Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 65, Decatur, Adams County, 16 March 1936 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

* Test Your Knowledge * Can you anawer seven of these 1 ton questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. In which alate i»> the I‘utuxeut RJver? I Who was John Rrydeu? 3. tn Itoviuu law. what w*« iuan-i uminlon? 4. Name Uie fifth President of the U 3. 3. 4n military law, what It, coilacriptlon? 6. Who wrote the "Samantha” books? 7. What i« an aetrolabe? 8. Where to the isle of Patmos? 9. Which religious body founded j Swarthmore College? 10. Who was Karl Kon sd Fried-1 rich Wilhekn Laobmann? 1. Has Switzerland a uavy2. Where is the Übangi River? 3. What is the Paternoster? 4. What strait separates the ] state of Washington from Vancou- ■ ver island? 5. Name the celebrated mistress ! ol Louis XV of France. 6. What and where was Bithyuia?

Public Sale The undersigned administrator of the Esuaje of Jennie May Stevens will sell at Public Auction, on SATURDAY, March 21, 1936 at 2 o’clock p.m.. on the premises 1109 Elm street. Decatur. Indiana, the following personal property and household goods: Kitchen Range, end cabinet, kitchen eaiiinet. sewing machine, ice box. kitchen table, chairs, cooking utensils, heating stove, mirrors, rugs, curtains, beds, library tables, victrola, davenport, dresspr, buffet and other miscellaneous articles. TERMS—Cash on day of sale. William H. Stevens, Administrator Roy S. Johnson. Auctioneer. John L. DeVoss. Attorney. MHEMUKMiMWWHanMIWBMnMBHaSBHMMMHI PUBLIC SALE Ou account of the death of my husband I will sell at put Mic auction .; miles north and 4 miles east of Berne or 3 miles south aaid 4 miles east of Monroe or 1 mile south and % mile west of Salem, on WEDNESDAY, March 18 Beginning at 12:00 noon, the following property: TWO HORSES—One sorrel horse, emooth mouth; one bay horse, smooth mouth. TWO COWS —One Jersey Cow, giving two gallon milk per day; dug Spotted Cow, four years old. bred. TWO HOGS —Two tried Duroc Brood (Sows. Farrow April 36 trmt- May 4 FARMING IMPLEMENTS—One Walter A. Wood Binder, 7 feet cut; one farm wagon; old wagon: one beet drill; one New Idea Manure Spreader: one International Corn Cultivator: one Spring Tooth Harrow; one Spike Tooth Harrow; one Walking Breaking Plow: Disc Harrow; Steel Land Roller; one Double Shovel Plow; one Single Shovel Flow. MISCELLANEOUS — Grindstone; wagon jack: cross cut saw; iron kettle: beet fork; one Vega cream separator; Home Comfort Ratige; tome potatoes; ome seed corn; some navy beans; one large walnut feed box: jars: cans, and many other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. MRS. ORVAL H. TINKHAM, Owner Auctioneer —Jess Michaud. Clerk—E. W. Baumgartner . ... ' -1.- ... ? NOTICE TO THE DEPOSITORS OF THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO., OF DECATUR, INDIANA In accordance with an order of the Adams Circuit Court, a distribution will be made to ali depositors entitled to the same of 10.5264'< of the amount found due the depositors when the Department of Financial Institutions took possession of said bank, which distribution will be equivalent to 4'i of the amount due to depositors wticn said bank dosed. This distribution w ill make a total of 78'< paid to depositors. Distribution checks will be ready for delivery at the Law Office of Lutz & Myers, Erwin Building. Decatur, Indiana, on the 20th day of March. 1936 and from day to day thereafter. Office hours from 8:30 A. M. to 1:30 P. M. Depositors unable to call for checks in person may authorize others to receipt for fiame. We will greatly appreciate depositors calling for checks at earliest convenience. It is the intention of the Department to close this Trust at the earliest possible date and that the next distribution made will be final. Department of Financial Institutions. l or the Liquidation of The Peoples i»an & Trust Company, Decatur, Indiana. By: Clark J. J>ulz. Special Representative. | ■saaMwttWßii iwimnw w nmiiHim n m i'l-wmwww >i

THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—“LAMBS VERSUS MUTTONHEADS” By SEGAR *DEfXU SHttPb. I BRfkHG \ r VJE'RE SICK OFH GORSH* KEEP fWN FROM Ml".) I x '-A I WHW A ”J£EP” " VA. THROUGH THE UAR-J SPIM&CHOVA! IWN HhRDU J I THROVJ A PITy GGJ Abi HOME, GET OUlj iu 7rx) ame RoVJ UJEUJASNT > BELIEVE MWTE r X OF ME SIGHT J™’ 1 KiNHfcVEPEhCE /=Mgi TO GO HOME- ) 1 Be < A?R 8 -c’ohhK > HOME.TOTBE B€ JIR--COMING-W BUL.D OP LAND OF OUR ) T -E OtEP .tag| ’lf rrn / Togo/ vjyc.

F?, In wiiat year dkl The Great Plugua of London occur? 8. Wibo wrote. "Uncle Tom’s Cabi linJ"I inJ " | 8. What is money? >, 1" Name the first suceveefd iron ; clad in the U. 8. Navy. COURTHOUSE Real estate Transfers Rodina Nufwbaum et al to Doris iN“hon. 33 a row of land in Wabash, jtwp. for sl. I Haris Nelson to Rosina Nussbaum , e-t al. 38 across iu Wa-baob twp (or pl WISCONSIN WPA (CONTINUKD EKOM u t, -*- GF ' misery of the homes we lucve been i trying to maintain on starvation wages of 148 a month.” Olson ex'plained. "We’re not going to leave until Martin W. Torkelson. ! the state WPA administrator, grants us more money.’’ | The strikers did not appear to suffer from the ’ hardships" of

sleeping on the red plush of the assembly chamber floors. They appeared to relish the meals their wlvee prepared for them in Salvation Army headquarters and served on the polished-oak assembly desks — even if some of the food was purchased through a donation by Gov. Philip F. LaFollette. With borrowed razors they hud their first -shave iu several days—ln the capitol washroom. AKRON MAYOR I HITS STRIKE Mayor Moves To Purge City Os Radical leaders Akron. 0.. Mar. 16— (U.R) —Former Mayor C. Nelson Sparks intensified his drive today to purge this industrial city of 256.000 of "out-of-town radical leaders” so that the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., can reopen its strike-besieged plants. From his headquarters in Akron's main hotel. Sparks, physically slight but knwon as a "fighter" directed his campaign to recruit “50,000 vigilantes by tonight." i Several score of his closest followers milled in his suite. A halfdozen telephones were kept ttaisy by persons calling to pledge their support. Sparks, sworn in as a special deputy sheriff, launched his "vigilante" organization after union rubber workers, on strike for four weeks because 70 veteran employes were dismissed, shouted down a. Goodyear peace proposal at a mass meeting. “There is not any ease here involving the rights and privileges of a decent union organization striving to protect their jobs.' Sparks said in sounding his appeal over a ifldio station. "The law-ajtiding people of this community have no quarrel with them. It is this handful of miser-1 able, chiseling leeches, labor agitators. radicals, communists, and red orators who have flocked in here from all over like jackals around a carcass that deserves the brand of repudiation.” Sparks appealed for public support "so we can tell these radical leaders to get the heli out of here and we are not going lo be too interested in the dignity of their going.” o— Trade in a Good Town — Decatur Ml 111 I: OF FIX VI *F.TI I KMKVT of i;.*'i t n; no. 3ixa Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Aaron | 1-autzciiheiser. deceased, to appear, in the Adams Circuit Court, held at i Decatur. Indiana, on the3rd day of April. 1956, and show cause, if any. whv tin FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said de-I cedent should not be approved; and: said heirs are notified to then and] there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Roy loHUtzenheixer Administrator! Decatur Indiana March 9, 1936. Iliihrrt It. Met hum han. Atty. Marcii 9-16 NOTICE OF I’lNit. *ETTI.EMEAT OF ESTATE NO. 3210 Notice is hereby river, to the cred- • Itor*. heirs and legatees of Sarah • E. Hak<r. deceased, to appear in the' Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 30th day of March. 1936. and show cause, if any.: whv the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said de- . cedent should not be approved; and • said heirs are notified to then and , there make proof of heirship, and • receive their distributive shares. L. Walter, i.xecutori Decautr, Indiana. March 7th, 1936 C. L. U alters, Attorney March 9-16 i O NOTUE OF I’INM. *EITI-E.MEM OF EMTATM N. «I«3 Notice is hereby given to the cred- , iters, heirs at.il legatees ct Henry j F Fruchte. deceased to appear in the ] Adams Circuit <y»urt. held at Decattur, Indiana, on the 30 day of March I 1936. and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement Accounts with I the estate of said decedent should j not he approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares Caroline Fruchte. executrix Decatur. Indiana, March 7, 1936. Itlornr.* Fruchte and I.Hterer Marcii 9-16 0 NOTH i: OF FIN th SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE \o. 3I(M» Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Eli D. Foor, deceased, to app< ar in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur Indiana, on the 31st day of March 1936, and show cause, if any, why tin- FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their disttributive shares. Vol!is Guniiy Ixinv, Executor Decatur, Indiana. March 1936 Attorn** Jwhtt L. Helu*. Man h 9-16

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 16,1936.

LEAGUE COUNCIL (COXTlNygn FROM PAOJE ON1C) slim, that away might be found out of a deadlock in which it was feared the council muct proceed thia afternoon to reject the German acceptimee.. The German word "alsJiald." it wav »uid, wan niininterpi'eted in the reply which Germany sent to Loudon yesterday. As translated, "alslxild" was given the meaning thut Hitler's peace terms must be discussed forthwith. It should have been translated, more suitably, accord-

S CHARLES GRANT

SYNOPSIS Lovely, young Cathleen McCarthy tries to discourage the attentions of Seward Ingram, her employer'a son, because of social barriers, but he insists on seeing her. Seward presents Cathleen with an expensive bracelet. She plans to return it. but her shiftless brother. Joe. steals the bracelet and pawns it for 5300. For the first time in his career, Jasper Ingram's financial throne is threatened. Just as he is trying to raise several million dollars, his wife, ignorant of the crisis, asks for half a million to purchase the Russian royal rubies. Ingram refuses and his wife secretly plans a loan. To add to the financier’s difficulties, Arline Martin, an actress, plans to sue Ingram on a false charge for not financing her play. Homer Alspaugh, Ingram's confidential secretary. speculates with his employer’s money in the hope of securing money to meet his faithless wife's extravagance. Marian Alspaugh is having an affair with the Marques d'Alhues. On a picnic with Seward. Cathleen. unable to tell him the truth about the bracelet, says she must return it, inferring that she still has it. The young couple go on a hike and cannot find their way back to the car. They get a lift to the railroad station, only to find there is no train that night. They stay at a farmhouse and Cathleen is filled with misgiving for her l family's disapproval. ing. Cathleen insists that Seward ■ remain and locate his car, while she returns to the city by train. At the station, Seward kisses Cathleen. Flustered, she forgets her bag. Seward, taking the liberty of going through the bag in search of a memento, comes upon the pawn ticket for the bracelet. Homer Alspaugh has had luck in his speculations. He replaced the sum taken from Ingram’s account and still has several thousand dollars profit. CHAPTER XXIV When he told Marian that Jasper Ingram was taking him out to Chicago for a few days, she could not. at otlre control her expression, and he angrily accused her of being glad to be rid of him. She retorted honestly enough: “You haven't been fit to live with for the last week! Os course. I'm glad you’ll be taking your grouch out on Mr. Ingram for a day or two instead of me. It’s not as if I’d got over my accident yet—l'm still a nervous wreck, though you don’t seem to realize it!” She had to look like a nervous wreck, wince when he raised his voice and lie languidly on the chesterfield until he had gone, but she had never felt less like one. If her heart pounded, it was with joy. for the opportunity she had been hopelessly dreaming of was now hers. Homer was hardly out of the hou. e when she was at her telephone—calling d'Alhues in New York. She had seen him only twice since her accident. He called formally,' when Homer was present, to inquire after her health. And once, briefly, he had visited her alone at the hospital. Now Homer would be away for two nights or more. She could easily gut t'. ■ laids out of the house . . . D'Alhues came near midnight. Trembling, Marian threw herself into his arms; they were alone, free to love at last. “Why can’t life always be like this?” she wailed "It can be and should be,” he said.. “Courage, only, is necessary The question, carina mia. how greatly do you dare?” “What d'you mean, darling? Lots of women would have been afraid ■ to have you here like this.” “It is true, tonight is already more than I ever dreamed of having At times I still forget that I am now a poor man. For a moment I thought of carrying you away to my castic near Burgos. But I could only carry you into beggery. ... If I can sell Dona Josefa’s rubies, and : if she wishes me to attend her back 1 to Europe, I shall have to live with the greatest economy. But if I had fifty thousand pesetas a year, I would not ask you. queridisima. to elope with me! I would take you. I by force, if necessary. But how can a begga: plav the man? It is not

ing to the report of the German message ct today, as "in du* course." It wa* the word ‘loithwiih" that roused <Fr«B6h anger and caused grave and auaious leaders to predict today that the council must eject the German answer perhaps by uuauimous vote. Because the translation was aw official one. authoritative siaircer expressed belief that Germany had made a concession and actually had modified its demands. (The United Press Berlin bureau, transmitting the text of the German reply, translatedjdsbahl"

even as though the rubies were sold!” "But darlingest, Martan protested. “I will have money. Homer would have to give me alimony! “Alimony—what is that?" > She explained: "Don’t you see? I’ll bring suit, and get a divorce. You won’t enter into it at all! I'll ask for a thumping alimony. Homer makes ten thousand a yepr. How much is that in pesetas?” "Fifty thousand. But we can not go to Spain—alas! They would seize me and send me to the \ ilia Cisneros. Two cousins and many I friends of mine are there already i Ts this beautiful drcam should come ■true, Marianeita. it is on the Riyiera that we should live, in a v ‘‘ja near Cannes, perhaps. You would like that? The society is singularly pleasant, easy-going-cosmopolitan. There are many exiied Spaniards on that coast and many aristocratic Russians, artists, and rich Americans. Questions would not be asked. I should present you to my friends as the Marquesa d’Alhues, and you would be unlikely- to meet anyone who had known you as Mrs. Alspaugh.” "I’d like to be a marquesa. said Marian. “Ah,” continued d'Alhues. “w e would lead there an idyllic existence. The sea is azure and the sun always shines. Everyone is gay. The best Parisian shops have succursaies, open in the season. There are races, sports, casinos where excellent representations are given by fine artists, local festivals and galas for visitors. All this on a narrow strip along the coast, with greymountains frowning above it. How happy we could be there. How much alimony do you think Mr. Alspaugh would give you?” “He’d have to pay me at least half what he gets.” Marian declared. “It isn't much. It would be ; hardly anything here — only five, thousand a year. What would that be in francs’”

"One hundred and twenty-five thousand francs ... we could live well on that, I believe, though I lack experience to say positively. I have a sister who has a charming villa at San Remo, and her income, I know, is less than one hundred thousand.” “Many people have told me living is awfully cheap on the Riviera. Oh. Inacio, I wish we could start tomorrow! It sounds perfectly wonderful—like heaven!” “Are we not in heaven now?”

“Darlingest, of course—but there it would never end. Are you sure five thousand will be enough?” “We shall live simply. It will suffice!”

“But if King Alfonso should stage a comeback, and you could recover your estates—then you’d be awfully rich, wouldn’t you?" "Ah. yes. tn that case—” He refrained from telling her that, in that case, she could have no share in his reacquired splendors. A Marques d’Alhues may camp on the Riviera with a pretty companion whom he indulges with the use of his name, but if the Bourbons returned to Spain and he with them, bohemia and morganatic marriages would be forgotten. The best he could do for Marian, in that event, would be to install her in a coquettish villa and visit her occasionally. • • •

Jasper Ingram in Chicago kept his secretary busy. There were formal conferences, long telegrams in code, and memoranda of agreements, Alspaugh, awake at last to the opportunities for personal profit afforded by his position, was bewildered by the rich possibilities opening in a dozen different fields. Ingram's interests ranged from public utilities to theatrical productions, with many a sound venture, large and small, between. Tn one day he took over a shipping line and a moribund picture company. Homer, knowing his intentions ahead of the rest of the world, chafed because he could buy the stock of neither, since all his available money was tied up. Ho debated wiring to his brokers to sell his holdings and buy in the new companies, but he h4.<l no time to give th- problem requisite consideration. He dared not neglect Ingram’s business in favor of his own. for to stand well with him was

Jm meaning at once Cassell* > I "uew German dictionary" gives It as: "Forthwith, thereupon, presently. at once, immediately.'!) Markets At A Glance i Stocks: irregular iu quiet trading; utilities firm. u Bonds: irregular and dull. , Cur.:: irregular; utilities firm. i Chicago stocks; irregularly lowl er Call money: % of UrSterling: sliglitly easier against I dollar; French franc steady, j Cotton: 3 points higher to 6

essential to his own snetc Nearly all one night, however. Alspaugh lay awake thinking ou< his financial problem. By morning he had decided to sell, and was a tually writing out the telegram when his telephone rang and Mr. Ingram, from his suite in the same hotel, summoned him to come to him at once. For some hours, ho was too busy even to finish writing the telegram. He took dictation while Ingram was dressing and then took breakfast with him. Important callers were announced immediately afterwards, and Alspaugh had to make minutes of the discussion.

At noon, however, ho was free, since Ingram was lunching at the Civic Club. Alspaugh was just gathering up his papers, after Ingram’s departure, when one more telegram was brought in. a cryptic message of about a hundred words. It was touch and go with him whether to attend to his own business at once or pause to decode the wire. A group of initials on the telegram told him it referred to the very merger in which he was interested. That decided him and. feverishly, he worked out the message. It apprised Ingram of certain new developments and begged him to make an immediate decision. This decision, if favorable, would make Alspaugh’s present investment far better than either of the two he was contemplating. He crumpled his own half-written form and waited again, in anguish of mind, for the chief’s return. Ingram glanced over the decoded wire, and gave him directions about another matter. "Aren’t you going to answer the Preston and Dalton people?” Hor.er ventured.

“No hurry, let it ride for a while.” But later as they were riding across town, he brought up th» subject himself and gave the very instructions Alspaugh had hoped to hear. Returning on the Twentieth Century the following day, Tlinter gloated over his certain winnings. After so many years of hard work for an inelastic “alary, it was intoxicating to find that he had made, in little more than a week, nearly as much as Ingram paid him in a year Marian had been right in blaming him for his lack of enterprise. and he decided that she deserved a reward for spurring him on. Say he put six thousand into the picture company; or say. he split the six thousand between two promising investments he'd have five thousand left, and he was uxorious enough to take considerable pleasure in the thought of buving Marian the pearl necklace she’had always craved.

Then too, he cannily reflected, now was a good time to buy pearls. They probably would never cost less, and would be a tangible asset, in all likelihood increasing in value. It would be not only a pleasure, bid a sound investment to put five thousand dollars into the uur.-hase of a real pearl necklace for Marian And what a surprise for her!

Marian received him indifferently, almost coldly, upon his return from Chicago, but Homer, instead of resenting her attitude, merely grinned, and thought. "Shell change her tune after I’ve made a kilhng and spring the pearls o n . r ' looked at pearls in vanous Fifth Avenue shons and was amazed and chagrined to find that five thousand dollars was a modest price for a string of pearls. When he sold out. a little under the top of his market because he hadn t the courage to hold on long, er. his winnings were still bettrt than his most optimistic forecast. This enabled him to buy a string of pearls which looked exquisite and impressive. They were beautifully matched and. if not large, they were lustrous and genuine, since he w-as given a written guaranty of repur #' ase . at ’.Price only slightly less than he paid for them, “That’s what we’d be willing to £!£ k Or i now ’” lhe manager told him. % ith the return of prosperity, naturally the pear's w-isl advance in value. Three years agu -his necklace was worth sevontvCi. ve » hun l rir ' c<i ’ Vcr T likely it’ll lear h that value again during the next three years.

(To Be Continued! griei irtt o> Kin rntu-t, sjMtrtta in-

I lower t Wheat: Uto % tower; May . 99’,-i; corn easier. Chicago livestock: hogs steady to strong; cattle steady to weiJt; sheep steady. Rubber: 3 to 8 points lower. SMARKETREPORTS _ I daily report of local AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, 5 Craigville, Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon. Corrected March 16. ■ __ No commission and uo yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday end Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs ... 9.60 120 to 140 lbs 10.80 140 to 160 lbs 10.30 160 to 230 lbs 10.70 230 to 270 lbs 10.20 270 to 300 lbs 10.00 307 to 350 lbs 9.80 Roughs 8.50 l Stags 6.50 Vealers 9.25 Ewe and wether iambs. 9.25 Buck lambs 8.25 Yearling lambs 4.50 CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, O-, Mar. 16.-014?) — Produce: Butter, steady; extras. lb., standards. in jobbing lots. Eggs, steady; extra firsts (56 lbs. and up to the crate) 15c doz . current receipts <55 lbs. and up). 18c doz.; (paying prices to shippers in 100-case lots). Live poultry, weak: heavy hens. lbs., and up. 22c; ducks, small, 21c. Potatoes. (100-lb. bags), Ohio. 11.25-11.50; tew best, 11.65; Maine. 11.85-J2; 15-lb. bags. 34-35 c; Idaho. 8215-52.25; 15-lb. box. 55c; 50-lb. box. 52-35; Florida No. 1. 51.75- ! $1.85 crate; No. 2. $1.40-51.50. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis. Mar. 16. — (U.R) — Livestock: Hogs, 3,000; holdovers, 165; 160- i 250 lbs., 10c higher; other weights , steady; 160-225 lbs., sll.lO-$! 1.20: I 225-250 lbs.. $10.95-511.05; 250-300 ! lbs., $10.30-510.70; 300-400 lbs., | $9.70-510.10; 130 160 lbs., $lO.lO I $10.60; 100-130 lbs., $9.35-$9.85; packing sows, $9-59.50. Cattle. 800. calves. 400; slaugh-, ter classes steady to weak; bulk I of steers eligible under $8.50, beef I cows, $5-56.25; low cutters and cut-: ters, $3 50 $4 75: vealers steady, i $9.50 down. SUt-ep. 1.200; lambs steady; uqaL-i ity considered: few choice fe<T! westerns, $10.25; bulk eligible' around $10;' slaughter sheep, $3.25$5.00. CHICAGO GRAIN STOCK May July Sept. Wheat ... ,!»9 .8?’. Jj6 7 „ Corn .60?* .60?» .60% Oats — . . .26% .27 .26% , EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Mar. 16. — (UJU —Livestock; Hogs, receipts, 1.800. including 160 Canadians, active to all interests; 10c to mostly 15c under Friday's average; bulk desirable SSO- - lbs , averaging 225 lbs., down. $11.35; sparingly $11.40; 250-285 lbs., butchers, sll-$11.25; pigs and underweights. $10.75-$11.25. Cattle, receipts. 1.400; steady; strictly good and choice steers, SIR2S; good offerings mostly SSO- - lbs.. $9 35-59.60; bulk medium and shortfed steers and heifers, $7.25-$8.25; cows and bulls firm, fleshy cows, $5.40-55.85. Calves, receipts, 700; better grade vealers. active, steady, mostly $10.50; others slow. Sheep, "receipts. 2.200; lambs. 25-35 c higher; good to choice ewes ami w ni hers, $10.50-$10.60: medium and mixed grades. S9XO-310. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., Mar 16. —(U.R) — Livestock: Hogs, 10 to 15c Inker; 160-180 lbs., $10.90: 180-200 lbs., siv.Bo: 200-225 lbs.. $10.70: 225-250 lbs. $10.60; 350-275 lbs-, $10.45; 275-300 lbs.. $10.35 : 300-350 lbs., $10.10; I 140-160 lbs., $10.30; 120-140 lbs.. $10; 100-120 lbs., $9.75. Roughs, $8.75; stags. $7. Calves. $9.50; lambs, $9.50. Corrected March 17 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better s4c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 93c Oats 20 to 22c Good Dry No. 2 Yel., Soy Beaus 70c New No. 4 yellow corn, 100 lbs 53 to 68c Rye 45c I CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Diy No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans 70c ( (Delivered to factory) o Yale Student an Alderman New Haven, (loon — (UP) — A Yale student has bee nelccted to the New Haven Board of Alderman He is John Q. Ti-ion. Jr.. Yale law student, who successfully carried the Republican banner into a nornialll Democratic ward .by dint of an intensive campaign.

buslnesscS w AXI, NOTI(M — salJ ! y i; ■■ fauns, easy i eril . loan. Invest Pc “l ,7( ? sai ’ i; . 'w $5- Frank I Monroe. sa, ‘ e eoudiltou ,-lteap used dareuportu ■ Hirnum,. i '-B 011'1 st P1,,.,.. "V FOR SALE -3 'V-'l'er T| ll( .„ ls ■ 1 hunu H t ,n sy; ' M FOR SALE~ p 0 | and f J hog. Oi(o Ehlerding i 1 l’! <Me I'lioijQ Yellow tested or cet tdied ,■ farm. 1 Ilu i e weß| M J house north Erie i> r W FORDSON THACTOrT; We ran furnish repair, Fordsoii's on . : | lort son Service Station FOR SALE-IJJI PiynioiM 1929 Ford serLu I tier. 102; Chevrolet coat Ch.-rr. t sedan. T| ; . s ,. , all in good shape Bry« Pleasant MnL. 1>I:, IM 3S() j I FOR SALE icaif . Martin Kirchner, iK. No 2 Treble phone, j EOR rent ; FOR RENT-30 acre north of Ikaatur. Su 27. Eight iitein liunsa w lings. Mrs H B. H-lier. i; Fourth Street. FOR RENT 1 patch and all out buM i miles west Decatur B . Democrat. — _ WANTED WANTED Girl for getten , WANTED TO BUY -IM desk Stat. pme. .144 IL. < ar, Dt.fiux rat. ! Trade in a Goon Town - \«i 11< -MSI ot nt: a i. »Tiq Tb, ■ g; ■ . tnirtai virute a’ •'l'ti'i- if :U ~ ■ ■ . • .' < a can.', ;■ .. t '.l ag. -nut ma llliz.a ■ t Sa.uh Ann I'st- ll ■. .<••. t I' '• *. rgl t: ... M - ie rne.l Smite .oil \ .i.: a I'nr.-aa 1 mar I? Si: • d nianbeq upon tl • ■!<" k. •- : .-evtj gms if.:.- < tha: n :!»4 ' j..| 1: , 1. a f as.l on ft..... . -Th ■’■'•! i:<::t; at : '"i ■> ■ to-.k P. St ,i.l s . 11, w:: 1 •('•.: for UM \,i te r a Hit ‘ 1.-'t full al'l"'.' " 1 : .w; :.s ■' —ex. Tru- t N t'lit It'Ll Sv fl ~rig.n.,l ; .: m tie t-.»U ot i>c dl Addins I oUg.' T'-.e I N "uv inlet B’o.l pi,.: -I till- t-»n. nj- |>. .t ■ vl.inr, •ounty.l Tract N’ . .re- Inlet tov II li'.'tv ■ c iitar.fl I' - ::, •ega- :ai , said into * tb. migm-t t'l-c vt them ~l t> ~t- Adimsrwj ..Ji'irf u.mi d i. It'D 9k <d then. .- > ’•« f' ’• P™ tl,, s.mtti I : ■ e! said :uto4 dre.l ll.'-t' •* n * l Tredtlis ' ' ,;i f, it t" <ke ’ of said , i ' lli'ii" ■-“"’S along tl:, west line rt * i fnrtv three and fire tt«U feet t • th- "’’Uth inlW U <’)'•’ • | l n ’'f* . - the soldi, t.m ot ' bmo, ' , .J of u-girn > !E II"' 72 three !• ■ : - ' "" W “’Tra/t 'n ■ .•'b ; '“Terms. ' ash ....

flash' Just received 2# Room suites: 1- Bed • suites: ■’> W n *N< Ail the new styles an terns. In this group can find an - . p . rU ( „ or ru£ ,' nU Watch our «indo*« SPRA<® R lINJTI RE STO® 152 S. Second St. N. A. BIXLEB optometrist "ssr" 8.-30 to 11:3° 12 ' M “ Saturdays. 8 00 ’; " Telepho” B '3