Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 28 May 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
NOTH K OF MKFTIMS OF ADAMI tIoIATI BOA KU OF HKVIKW Notice is hereby liven that the County Board of Review of Adams County, State of Indiana, will meet at 10:00 o'cloek In the forenoon, Monday. June 7th, 1937, the same being the first Monday In June of ihle year, at the Auditor's Office in the Court House, for the following' purposes: I. To hear complaints of any owner of personal property, except such property as Is originally assessed; by the State Board of Tux Commissioners. 3. To hear complaints concerning the assessment of real estate specially assessed In 193 f ana assessment* on aiidllloital Improvement*. 3. To equalise the valuation and assessment of property and taxable* made by tne assessing officers subsequent to March 1, 1937. 4. To equalise the valuations made by the assessors, either by adding to or deducting therefrom such sums as may I s necessary to fix assessments at the true cash value of property. 5. To review all assessments and to Inquire as to the valuations of the carious classes of property or parts thereof In the several township* and di sions of the county. S. To make such changes in assessments, whether byway of increase or deereac • in the valuation of the various classes of property, as may be necessary to equalise the same in or between the townships or any taxing unit. 7. To determine rate per cent to be added or deducted in order to make a Just and equitable equilization in the several townships and taxing units so as to conform throughout the county to a just and equitable standard. X. To add omitted property In all necessary cases. 9. To increase the valuation of omitted property when necessary as made by the assessors. 10. To correct errors in the names of persons and n the description of property and i.» the valuation and assessor t of property upon the assessment list. 11. To correct any list or valuation as may be dee med proper. 12. To correct any list or valuation jof any property in such manner as will in the judgim it of the Board of ,-nJfaview make the valuation thereof — just and equal. — 13. To add to ♦' assessment list j the names o' pe > s, the value of — personal property ; id the descrip,tign and value of real estate liable 'to»as«esr t but omitted from the w listsj 14. To assess the capital stock and • franchises of all domestic corpora- ** tions except suvli as are valued and • assessed by the State Board of Tax Commissioner!. i w la. To consider and act upon recommendations made by the county assessor. 16. To do or cause to be done whatever else may be necessary tol do to make all returns of assessment lists and all valuations in compli-| ance with the provisions of the taxing laws. • The County Board of Review is also subject to be reconvened in spe,cial session to meet on the first Tuesday in August to consider the certified report and information re- ** gardlng the inequality or lark of • uniformity of assessments in this “ county as may be presented to said " 'Board by the State Board of Tax toumnissloners. .Ml to be done to eq tallzetion and assessments of pr perty and taxable* in said county for taxes for the.current year and of winch all property owners 1 1 d taxpayers are • required to take due notice. In Witness Whereof I, John W. 1 Tyndall, Auditor < Adams County, State of Indiana, ba’ . hereunto as- • fixed my hand and he seal of the Board of Como ners of said t county, this 21st of May, 1937. Joh W. Tyndall Auditor Adams County, Indiana.l May 21-2*l
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT; OF ESTATE NO. 2.910 Notice is hereby given to the 1 creditors, heirs and legatees of Benjamin 11. Smith, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 10th day of June. 1937, and show cause, if any, why the 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 re- . ceive their distributive shares. , First Bank of Berne Administrator de bonis non Deentur, Indiana, May 20, 1937. Henry B. Heller, Attorneys May 21-28 — NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT ' OF ESTATE NO. 3301 Notice is hereby given to the) creditors, heirs and legatees of Charles C. Arnold, deceased, to appetrr in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, on the 18th day of May. 1937, and show cause if , .nay. why the Final Settlement Ar. counts 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 distributive shares. Noah Arnold. Administrator Decatur, Indiana. May 20th 1937. .Milton C. Merling, Attorney. May 21-28 0 — Trade in a Good Town — Decatur N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined ■ Glasses Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Teiephona 116. ; HOURS *IBO to 11:80 12:30 to 5:00 I GILLEITE TIRES • : ALL SIZES. -Liberal trade-in allowance.! PORTER TIRE CO. 341 Winchester Phone 1289 i
TH!S:i:I,E THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE JUDGE AND THE JURY" By SEGAR T?S U rS?.'^^Sy-. & ' Ve .\ row. PCsPOOtAHE tMXES 'A I* HAN WHO \ .Z J | SER HONOR JViNT TU.'COT |hC6 SORE GIVING SOO FITS?] I /PST-SOO HWEHT "\ F . KISVXTV / 7* ’ / HK.o iinCK- 15KUNK J/ ’ SOCK A NOT BE , \(A FW COURT s' ‘ \t — / / / I —s< .^/} A HlhAf/xbISTURBED J ' * fT) \ / .6 "w x/" 7 c. 7 | a jUll&rl / / J MM Ms A .' 1 ji p>XXr?3taß imim will <Mii =7 =.( I '-—— m ' W St—““ *■ U-- ■ ,=J -Lu J l-l , 1K?ZII 1 w ILL ;
Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questioner Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ 1. What Is a rip-tide? 3. How did the name of Great Smoky Mountains originate? 3. In which standard time sone Is the city of Cleveland, Ohio? 4. In which country te the state of Campeche? 5. Who wae Charles Hartford Lloyd ? 6. Name the large city In Cook County, 111. 7. Who wrote the novel, "Hard Cash?” 8. Name the strait that separates Greenland from the North American continent. 9. Name the most famous tenor of modern tlmee. 10. What is the rate of letter postage to England?
COURT HOUSE Case Dismissed The plaintiff dismissed the suit for account brought by the Barrett Company against N. B. Putman company. The suit was venued here from Allen county. Answer Filed An answer in general denial was fik>d by the defendant in the divorce action brought by Ora D. Baker against Anna Baker. A cross complaint was filed by the defendant. The case was venued here from
Dr. Eugene Fields Dentist Nitrous-Oxid-Gas Anesthesia X-Ray 127 N. 3rd st. Phone 56
WANTED Rags, Magazines, Newspapers, Scrap Iron, Old Auto Radiators, Batteries, Copper. Brass, Aluminum, and all grades of scrap metals. We buy hides, wool, sheep pelts, the year round. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 710 W. Monroe st. Phone 442
For A Pleasant Week-end, See Us Before You Lea Ye. LUBRICATION WASHING OILS GASOLINE MAPS FUNNIES RUNYON GULF SERVICE Monroe at 4th Phone 10
S P R A G KJ E SPECIALS HASSOCKSSLOO ROUND MIRRORS $1.25 Card Tables, the strong kindsl.7s Lovely Inner Spring* Mattressessl2.so Two 9x12 Belgian Oriental Rugss3s.oo each SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 S. Second St. Phone 199 “The Better Home Store”
Wells county. Real Estate Transfers Edward D. Engeler et ux to Gulf Refining Co., in-Jots 224 and 225 in Decatur for JI. John Baker et ux to Ira Stuckey, part of In-lot 351 !n Decatur for $1Marriage Licenses Curtis Ruprlght, 25, Ossian, route one, General Electric employe to Gertrude Wente, 23. Decatur, route one, General Electric employe. o— — — Treble - news *i Shackley an<j Jean ing spent Wednesday morning visiting Donald and William Shady. Mrs. Luther Arnold called on Mrs. Orville Heller, Thursday afternoon
CHAPTER XV During the weeks following ths first of the year Jonathan grew to look upon a northern winter with genuine respect Old timers assured him it was the worst winter in a number of years and he could well believe them, going out upon streets which were smoothly sheeted in glare ice. He told himself grimly that it was an ill winter which blew the doctors no good, for he was having plenty of work. ’Flu, pneumonia, accidents—a day hardly passed that did not bring a sprained ankle, a fractured leg, a bad bruise or a genera) shake-up. His practice was not always permanently increased by the fact that people often fell down at his very doorstep, but it grew steadily, if not dramatically. He had been called to the Sutton house shortly after Christmas to attend the ex-state senator who was suffering from over-eating. That formidable gentleman seemed much less so when viewed prone and deflated, surrounded by polished bedposts, pillows, down quilts and canopies. Mrs. Sutton wrung her hands and pealed the bell for the servants alternately, and whispered to Jonathan in the hall that there wasn’t any use prescribing “nasty medicine” for her husband or ordering a meagre diet as hejust wouldn’t obey orders and if she grew insistent, he would probably throw a hot water bag at her. Jonathan listened, endeavoring to maintain a professional gravity and eventually sent to the hospital for a couple of strong-minded nurses, not too young, who would not, he devoutly hoped, be intimidated by the prestige of their employer. The senator suffered, and not in «tience. Cured, however, of his ailment he was loud in his praise* of Jonathan who had managed someh<wv to be both firm and tactful. And this providential laying low of the mighty brought patients t.i the Kimber door, patients to whom Doctor B al lard had never sent a bill. “I’m getting on,” he told Rose gaily orrthe day after Mrs. Livingston, ample, white-haired and influential, bad sent for him regarding her arthritis, and Rose nodded and told him how glad she was. She was not seeing him as often as in the earlier days. He was busy, his calls took him out at all hours and in all weather. The main highways were being kept open by snow ploughs to a great extent but the less used roans were heaped high with drifts and there were days when Jonathan left the little car in the garage and hired a horse and cutter at a livery stable. On such occasions, muffled in overcoat and fur toque and feeling the warmth of the soapstone Evelina insisted on putting under the buffalo robe, he felt that he had managed to go back a generation, and he liked the sensation. Rose was having her own difficulties which sometimes she discussed with him but more often kept to herself. Larry Dexter had entered school shortly after Thanksgiving. Rose remembered him as a small, .noisy boy tearing about the residential streets, picking quarrels with his playmates, breaking windows and getting himself generally disliked. Now he had shot up physically past all recognition. He was taller than his brother, heavier, and a good deal handsomer. Later, no doubt, his features would thicken as his brother’s were beginning to, and would settle into a prototype of his father. But now there was merely the foreshadowing of this, in the thrust of the jaw, and he had wicked, attractive dark eyes and a consciously ingenuous grin. He was eighteen, a full year older than the average member of the junior class. At faculty meetings he was not much discussed, and never under the eagle eye and sharp ears of Mr. Martin, the principal, but whenever two or three of his teachers gathered informally together, his name was apt to come into ths conversation. Rogers, the tali, thin, nervous man who taught mathematics.
DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1937.
Mrs. I*ena Sherlock and Gretrudo Hoffman of Fort Wayne wore the 1 guests of the latter’s parents. Mr. > and Mrs. Milton Hoffman Mrs. Glen Straub and daughter Marie visited Mrs. June Shackley, Thursday. 1 verna Werling of Indianapolis te spending the week as the guest of , her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Werling. Lorine and Erana Kirchner epent Monday evening with Mrs. Frank Rugate and daughter Blanche. Mr. and Mrs. F. Homemeler of Fort Wayne were the guests of Mrs. Catherine Llnnemeier. Rudolph Lin- ! nemeier and Martin Bentx. Sunday. Mrs. Henry Miller called on Mrs. Geo. Bultemeder, Thursday afternoon-. Mrs. Frank Spade of Peterson and Mrs. R Llechty of Celina, Ohio
had been heard to remark that a good horsewhipping would do a certain young man all the good in the world, in which Rosa was forced to agree. Larry was obviously much more sophisticated than the other boys in nis, or the senior, class. Not that the average small town boy wasn't sophisticated, with the wisdom of his generation, a generation informed in life by the printing presses and the motion picture theatre, and learning a good deal from experience as well, with fast cars available, which can eat up miles and so lessen the distance between town and city. But Larry’s wisdom was of a sleeker, more habituated, less routine type. He had not been in class six weeks before he was its acknowledged leader; and he hadn’t been in class two days when two girls blossomed out into redder lipstick and three in more elaborate permanents. “He’s plain dumb," remarked Margaret Smith, who had him in chemistry, and Rose nodded. As she had him in English literature she was perfectly agreed. Learning was not Larry’s forte, he was no stud’ll. He’d graduate—if he d'd gradiwte—at nineteen . . . and unashamed. And whether or not he would be able to go to college was another matter Os course, he might tutor summers, providing his idiotic mother did not drag him off to Europe again “for his health.” But Rose’s new preoccupation with young Larry Dexter had very little to do with his scholastic standing. She could take his deficiencies in her stride, laugh or frown in privacy over his sloppy, haphazard test papers and listen to his utterly unapologetic lack of preparation in class. It was his attitude toward herself which disturbed her. He had entered school unwillingly enough, quite aware that about eight hundred pupils and their teachers knew why he had returned to Riverport. He hadn’t expected that the nervous breakdown with which his doting maternal parent had endowed him had been very convincing. But, encountering Rose that very first day he beamed upon her cheerfully from the front row with an expression of gratified astonishment. Rose was fairly accustomed to this. She was a perfectly normal girl and she had been informed often enough that she was a very pretty one as well. If no one else had ever told her, she had merely to look in the mirror and confirm her own pleasant suspicions. She had been as popular as any girl during her own school and university days and Bill Lynd and Jonathan Kimber were not the only men in town who appreciated her charms ... and told her so—not that Jonathan had ever really told her so, she thought, sighing, not in so many words. Moreover, her brief teaching experience had taught her a number of things; and she had learned that youthful pupils are prone to sudden fervent enthusiasms. To be sure, there were no red apples on her desk now, in season; no wilting field flowers. But it was a legend in the school that during Christmas recess a sophmore and a freshman had fought a bloody battle because the freshman had stated that he, for one, didn’t think that Helen of Troy had greatly resembled Miss Ward. Rose could count on loyalty and devotion from the majority of her pupils. Some of the younger, susceptible girls giggled and blushed when she spoke to them, sent her valentines and left boxes of candy on her doorstep and otherwise behaved in the normal way of little fourteen year olds whose attentions have not yet 'jeen deflected into the inevitable pa&s. And one gangling boy who walked to School three miles every day of his life and whom she had once rescued from a foolish, harmless scrape had told her, with difficulty and a wildly working Adam’s apple that she was his ideal. Yet all this had not quite prepared her for Larry Dexter. He waited for her every day outside of school in his car and offered to drive her home. The first few times she accepted amiably, and then, on once overhearing a whis-
>' visited Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dilling i and family, Thursday. , I M;ss Bernet a Hoffman's Sunday School class met at her home Tuee- • day evening to celebrate her birth- , day anniversary. Various games were enjoyed and later during the i evening a welner and marshmallow I roast was enjoyed by the honored , guest and members of her Sunday school class. The honored guest re- , ceived many lovely gifts. Those pre- : sent were, Donald and Jean Werl- | ing, Darrell Shackley. Donald Shady ’ Rodney and Phyllis Dilling and Peggy Sulkvan. .i o — Purse Snatched; Cap Grabbed Cleveland (U.R>— It was hardly a fair exchange, but Mrs. Jule GoodI man got some satisfaction out of , grabbing a cap from the head of the youth who snatched her purse.
nered “Teacher’s Pet!" in a singularly unpleasant tone from a group of seniors standing near the car, had afterwards refused. She thought of an eighteen year old boy as a child growing up. She could not, however, think of Larry as a child. In the first place anything childish in his appearance had long since disappeared and his manner was the reverse of juvenile. In his own phrase, he had been around, he had gone places, seen things and done things and did not consider himself a school boy and it was borne in upon Rose Ward that a school boy was the last thing in the world he eould claim to be, despite the fact that he was going to school, the oldest, and perhaps the worst, student in his class. He was, she admitted to herself, amusing enough; a wise-cracker, with a gift of arrogance and a certain charm. But one day in February when he waited for her, asking humbly enough if he could drop around to see her that evening, to talk over something he did not quite grasp in his work, she found herself at a loss for an easy reply. He was not the first pupil who had asked this of her, and she had always been glad to tell his predecessors to come, without hesitation. But now, after an imperceptible delay, she shook herself slightly and replied, smiling, “Why, of course, Larry.” Ridiculous, just because hir eyes literally danced in his head, and his full, pleasure-loving mouth had curved to a smile the reverse of respectful, that she should feel he was using the class work as an excuse. It was obvious that that was exactly- what he had done, for when evening came and his car slithered through ice and snow to a stop before her door and he romped in, in his absurd coonskin coat, apd made himself completely at home, he was hard put to it to find exactly what had puzzled him in his lessons. “But what was it, Larry—?• He looked at her. She wore a little dark red woolen dress and her eyes and cheeks were bright. He said, laughing, "Honest, Miss Ward, I’ve forgotten....”
“But—” He said easily, “I had to have an excuse, didn't I . ..?” She blessed the ring at the door which heralded Bill Lynd. Larry didn’t stay long after Bill arrived. He regarded him sullenly and wm so patently rude that Rose was alarmed. Bill, under his easy-going exterior, had a more than adequate temper. After Larry had gone Bill asked, “What did that little beast want?” “To talk about Chaucer,” Rose refilied, laughing, “and he's not very ittle.” “No, he’s not. Too darned big! Chaucer, sez you?” “Sez me,” agreed the Riverport instructor of English Literature. “He’s a bad egg,” commented Bill after a moment, “it’s a pity he ever came back here. Phil’s a saint compared to that kid....” “That’s a little overdrawn, isn't it?” “No. Phil’s crazy, of course, no manners, like all that tribe of tophats, drinks too much, thinks that he —together with the Suttons, owns the world. But he’s a good business man, strange to relate; and has some fairly decent traits,” argued Bill, astonished at his own magnanimity, “but this youngster’s just no good. If you ever have any trouble with him—” “Oh, but I won’t.” Rose declared with a confidence she was far from feeling. Bill looked at her keenly. He said, “Look here, Rose, you’re twentyfour. Larry Dexter’s eighteen. That sounds like a gap, doesn’t it .. . ? *Well, it isn’t. He’s not a Riverport eighteen, you know. I’ve heard things about him. . . .” He frowned. Then he said, contentedly, “Nice being here. Cold as the d*’ outside.” (To be continued) Capyricht by ItUh Baldwin. DUtribuUd by Kin« Bmlufm Syndicate, la*
Classified, Business Cards, Notices
• RATES Ona Time—Minimum charge of 25c for 20 worda or less. Over 20 worda, 1!4« per word Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 worda or less. Over 20 worda 2c per word for the two timesThree Tlme»-Minimum charge of 50c for 20 worda or loes. Over 20 worda 2'/ s c per word for the three tlmee. | Carde of Thanke 35c I | Obituaries and verses sl-00 J FOR SALE FOR SALE — Singer sewing machines and vacuum cleaners, new and used. Repairs for all makes. Hemstitching while you wait. Complete eelection Nuns boilproof embroidery floss. Stamped goods. Marc-Saul Shop, 303 W. Monroe, Phone 737.10V30tx FOR SALE—Hoosier range stove; Oak buffet, pump jack; Majestic radio; metal beds. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson St. 124-ts 40 acres southwest of Decatur, known as Coffee farm will be sold May 29 between 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. by Ferd L. Litterer at Fruchte and Litterer oflice.l2(>-2t FOR SALE—Early and late yellow resistant cabbage. Yams, garden and flower plants. Special price per hundred. 1127 West Monroe. 12G-2t FOR SALE—Two John Deere tractors with corn plows; two new type Fordson tractors: six used Fordson tractors; two 10-20 McCormick Deering tractors: three tworow corn plows; one 12-inch tractor plow. Special prices on cultipackers and hoes; one clover httller; one threshing machine. See the new Oliver on display. Craigville Garage. 124-4tx FOR SALE —4O acres southwest Decatur, known as Coffee farm. To be sold 10 a.m. to 4 p in., May 29. Ferd L. Litterer, Com. 125t3x FOR SALE—Dunfield seed beans. 100% growth. Sylvester Birch. 3 miles South, 314 miles East of Monroe. 125t3x
JUST ARRIVED! New Model Westinghouse Electric Range on display. Stults Home Appliance Store. 125t3 FOR SALE — New Westinghouse Console Radio, priced to move quiefc. Also, Nesco Saft-e-matic gasoline pressure stove. Stults Home Appliance Store, Headquarters for Stewart-Warner Refrigerators. 125t3 FOR SALE -20-40 Rumley tractor. John Deere general purpose tractor. Fordsn tractor, all ready for work, A-l condtiion. Used 3-row cultivator and other used machinery. E. J. R. Implement Co., Willshire, Ohio. 126-3tx FOR SALE —Mattresses and Bed Springs. Large number of innerspring and felt mattresses. Also bed springs of all kinds, selling from $6.95 to $39.50. Liberal trade in allowance for your old spring or mattress. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. Second St., Phone 199. 126-3 t FOR SALE — Sciota and Dunfield soybeans, germination 98% plus. L. A. Ripley, Monroe, Ind., R. R. 1. 26-2S-29-J. 2 FOR SALE — Early Yellow Dent seed corn, ideal variety for late planting. Matures 85 90 days on normal seasons. All select ears from fields yielding 70 bu. per acre. Fire-dried on slotted floors. High germination, strong vitality guaranteed. F. P. Hoopengardner, Ossian, Ind. Ossian phone. Farm located five miles north, one west of Tocsin. 127-2tx FOR SALE —Hereford Cattle; 140 steer calves; 120 yearlings; 76 heifers. T. B. tested, well bred. Number good horses. Charles Mathies, Fairfield, lowa. 127-2tx FOR SALE — Garden and flower plants at reduced prices. William Strahm, 339 North 9th St. FOR SALE —General purpose work mare. Smooth mouth, sound, good worker, $75. Harry Crownover, I>4 miles west Pleasant Mills. Phone 9923. 127-3tx
FOR SALE -Cabbage, and tomato [ plants, 25c. Evergreen sweet i early bantam seed corn. Seed, eating potatoes. Phone 5424, Frank Hoffman, Belmont road. 126-3tx FOR SALE-1932 Model B. Ford coupe, recently painted, good . tires. Paul Germann. phone 863-E 4Mi miles west on 234.- 125-Htx FUR SALE—AII kinds of plants James E. Ward. i tx FOR SALE Used bed room suites; like new; used six months; bed, I dresser, and chest; formerly sold for SBO. Our price $45. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 127-3 t O—WANTED WANTED — Loans on improved farms; Eastern money; long terms; low rates. French Quinn. 125 W&F ts Wanted: — Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machinery. Underwear, curtains, silks Will pay 4c per ib. Daily Democrat Co. WANTED —Light and heavy hauling. We also have dump trucks. Prices reasonable. Sam & Elmer Bailer, Phone 1135. 125-3tx o— MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS — Furniture repaired, upholstered or refinished at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. 145 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 105-30 t 1 o NOTICE I My residence and office is now i located at 430 N. sth St. Dr. C. V- Connell lOStf o— FOR RENT ' FOR RENT —Five room apartment with bath. Unfurnished. Phone : 3 55. 125g3t o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Omlor, 512 North Third street, are the parents of a baby boy born Thursday afternoon at 1 o’clock. The baby weighed eight and three-fourths pounds at birth and has not been named. O — Youthful Killers Are Found (guilty Jersey City, N. J. May !B—tT’P) [ — Gladys Macknight, 17-year-old high school girl, and her former sweetheart, Donald Wightman, 19, accepted gratefully today a prison term for the hatchet murder of her mother. A jury saved them from the electric chair by reutrmng a verdict of second degree murder which carries a maximum sentence of 30 years and a minimum of one year. It deliberated only three hours. o — Yale Mothers Universities New Haven, Conn.— ,<U.R) —First preseidents for 18 colleges and universifies, from Princeton in 1747, to the University of Chicago in 1891, were provided by Yale University. ♦ O TODAY'S COMMON ERROR I Never say, “Senator Brown. | who we expected to support | the bill, voted against it;” say, j “whom we expected.” ♦ — ♦ DR. RAY STINGELY DENTIST Rooms 1 and 2, K. of C. Bldg. Phone 240 Office Hours: 8 to 12 -1 to 5 Office closed all day Wednesday. Thoughts of Spring Suggest Full line of Troy gliders, spring base chairs for porches, steamer chairs for lawn or porch. SPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY 9x12 FELT BASE and CONGOLEUM RUGS s4’9o “J ZWICK’S
markem! C,M 11 CWWH 1,,. No 1,118 received | 111(1 l-’n lbs WM to 140 lb, iso t" 220 lb ß ‘ to 300 lb, 03 ’o 350 lb, and up Roughs s l"ing lamb, flipped lambs whcat !| .vv i-, A f® « 01d ■ I MN " t , I ' INDIANAPOLIS Indianapolis, Livestock: ' WE Hi’S receipts, i.ijk; q-.-acy u top. fll.’iu on rhuee steady ilO.bo; Ibu-joti lbs i'"*$11.15; 100-lfu ib, fattie, rai'ti. 7 ’ ally Steady on 4 |; ilgllt -’. ■ IS. 311.?;, ings. sl7, H and nndium ■ niter grades. , I'ulls. s'j.j ; ! down; top, $9. Sheep. 300: market aitiv. ; und-rn.’. mi shorn lambs ot< 1- classes absent FORT WAYNE LIVEfIH Fort Wayne, Ind, lajjß Livestock: Hogs, steady; 5H ■ $11.45 25".:; Ite.. |U£ II > . $11.25; l’K>wii| 275-3 KO lbs.. 111.21; UK SH.oS. ItiO-ISO lb,,|ud • lbs. $10.55; 14'Ll) Jvl 130 140 lbs.. J 9.95; J» $9.-o, Inn-1.- lbs. IA Roughs. $9.75, stags,Hi , Cal ms. $A iambs. Ulf Mark-1 dosed Monday. CLEVELAND PHOM I ■ i .-v- l), May 1-| Produce: ’ Hutt, i. steady; ettn.ll dard, 33*xc. ' Eggs, steady; extra pi 1 21 c; extra firsts, »!jrJ receipts, IS'-je. Live poultry, strt! heavy. ISe: dueb. 7«sl and up. 17c; small Ik4 Potatoes, lOtl-lb. bap. 1.1 1, Idaho, F 15 $3.35. I*l ■ $2.35; California bull ■ $2.5"-$2.60 iwi-lb. bg; * 1 Triumphs. $2-$2.15 l**i Alabama ('obbiers, 12-W ana Red washed, U& : ' EAST BUFFALO LIVEi® East Buffalo, N. Lil ' (U.PJ Livestock: j Hogs, receipts, Ml • $11.5«-SIL6S; spariniH ■ good and choice 1»»" ' run. held above SL, tW ; sows. 39.50 310. Cattle, receipts, SW; ■ weak; fat cows. ter and cutter cows. turn bulls. $6.35-sf-ii-Calves, receipts, 3«0; * hive, steady; good am | mainly $lO- — Sheep, receipts. IM ’ lambs, 25r to 35c lo* er ' choice, $10; o' he ™ * from $9; choice 7lHs‘ -’ springers. SIL ® springers, sl2-SI3.W, $5.50. local GRAIN BURK ELEVATOR# Corrected May # I No. 1 Wheat. 60 lbs,W J i No. 2 Wheat, etc— "J i Soya Beans. No- 2 : New No. 4 Yellow CoM ! Rye - central Soya Bea Po. Stocks, irregular!! dull. nJ. Bonds, irregular, ment issues Curb stocks. trr« dealings. na rro*lf Chicago s ,ockß 10t «» Foreign exchang j lation to the dollarCotton, steadyGrains lower,a } off more than 3 Chicago cattle steady, 5 n „jjtsi ,lS Rubber 16 to 18
