Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
k Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these i ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. Name the British General who led the disastrous expedition against Fort DuQueene in the French and Indian War. 2. What to Irish Mose? 3- Name the oldest university in Denmark. 9. Where is Holy Cross Mountain? 5. When was the Pony express mail service, between Saint Joseph Mo., and California, inaugurated? 6. Who painted the famous picture “The HOree Fair?" 7.. in which ocean is Nova Zem-. bls* X Name the Presidents who were asjsasiau'ed while in office. NOTICE To all people who <ave friends and relatives buried in the Ray cemetery. As we need funds for the upkeep of this cemetery it will be greatly appreciated if all those interested would contribute a small amount. Contributions will be tak-1 en by the following men: Ira Wagner, Chas. Bahner, Sherman Essex Herman Meyers.
Romance on a lost island of the Bahamas RICH CARGOES Henry C. Rowland s exciting new serial ■Ol nJ I H *• . Isabel took the gems in her cupped funds. J - In a setting of oriental splendor, with an army of Caribs to do his bidding and a pet elephant to ride on, a rollicking old adventurer rules like an eastern potentate... until -j an unexpected guest arrives, to lay siege to the heart of ” Hirfavorite niece. v . Every chapter of this unusual tale teems with thrills anJsurprises. And one of the chief roles is played by the pet elephant. BEGINS MONDAY, APRIL 12 in DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“A FILLY AT THE POST” By SEGAR . ( GOON, RUM'. RUNUJHILE? ( YOU'Lt NOTICE 1 AIN'T P GEE, YER SUDELL! \ S RUN’. GO ON, z»T S' RUN - I I HOLDS TH<5 COPh— —' x k VERY HARD TO T~ ANYBODY U)ICH SEZ ) ( RUN- SAY,UUHA'S ) Q) ( HURRY UP! IM ’• . J /S\Y HEARTS IS *,- M WITH YA? jC ■ z /\^ x (p • gy> p=L (p -c — r *• - w> "IO F\ - '' f .. ‘ ,’ . -
I ». Who was 'William Larminlo? ! 10. What is a monocle? COURTHOUSE Partition Asked A petition for a partition was filed by Cleo .MiCandlish, Kenneth and Robert Finch. Jennie Schaffer and Ruby Loranee against Cleo MeCandltob, administratrix of the the relate of Emma Finch and Grace and Harry Zimmerman. Summons were ordered, returnable April 22. i Order Granted An application filed by the plain- ■ tiff, seeking a restraining order prohibitng the eale of property by i the defendant was sustained in the I divorce proceedings brought by Dolly Death against Dan Death. New Case A suit for the foreclosure of a ‘ mechanic's Hen was brought by the Saylors Motor company against Peter A. Hess. Vacation summons were ordered, returnable April 19. New Case An application for letters of administration was filed by Bessie Girod in the estate of Eli A. Girod. Dr. Eugene Fields Dentist Nitrous-Oxid-Gas Anesthesia X-Ray 127 N. 3rd st Phone 56
’ for the purpose of collecting dam- 1 ages for personal Injury resulting in the death of Ell A. Girod. A bond of SI,OOO was filed, examined and approved- A petition to settle a death claim was filed. The clerk's report was filed. Divorce Asked Oreta Trullender has asked for . a divorce from Alfred D. Trullender on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment. She charges the defend-1 ant has “continuously cursed and sworn at her. was guilty of habitual drunkness and failed to provide | properly for her." They were married September 17, 1923, and separated, January 1, 1936. A notice of. non-residence was issued returnI able June 1. Real Estate Transfers Samuel 18. Althause to Harold Mott et ux, 77 acres in Union twp. for sl. Carey Templin et ux to Emil A. ' Springer. 1.21 acres in Wabash twp. . for $2260Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
‘‘Leizure to Repent’’! <Wtsu£a 'PaAAott,
CHAPTER XXVIII “Tell me, Denise, that you care. No reason you should, but tell me you do I" pleaded Keith. Those eyes that were clear as a child’s were appraising now. He waited, his heart pounding. He watched her lovely face harden. For an instant, watching her, he knew I how she would look when she was not young any more. But she did not speak, because she could not. It was cruel that those words of his, so reckless of her sister's pride, of his honor, and of her own, should force her to judge him at last: He was charming stul, and still he had the capacity to stir her; but he had no steadiness at all, nor very much strength. She could make him waver in his affection for Felicia, as Felicia had been so quickly able to make him forget his affection for her. And yet—and yet as he was, she had loved him and perhaps stili ' did. He knelt, put his head against her lap. Why, he was trembling! That trembling tore her heart. Still she did not answer those words of his: “Tell me that you care.” All those weeks she had waited for those words, and now would never answer them. Because, though perhaps she never would want Gilbert as much as she had wanted this man kneeling beside her, she would not betray Gilbert by a single disloyal word. So much his love deserved of her, surely. But she touched Keith’s brown head lightly with her finger-tips, waiting until she was sure her voice would be calm enough to say goodby. She heard Gilbert saying her name, “Denite!" — looked up and saw him standing there. Keith got to his feet, and so did she. She saw Felicia's face behind Gilbert, and estimated accurately enough what had happened. But steadily she said: "Gilbert, you must not, you simply must not, think any of the things you are thinking. I shall talk to you, as soon as we are alone." She walked across the terrace and into the house. Gilbert stood aside to let her pass. She went to her room, and made herself begin to dress for dinner, though her hands were shaking. tHupid Felicia’s intervention! Utterly stupid, that scene. But she must make Gilbert sure of that too —for his sake as much as hers. She expected to hear his knock at the door. But he did not come. Resolutely, when she was dressed, she went downstairs to wait for him. After a time she heard Felicia's voice, contemptuous, amused, in the drawing-room be- • yond the terrace, and Keith’s voice answering it softly. She did not join them. She was impatient with them both; and with herself, that an old tenderness should have betrayed her into behaving just like I them. Gilbert came out on to the terrace just as the dinner gong rang. Felicia and Keith came out then too, so Denise had no chance to speak to Gilbert before dinner. They all went into the diningroom, and they were all well-bred people, so they “made conversation suitable for the ears of servants passing dishes. They mentioned horse-racing, the London season so specially gay because of Jubilee year, the qmetaess of Gilbert's ocean crossing as compared to the quietness of Keith s ocean crossing. They told Gilbert of the condition of health of Mr. and Mrs. Rendale. He told them about drought conditions in the year before. Keith, in response to polite inquiry from Gilbert, declared his father’s health to be excellent. Felicia’s eyes went from
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1937.
' Extension Horseman To Conduct Meetings P. T. Brown, extension horseman of Purdue, will be In Adume county Tuesday, April 27. for three colt meetings: one at 9:30 A. M. will be held on the Central Steak Farm one mile north of Decatur, In addition to trimming colts’ hoofs and | taking care, feed, and management, an opportunity will be given to see a splendid group of white-faced steers on feed and a breeding herd of shorthorn cattle. At 1:00 P. M. a meeting will be held on the Mose i Schmitt farm, one mile east and ! three miles north of Berne. The i third meeting will .be held at 3 p. in. ' on the Henry lAscbleman farm, four milee west of Berne and one-half mile north, in these last two meetings Mr. Brown will again trim colt's feet and discuss care, feed and management. The Adame County Honse Improvement Association will have another meeting in the county agent’s office the evening of Tues-1
face to face. As dessert was being served, she said to Gilbert: “It was my fault that Denise did not meet you. I copied down the telegram and told her that you were coming on the Normarrie tomorrow." Gilbert said, “Yes, I quite understand," and no one else made any comment Halfway through the dessert, Gilbert was called to the telephone. “If youll excuse me, Denise. ... I didn't suppose anyone knew I had arrived yet” When he went away, Felicia said quickly, “Sorry, Denise,” as if, strangely, she meant it “It doesn’t matter.” Keith said nothing at all. "Are you sure it doesn’t matter?” Felicia insisted. Denise looked at her. “Perfectly.” But she was not sure. Gilbert was gone a rather long time. When he came back, one glance at his face toid Denise he had dreadful news for them. “Will you come into the drawingroom with me, Felicia? ... And perhaps, Denise—you’d better—” The hot dry air of the desert was like a flame against Eustace’s cheeks, his first day back in New Mexico. His foreman was surprisingly pleased to see him, and the horse Dark Lad nuzzled his shoulder. When the blazing sunset died, when the silver dawn came up, he took Dark Lad riding every evening, every early morning. A small flock of days went by, one like another. His foreman came riding in one afternoon, with the mail and some Eastern newspapers. “You know, our boss is a racketeer, like me and the boys thought. Look I” The newspaper account was that the owner of the ranch had been arrested on his return from Europe, and was to be tried for non-payment of income-tax. There followed an account of his various “interests.” When Eustace saw a line about “an organization of bookmakers which he is supposed to control,” he knew where those fine horses came from. Some poor devil that he’d fleeced of his last cent had to give him his string of horses too. Probably it had been one of his concepts of grandeur to send race horses West for his friends to ride when he should have time to entertain on his new ranch. The foreman said, shrewdly: “Suppose when the boss gets through paying his lawyers, he’ll have lost this place, and we’ll be looking for jobs.” “Suppose so,” said Eustace. Well, he would manage to keep Dark Lad somehow. He was growing a little careless about the places he took that horse, who had been bred for racing. Actually, he was philosophical about it As he himself seemed to have come to a dead end in a place remote from all of his life as he’d planned it, so had Dark Lad. They would have to make the attempt together. From Felicia he had no word, nor from his people. When grief for her tore at him, and danger and despair, he mounted and gallopped cross-country, with the horse under him as wild as himself. There was a curving trail, halfway up a hillside, with a vista of mountains and mountains piled beyond, and below, a sharp drop to a canon always misty in the dawn or in the gathering dark when he rode there. The slope upward was very easy. Dark Lad whinnied with delight when he raced up it? And sometimes Eustace said to him: "Not i bad, is it? Travel it fast enough, i and you’ll leave behind ail your possible regrets for smooth green turf, and jockeys and silks. and the i crowds applauding.”
I day, April 27, with Mr. Brown pro--1 rent. o —. ■ FOR RENT FOR RENT- A sleeping room. 310 J .. N. Third St. Phone 511, S3ib3t; FOR RENT — Sleeping rooms. 133 North Second street. 85-kltx —’ MITICE TO VOS-HF.SHH4RITS In lhe X linin’ C ircuit C ourt. In Va" codon IM7. C ouiplnlnt Vo. 13061 c otoi’lolnc for llitorrr THE STATE OF INDIANA, ADAMS COUNTY . Ireta Trullender vs. Alfred D. | Trullender. _ . _ Now .omen the plaintiff, and files her complaint herein, together which an affidavit of Richard Miller, that said defendant Alfred D. Truilen- ' der Is not a resident of the State of Indiana; that .'•aid action is for DiI vorce and that said non-resident tie- . fendant is a necessary party thereto I Notice Is therefore hereby given said Defendant, last named, that un- ! less he he and appear on the Ist day of June 1937 In the Adams Circuit Court, at the Court House In Decatur in said Countv and State, and answer : or demur to said complaint the eame I . wilt be heard and determined in his | I absence. Witness my name and the Seal of ; said Court, affixed at Decatur, Indi iana this Bth day of April A. D. 193.. G. Remy Blerly. clerk. I April 9-16-23
As when he rode fast enough, he could sometimes ride beyond memory of her warm lips, her flaming hair. So one morning he rode in a clear dawn after a brief desert storm, up that path with the great mountains beyond, and a mist in the carnon below him. Where the path curved, the storm had loosened foot or two of bank, on the canon’s edge. They came fast, the tall blond man, the great black horse, with the cool dawn wind blowing against them stirring the mists in the canon. There was an instant when Dark Lad’s hoofs clutched at moving earth. An instant long enough, surely, for a man who had only loved one woman in his life, to remember her face, perhaps even to remember that some one, far away, had promised to take care of her. Then man and horse went over, down through the mists. . . . The foreman found them, some hours later. It was clear that they had died instantly against the rocks at the bottom of the canon. When he brought Eustace home, tho mail was arrived. There was b. letter, that said, “Return to Gilbert Windon," with a New York address. After some hesitation, the foreman decided to open it. He read a great many Eastern newspapers. He was quite familiar with the story of Eustace Dayne. his wife Felicia, and a man named Keith Sheldie, though he had always been too polite to tell Eustace that he knew the story. And he even remembered that Gilbert Windon was the brother-in-law. The letter offer’d Eustace work in Vancouver, and gave an addres= in Sussex, England, “which of course, you know, since Felicia’s with us,” as the best place to write. “I shall be there with Denise another month.” The foreman had never made a long-distance call in his life, much less a transatlantic cal). But he knew there was a transatlantic telephone. It seemed to him that Gilbert Windon was the best person I to reach, to tell Mr. Dayne’s poor wife. She would be grieved now, for all her folly! He got Mr. Windon on the telephone by one o’clock which was nine I o’clock in the evening in England. , Always afterward Denise was to j remember that drawing-room, the dresses of herself and Felicia, the light on Felicia’s hair, her face utterly immobile, Gilbert’s face i grave—and a little puzzled, like the face of one confronting an incredible and stupid accident She remembered the order of the thing-s they did: That Felicia seated herself first, on a low green sofa by a coffee-table, and that she sat very erect, her hands light against the chair-arms, that the ruffled skirt of her pale yellow organdy frock spread like a fan. That after a little hesitation and a glance at Gilbert, she, herself sat ! down in a small chair facing Felicia diagonally. That Gilbert strode up and down the room once. When she looked up, she saw that Keith had followed them, was standing in the , doorway, his scarred handsome face faintly ironic, as if there were something entertaining in the fact that ! they had forgotten him. Then the , butler came :n with coffee. Ever afterwards it was as if those momenta did not recede as other moments, but remained a small complete interval frozen in 1 time, between everything that had gone before in life and everything that could happen after. A very short interval it was, between the instant when Felicia sat down, and the moment when the butler ’ brought in their eoffee. , (To be continued) ! Copyright by Urwlt Ftrrott DittrltetiUd »> KIM VWMaNB BridlraU. taa.
LOST AND FOUND LOST—-7:50 x2O truck tl :a vicinity of Kingsland, Parrot Packing Co. Fort Wayne. 83-3tx _ miscellaa EOUS MISCELLANEOUS — Furniture repaired. upholstered or refinished at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. 145 8. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 70-30 t Legal NoGce Notice Is hereby given that at on* o'clock p. nr on the 16th day of April 1937, at th* place ot realdence of Theodore Both, In Union Township, county of Adams. State of Indiana, 1 will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the following described automobile; 1933 model Hudson. Standard Sedan, Motor No. 59137, that the name ot the owner, or reputed owner, of shid automobile Is George Scott and the Ala-baster-Evans Company; that said automobile Is in my possession and held by me by virtue of a lien thereon In pursuance to section 56 ot I chapter 213 ot the acts of the genI eral assembly ot the state of IndI iana for the year 1935. for sterane and labor furnished for, such automobile; that said storage and labor furnished by me was completed on the Ist dav of March, 1937, and more than thirty <3®> ’>«• have since that date: that the sum of fifty <350 Idollars is due me from said George Scott and Alabaster- Evans Company for storage and labor, for which sum is said lien is claimed; that said sale will be made to satisfy the sai<l claim of fifty (SSO) dollars and the expense of said sale, the residue, if any. to be paid to said George Scott and Alabaster-Evans Company Theodore Foth Hubert H. McClenahan. Attorney. Dated this 2nd day ot April. 1937. April 2-9 o NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Notice is hereby given that Monday, May 3. 1937 will be the last day to pay-your Spring Installment ot taxes. The county treasurer's office will bp open from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. during the tax paying season. All taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and an 8% penalty will be added, an additional will be added for each year tax remains unpaid from first Monay In November in the year the delinquency occurred. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division ot taxes are asked to come in at once. Cail on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ommission of tax-payers to state definitely on what property the desire to pay, in whose name it may be found, in what township or corporation it is situated. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the law is such that there is no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. County orders will not be paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons are warned against them. Particular attention. It you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer also see that your receipts call for all your real estate and personal pro perty. In making inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do not fail to include return postage. JEFF LIECHTY Treasurer Adams County, Indiana. April 2 tn May 2 WANTED Beef Hides. Sheep Pelts and Tallow. We also buy Rags, Magazines, Newspapers. Scrap Iron, Old Auto Radiators, Batteries. Copper. Brass, Aluminum, and all grades of scrap metals. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 710 W. Monroe st. Phone 442 FEDERAL FARM LOANS Now At 4% T>»e Adams County National Farm Loan Association, of Decatur, Indiana has received a Charter and has been duly authorized and empowered to make farm loans in all of ; Adams County. JI you are expecting to re-finance your farm loan, call or write this association at once. ' Office: 133 South Seconu Street Decatur, Indiana : E. Burt Lenhart, sec'y-treas. Fred T. Scburger, investigator N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 116.
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, ' Craigville. Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon. Corrected April 9. No commission and no yardage. Veals received every day. r < • 100 to 120 lbs. $7.60 ,’ 120 to 140 lbs 7.80 : 140 to 160 lbs 8.80 1 160 to 180 lbs 9.30 180 to 260 lbs 9.5 v ; 260 to 300 lbs 9.50 I 300 to 350 lbs. 9.10 1 350 lbs., and up 8.70 r Roughs 8.65 • Stags 7.50 J Vealers 9.25 • Ewe and wether lambs 11.75 Buck lambs - 10.75 : Yearling laflibs 5.00 I CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE l; ; May July Sept.! .Wheat $1.39 $1.25% $1.21% Corn. New 1.30% 1.20% 1.11% ' 01d... 1.27% 1.19% 5 Oats 49% .46% .43% CLEVELAND PRODUCE ’ Cleveland, Ohio, Apr. 9.--(U.PJ — ! Produce: Butter, unsettled; extras, 35c; < t standards, 35c. ; ! Eggs, unsettled; extra grade, j 24 %c; extra firsts, 22%e; current - receipts, 21 %c. { Live poultry, steady; hens, s heavy, 20c; ducks, young, 6 lbs., ■ and up, 21c; small, 17c; old, 14c. r Potatoes. 100-lb. bags, U. S. No. f 1, Idaho, SS.4O-$3.60; Ohio, No. 1, j $l.»O-$2.25; Maine, $2.40-$2.60; 10i lb. bag, Florida new potatoes. . $2.25-$2.35 bu hamper; Florida t Hastings, $6.75-$6.85 bbl.; Texas, I 501 b. sacks. $2.25 $2.50. ’ INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK ' Indianapolis, Ind., Apr. 9.—(U.RA — Livestock: Hog receipts, 6,000; holdovers, r 158; 160 lbs., up, 5c higher; 160 ' lbs., down, steady; 160-180 lbs., > $9.90; 180-200 lbs., $9.95; 200-210 1 lbs., $10; 210-225 lbs., $10.05; 225 f 250 lbs., $10.10; 250-275 lbs., $10.05; ’ 275-300 lbs.. $10; 300-325 lbs.. »9.95; r 325-350 lbs., $9.90; 350-400 lbs., $9.95; 155-160 lbs., $9.60; 150-155 . lbs , $9.35; 140 150 lbs.. $9.10; 130- - 140 lbs.. $8.85; 120-130 lbs., $8.63; 1 110120 lbs., $8.35; 100-110 lbs., $8.10; sows, steady, bulk $9-$9.50; 7 top, $9.60. I Cattle, 600; calves, 600; all kiiF . ing classes steady; steers, $9.00$11.5P; heifers, SB-$9.35; common and medium beef cows, $5.25-$6.50; cutter grades. $4-»5; vealers openI ed strong to 10c higher at SIOXO down; closed $1 higher al $11,50 down. ■ Sheep. 1,300; iambs steady to 1 strong; choice wool lambs, sl2; , load strictly choice clipped lambs, , $10.50; slaughter ewes steady at f $5.50 down. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Apr. 9. —<(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, 5c higher; 225-250 lbs., i $9.90; 250-275 lbs., $9.85; 200-225 : lbs . $9.75; 180-200 lbs., $9.70; 275300 lbs., $9.70; 300-350 lbs., $9.50; 1 160-180 lbs., $9.65; 150-160 lbs., • $9.25; 140-150 lbs., $9; 130-140 lbs., . $8.65; 120-130 lbs., $8.40; 100-120 lbs., $8.15. Roughs, $9; stags, $7.75. Calves, $10.50; lambs, $11.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y-, Apr. 9. —(U.PJ • —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 1,500; 10c lower; good and choice 160-250 lbs., averaging 180-230 lbs., $10.40 to most ’ ly $10.50 and $10.55. i Cattle, receipts, 300; odd head medium steers about steady, $9.50; fleshy cows and medium bulls, s *6.25-$6.50; low cutter and cutter • cows, $4.35-$5.50. Calves, receipts, 400; vealers, higher; good .and choice mainly $10.50. r LOCAL GRAIN M'ARKET , BURK ELEVATUR CO. Corrected April 9. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better $1.34 No. 2 Wheat, etc. 1.33 Oat* 50c Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1.60 , New No. 4 Yellow Corn $1 to 1.70 Rye 90c CENTRAL SOYA CO. I Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1.60 ’ 'WANTED WANTED — Loans on Improved farms; Eastern money; long terms; low rates. French Quinn. j 262 w&f ts WONTED TO RENT—Four room furnished apartment, modern, private entrance. Phone 429. 83-k3tx j HELP WANTED — Reputable concern ot national Importance can : use two neat appearing men with light cars. Must lie tree to travel, i Splendid earnings from start and promotion as merited. See Mr. MeKeeman, 7 to 8 p in. Rice Hotel. i ■ 82t4x | WANTED —To rept. Two rooms for light housekeeping or one! i large room. By couple. Near bus- . 1 iness district. Box 3OT. 85-3tx '
HI SIXEKS ci'fhßFV. , ' X|l Wli cjWfRates Os 40c for 20 word, O S' T Over 20 word, 2c o,J . the two times. P ' Three T,m es _ Minim of 50c for 20 word, , Over 20 words 2' 2C ’ *for the three tunes. ' 'K SPECIAL SiartedTabTchiA^^B" 7 * lay 111,1 ,iH ' k .. io,kr ' ■" ’■> lUtrh-l. FOR SALE - Buffet. ranrr $1 .. Smg, FOR SAI.E mil.' imrih of M,, nrw Lengerich FOB SALE \. Burk Elevator. dels toil,!) !ldS£k^^En! phone 497. FOR SALE- Chicks, hatching, shire, road 4 ' FOB SALE- L '::u alfalfa JHK schen. FOB Stl.E t FOBE S AI.I i I'- ,i >i > : mires Hw .:ri-y 1 :r:r. , Ail.l ill- LM One 1929 c eil'". H ;i and 1; ■ 1 Four niiax- w - ' ■ BAI'MGART.X'i.:. > I! -!’ W-lH Blood : -■> '! 1: ' ki ' ly si le< i' il. breeds. Also l.aii'.nng i eggs by a >!'■ ' or. Price , nor Hatchery. a.af. :> south Monroe Bon to 4. Biilftr,.; O ! BABY < iil< l<> parent sto< 1 'b u Stale Lice S’ ■ r.u.'i.iiy plan. By stai" "4 ’ ary. Fully g'.ia ' "• v ing, Craigvillel'b" 1 11’ 1 ■ FOB SALE I’lXl7 nnh wta’O $2 each. Suitable for 1 wheels. New and used ,ires L 'Sizes. Porter Tne Co.. 341 Chester S'. I” ' k3 M I FOR SALE Two 1" 2" i Deering. 1 ■l’>hn ■ I One F-12 Farmall T«" n, ‘ w son tractors. On - used - tractor. Six old F"tdson tnuiorW Two 2-row corn plows One HMM mermill and engim X’ " alld t'Tractor Parts. Sei 01l ”« on display. Ciaigville garage O . Craigville M 'FOR SALE—Seed ( 'orn. Try MB ert's late or ear'y seed. Guaranty : to grow. Win. IL: FOR SALE—Used nlai h " iery J McCormick Dein ing Store. tur, Indiana: C4O 2 b»i tonal truck: 1% ton 1934 | truck with stock rack and 8 bed; F-12 Farina" tractor I cultivators; F-30 I annal • J with tractors; 10x3" 1 v . k 1 Deering tractor; 15x:t" M< • ’Deering traitor; F'2 lal 11 o|ie 1 mower; set heavy h»in • ' year old; 12-ft Olivet ‘. j horse disk, all sizes. ’ ' Coni planters; 4 sing e io | cultivators; 6-ft. ’ 6-rt. McCormick bindet. ■ spreaders; 3 tractor pl"'' 8 ; . son tractors; 2 plain t- 1 '"- ((( 2 J. D. 2-row i movers; 2 sulky plows, - I plows. __ . ( —o ~~ Markets At A Glance Stocks: higher in light Bonds: irregularly lower. government Issues highe'Curb stocks: firm. i Chicago stocks; irregular. Foreign exchange: lower. Hen franc weatk. r ! Cotton: 10 to 23 pm»' B 0 Grains: fractionally high . Chicago livestock: hogs tie weak, sheep steady Rubber: 50 to 64 po.uts Silver bar at New 4oik. 1 46% cento a Die ounce.
