Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 21 August 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
f Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. * * 1. In which of Shakespeares plays is Fluellen a humorous character? 2. Os which country is Tamaulipas a state? 3. In which European city is the famous street Drury Lane? 4. Who was George Whiting Flagg? 5. How is suite, meaning a set of furniture, pronounced? 6. In medicine, what is an emetic? 7. What position did Joe E. Brown play on the baseball team in the motion picture, “Elmer the TODAY'S COMMON ERROR | Never say, “A man whom I | know was influential spoke in |i my favor,’’ say, “who (I know) | was influential.” ♦ w
I.IRRBRV FORM 'NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the Matter of Determining the Tax Rates foi- certain purposes by the Library Board Before the Library Board of Decatur, Adams County. Indiana. N<M4ee is hereby given the taxpayers of Decatur and Washington Township, Adams County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality, at their regular meeting pla*e, on the seventh day of September, 1937, will consider the following budget: Ul DGET CL ISSIFICATIO* 1. ServirrM Personal 11. Salary Librarian - I 900.00 12. Salary Assistants _ 200.0 u 13. Wages of Janitors and others 45v.00 14. Other Compensation * noije 3. Services, Contractual tl. Communication and transportation 60.00 82. Heat, Light, Power and Water 400.00 C 3. Printing and Advertising l 84. Repairs 150.00 85. Services other contractual none • 3. Mipplien BL Office-. 30.00 32. Other Supplies ~ 100.00 4. Material 41. Building .. _ none 44. General n-oie 45. n<’iiv 5. Current ( 61. Insurance Premiums „ 110.00 52. Rents n ”ie 03. Tax and Assessments " 54. ....... none «. Properties 71. Building .. none ; j 2. Equipment none 73. Books 1.325.00 . TOTAL t .>3,775.00 I ESTIMATE OF LIBRARY Fl AD TO BE RAISED Funds Required For Expcumcn To Oecember glat of Coming Year • 1. Total Budget Estimate for Incoming year 1938 >3,775.00 • 2. Necessary expenditures to be made from appro- « priations unexpended July 31st of present year 1937 none , 3. Additional appropriations necessary to be made i August Ist to December 31st of present year . 1,628.75 1 • 4. Outstanding temporary loans to be paid before t December 31st of present year—not included in • lines 2 or 3 none .5 Total funds required (Add lines 1,2, 3 and 4) 5,403.75 .Funds On Hand To Br Received From Source** Other Than Proposed Tax Levy 6. Actual balance, July 31st of present year (5 mo.) .... 2,178.69 7. Taxes to be collected, present year (December settlement (5 Mo.) 1,312.40 t 8. Miscellaneous Revenue to be received August Ist of present year to December 31st of incoming year (Schedule on file in office of Library Board): .. (a) Special Taxes (Intangibles) —•(b) Fees and all other revenues (F!ne*> none .9. Total funds (Add lines 6,7, . 3,490.09 10. NET AMOUNT TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31st OF INCOMING YEAR (Deduct _ -line 9 from line 5) ... . 1,913.66 JU. Operating Balance (Not in excess of expense Jan. Ist to June 30, less miscellaneous revenue -for same period 1,500.00 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY TAX LEVY (Add line 10 and 11) >3,413.66 PROPOSED LEVIES A’et Taxable Property (a) Decatur-Root ) (b) Decatur-Washington) $4,710,913.00 - (c) Washington Township 2,198,286.00 | Aa me of Fund Levy on Property Amt. to he rained j Library (a) Decatur-Root 6) (b) Decatur-Washington 6) >2,84 4.54 (c) Washington Township 3 659.48 Comparative Statement of Tnxen Collected and to he Collected To Be • Collected i Fund* Collected IBBS 193(1 1937 K«K Tor Library >2,611.84 >2,638.53 >2,677.22 33,504.02 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined, ten or more taxpayers feeling aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final action thereon, by filing a petition therefore with the County Auditor not later than the fourth Monday of September, and then the Stat* Board will fix a date ■of hearing in this county. Dated August 18, 1937 JOHN R. PARRISH, Secretary AUGUST 21—28 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■l Free Lime I For Your Farms I Liming your soil is a highly profitable investment. On acid soil lime is more import- * ant than fertilizer and in any case fertilizer - will give better returns after the land is limed. For several days starting Tuesday, Aug. 24, The Central Sugar Company will give away lime to those wishing it. A drag-line loader will also load the lime without cost. Central Sugar Co., Inc. Decatur, Indiana
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“A GERM OF AN IDEA” By SEGAR vsy S- 7 iff fl 7\ r 1 rfi’ JwSk /■■H. f. u/v%> W i rl <.. TaKLk-t 4u.’^F) —/ yh • v '■!• CX 6 , ■7 ' ' “i —•ffYVwl x’ -- -hit .. “- ' I ’. Ul ini ( Y,n a •;• j.;/-f ;
, Great?” 8. Which letter of the English alphabet Is most used? 9. What is the name for the loose skin that hangs from the necks of turkeys? 10. From what sort of trees is bark obtained that is used in making quinine? — — —o SNAKES BECOME PETS FOR WORK AS RAT KILLERS Clarendon, Tex. —■' (UP) — The I Molesworth ranch near Clarendon, once noted for a horde of vicious rate, now boasts two pet snakes, the destroyers of the rats. ■ J. W. Molesworth, owner of the ■ ranch camp, said the snakes first were noticed about the ranch camp two months ago when the house was overrun with rats. “We made pets of them, allowing the snakes to sleep under empty bunks during the day and range about the room at night.” the ranch ■owner said. “Our sleep often Is interrupted |by a thud followed by terrified squeals and brief struggles. Next
morning we find two gored snakes and fewer rats,” he continued. "They are getting tatter and seem to wear a “thanks for the chuck expression’ after each night's feed- j lug." 0 DOG GOES PLACES AND MEETS PEOPLE Cleveland (U.R) Hans. 14-montbs old German Schnauzer, likes to go places and meet people. Since his pup days, Hans has I made it a habit to stroll the streets each morning saying, in } his own fashion, "good morning" to everybody he passes. Htns goes j to the courthouse and calls on
|"The Captive’Bßide'l | Zy BARRETT WILLOUGHBY *
CHAPTER XLIV "Coward?” Van was on his feet, his eyes blazing with anger and outrage into the green flame of hers. “Yesi Coward! Quitter! You’ve given up! You’ve—” • Little fool! You don’t know what you're talking aboutl You’ve never in your life—” “I know one thing!” Denny cut in, holding up her right hand on which the burn stood out, red and swollen. “If anything should happen to this, I wouldn't be fool enough to ruin my chances of recovery by drugging myself, day after day, with rum. I wouldn’t sit idle, railing at Fate, snarling at people who tried to help me. I’d be too proud to lie down and quit! I'd—l’d—” “Go ahead, Mrs. Bourne!” he prompted with sarcastic fury. “Don’t strangle yourself, boasting of your feminine courage. Go ahead and tell us just how one of your wisdom and fortitude would deal with such a problem!” ‘‘l will!” she flashed, taking a step toward him. “I’d get out-doors and take some exercise that would keep me from getting flabby as a halffilled balloon. And I’d begin to train my left hand. I’d work with it night and day. I’d never give up until I could make it do the work of my right. That’s what I, or any other ordinary woman, would do!” Van Cleve, after staring at her departing figure for an instant, slowly lifted his left hand and scanned it as if he were seeing it for the first time. When she reached her room, she was aghast at the way in which she had lost her head. She recalled Van’s pale face as he winced —del aher cruel, stinging words. Tier innate honesty confronted her with her glibness in telling him how he should handle his problem when she knew she had made an irreparable mess of managing her own. Then suddenly she flung herself down amcmg the cushions and all thought was blotted out in a passion of weeping. Her emotional storm spent itself after a time and she came back to a consciousness of something that filled her with mild wonder. The blizzard was still roaring with unabated fury about the walls, but she was no longer fighting it. In that mindless interval of tears, she had somehow yielded herself to it, merged herself with it in a kind of mystic unity that was now rewarding her with the first relaxation the had known for days. Later, when she went down to apologize to Van, she found him still in the card room. But the bottle of rum had disappeared. He sat before a table, meticulously, absorbedly drawing geometrical designs—with his left hand. * • • * The following Sunday morning, as Denny stood looking out the living-room window, the ding dong of the church bell came up sweetly through the falling snow. She felt a rush of sympathy for the missionary. She had never visited his church and had no intention of identifying herself with any of its activities, but now she decided she would break the monotony of the day by going down to the morning service. The second bell had just ceased ringing when she entered the tiny, barren vestibule. With hesitant steps she went on into the dim auditorium, her eyes taking in the hewn long wails, the windows thick with frost; the stove made of a gasoline drum, glowing red and sending out blasts of heat that scorched the face and left the back freezing; the portable organ quaintly wrapped in gray Hudson’s Bay blankets to keep out the cold. All the pews were depressingly empty except one where the Commander’s native servant and three bundled-up Indian women sat quietly, their dark eye« fixed on the altar behind the chancel. She did net know why she should be so touched at the sight cf the Commander, very erect behind the chancel, facing his meager congre-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1937.
county commissioners, several of the common pleas judges and other officials. Then he drops in at the Great Lakes exposition, walks a teti more main streets, | and then heads for home. His master is listed as Jerry ' Wolf, restauranteur. o BOWL OF GOLDFISH FLOWN ON 3,415-MILE JOURNEY — Miami. Fla. (U.R>-Goldfish have Joined the ranks of those who travel by air. Gen. Oscar R. Benavides, president of Peru, was responsible. He ordered that several dozen of the
gation like a naval officer on his bridge, his Church of England robes holding decorously aloof from his sturdy, moccasined ®fcet. But when his blue eyes met hers in a glad look of surprise and welcome, her own misted so that she could only vaguely see as she slipped into a pew. ’ He began the service, his clipped, confident British voice barking out the announcements as if—as Harp had said—he were snapping out orders to a turret crew. “Hymn Number 721!” She watched him swing down out of the chancel, march over'to the organ and seat himself before it, booting aside his robes to get his feet on the worn pedals. Like a small boy playing a piece, he concentrated on his hands, drawing preliminary chords from the stiff keys; chords thin and blurred, but somehow endowed with his own sureness. An emotional chill ran through her as his deep baritone took up the words: “Lead kindly light, amid th’ encircling gloom, Lead thou me on. The night is dark, and I am far from home . . .” The voices of the Indian wAnen, faint and high and sweetly uncertain, joined in; but after a bar or two died away, leaving the Commander singing alone. Denny attempted to help him but found herself unable to utter a note, because of a welling sense of tears in her throat. The Commander . . . far from home .. . dear and funny and splendidly gallant; asking no help from his kind, but carrying on alone against the ignorance and superstition and spiritual inertia of these natives for whom he had sacrificed so much. She heard little as the sermon the Commander preached in his almost empty church; for in her was awakening somethin g—elusive whtn she tried to name it—but higher and finer than anything she had ever felt before. It was an emotion compounded of many things —compassion for the Commander, for his flock, for every one in the world; and an impulse toward gracious, unselfish service; a determination to live up to that motto her father had caused to be carved across the mantel at River House—- “ Fortitude in Distress.” The spell was still upon her when, after the service, she invited the Commander home for lunch. And before she knew it, she was offering her services as organist every Sunday also promising to help him with his sewing class. Her high mood wore off, of course, almost before the Commander left the house, and she began to regret her impulsiveness. But to her surprise, as time went on she began to take a pride in, and derive a great deal of amusement from her work. • » « » St. Patrick’s morning, sunny and bright after a week of storm, found Honey-jo alone in her kitchen. Harp entered through she back door in an aura of fresh air. His quick glance flicked the chair where Boom was usually sitting and he brightened perceptibly when he found it empty. His eyes dwelt approvingly on the housekeeper while he rubbed his hands and sniffed the spicy air of the kitehen. “A swell day, Honey-Jo!" She nodded, tucking cinnamon, sugar, and a dab of butter into a round of dough. “The days are getting longer too—praise God 1 Spring can’t come any too soon for every one in this household,” she added cryptically. “How come?” "A blind man could see what’s going on in there!” She nodded toward the door that led to tha living room. “Oh, every one gets on edge when they’re penned up (Turing the winter. They haven’t started throwing the furniture yet, have they?” “It’s not tempers I’m talking about,” explained Honey-jo, vigorously rolling out a slab of dough. “It’s hearts. Ever since Rio got
finny creatures be shipped to him from the United States, a 3,416mile trip from Miami's International Pan-American Airport to Lima, Peru. YOUTH FORCED ENTRY, THEN ESTABLISHES STORE Sandwich, Mass. (U.R)-~lt does not cost a young man much to aet himself up In business here. An unidentified man broke into the unused restaurant of Deputy Sheriff William A. Windsor and hung out a sign “Candy, cigarettes antiques and eggs." He tried to sell a resident a bicycle—believed stolen—and fled before police arrived.
i tired of Derek, she’s been making I a sly play for the skipper. As for i Van Cleve —he may have been a : woman-hater when he landed here, i but now he's casting eyes at Miss , Denise, and she—” I “Now, now, Baby!” Harp came i over to the pastry table. “You’re imagining things. You—” , She stopped him with a lift of one : floury hand. “Listen! I’m merely , seeing off the end of my nose. Half , an hour ago, Miss Denise came running in here, pretty as a picture in her white Hudson’s Bay suit. She’s laughing, and her green eyes are sparkling like her father’s, when something pleased him. And all because the sun’s shining today. She gives me a hug and says she’s off for a hike on those snowshoes you made her for Christmas, and she wants a lunch. Then the doctor < pops in—following her. She wants him to come along, but he ain’t in the mood. ‘AU right, Lazy Bones,’ ( says she, gaylike. ‘Then hand over the chronometer—regulator of the ( sun, moon and stars!’ “He gives her his watch to wind and bends his head, looking at her and speaking low—thinking I can’t hear. ‘You are my regulator of the F sun, moon, and stars, Denny,' he says. Then Rio comes through the i door, yawning, ‘Ho, hum! So begins another dizzy day in the life of F an Arctic butterfly. What’ll we do today, fellow inmates?’ e “The doctor wants they should > play three-handed bridge—he seems 1 hell-bent to keep Miss Denise from y leaving the house—but Rio tells him her intellect is too feeble for that. a Miss Denise says, ‘Nothing could keep me indoors on a sunny day like c this!”’ Hbney-jo paused to turn and whip a pan of buns into the oven; and Harp drawled tolerantly, “Well, is o therw anything suspicious in that?” t' “Wait. Cap’n Rev comes in the p back way about then and invites ’em a all for a dog-team ride to the lava beds, which none of them have seen. When Rio and Doc refused to budge, I was thinking, ‘Praise be, the skipper, for once, will have his wife to himself!’ But at that, Miss Denise, who was anxious to get ouLdoors a minute before, now pats Cap’n Rev's arm and tells him in that sweet way " of hers, ‘Thank you, Reval. But e Van has just promised to show me how to play two-handed bridge.’ a Can you beat that, Harp?” b The foreman made a dismissing' a gesture, but Honey-jo forestalled b the remark he started to make. “The Captain, poor lamb, lost all his smiling looks. But the next minute he's 1 laughing. ‘Okay, you hothouse blossoms,’ he says. ‘l'll see you' all I later.’ And he flips his cap onto his L head and goes out whistling. But he can’t fool me. I know he thought it queer to see Miss Denise in her S outdoor outfit—planning to play ' two-handed bridge. Satan’s bells s and panther tracks! It does seem to me—” d “Now, Baby. Don’t start swear- £ ! ing. You just got the wrong slant on things. You’ve missed too many i boats to the Outside, Honey-jo. What . i you need is a change and a husband I i to look after you. A husband like ■ me, sugar-mouth. Are you going i to marry me, or not?” “I are not. Take your dirty paw ! ■ out of that bun.” Aw! He jerked the offending 1 member up, glared at the circle of dough adhering to its palm, and flung it off savagely. Then, with a ' sudden elaborate assumption of indifference, he went on: “Oh, very ; well. But remember—this is posij tively the last chance you’ll ever have to become Mrs. Harper I. Mac1 Farlane.” The housekeeper’s flour-white ' . hand indicated the door. ' | “Now, Sweetheart, that’s no way i He broke off, for the housekeeper ■ was beaming over her pan st some > one behind him. “Boom!” she exclaimed effusively. “Come in! You’re ! just in time to sample my buns!” (To be continued) Copyright by Barrett Willoughby C Distributed by King Features Syi*dleat«, Ina.
—— — Classified, Business Cards, Notices
* ♦ ; * RATES One Time —Minimum charge of 250 for 20 words or less. Ovsr 20 words, I!4c per word Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words 2c per word for the two times. Three Times—Minimum charge of 50c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words 2J/ a c fer word for the three times. I Cards of Thanks ———3* c | Obituaries and verses.... FOR SALE ■ FOR SALE —Late model 1936 Chevrolet master sedan, low mileage, like new. Priced for quick sale. Orel Gilliom, 6 miles west, 1 south ot Monroe. 196-3tx FOR SALE—Hereford feeding calves. direct from the ranch. Two miles south of Chattanooga, Ohio. S. A. Bollenbacher, Celina, Ohio, aug. 21 & 25* FOR SALE OR TRADE—B 2 acres, fine home near town. Cash down $1,500 and terms, or trade for city property. Real bargain. Phone SSK. It FOR SALE—Thirteen shoats. Av-, erage weight seventy pounds. Two brood sows. Mrs. Chalmer Miller, route 5, east of Decatur. -96-3tx o MISCELLANEOUS Fresh Potato Chips and assorted nuts daily at The Green Kettle CUSTOM CANNING every day except Saturday. Colter Canning Co., Hoagland. Ind. 194-3teod FOR RENT FOR RENT — Newly constructed home on Winchester St. Phone! 117 or 408 after 5 p. m. 197-3tx ; FOR RENT —Two room furnished ; apartment. First floor, private entrance. Call 1082. Inquire 410 N. Fifth St. It', ————————— FOR RENT — Sleeping rooms in I modern home. Large room suit-, able for one or two. Centrally lo- ■; cated. 304 N. 4th St. 198-3 t ' Card of Thanks In this manner we desire to thank our many friende and neighbors for their kindness and words of sympathy shown us during the illness and death ot our mother, Mrs. Sophia Johns. The Children. o ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Leon Kohne of 224 I South Fourth street are the par-1 ents of a boy baby, born Friday as- ' terncon at 3:17 o’clock at the Ad-, ams county memorial hospital. The baby weighed eeven pounds five i and one quarter ounces and has been named Dav-id Edward. o ♦ * Adams County Memorial Hospital ♦— ♦ Admitted this morn-ing: Harry I Stallbaum, Monroeville; Delores Soheumann. route 1, Hoagland; Sheila Murtaugh, 515 Nuttmn ave. Dismissed Friday; Bobby ®oknecht, 235 btoa-th Fifth street; Brice Sheets, route 2. Dismissed today: Miss Mildred M-!.’ler, Monroeville. Limberlost Electric Fence Co. ■ Geneva. Ind. Electric and Battery Fence Controls. Price $9.95 electric. $12.95 battery complete. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. HOURS 8:30 to 1130 12:30 to 5:00
WANTED WANTED —To buy safe. Inquire' at American Legion Home. ] lyo-3t i SALESMEN WANTED by well, I known oil company. Experience | unnecessary. No investment re Squired. Immediate steady Income for man with car. Write P. T. Webster, 648 Standard Bldg., Cleve j land. Ohio. ltx o—notice My residence and office is now i located at 430 North Fifth Street. 108-ts Dr. C. V. Connell. StatemenTTrCondltion of ths PIIOKMX Mt Tt Al. l ie FR AXCE COMPtXI Hartford, Connecticut 7S Elm Street On the 3ist Day of December, 1936 ARTHUII M COLLENS, President HARRY K JOHNSON, Secretary Amount of Capital paid . )utua , ASSETS OF Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Fres from any prior tn- | incumbrance) 3-,4 99,4 JV.-i Bonds & Stocks Own- ; ed (Market \alue) .. 109,2u1,151.41 Cash in Banks (On In- , t"::t» an “ Not On ln ' 4,890.460 6!> Accrued Securities (Ini terest & Rents, etc.) ’.,81.359.0i Other Securities Polivy laians .9,401,096.74 i Mortgage Loan Exp. to | be Redeemed .5,.655.9, ' Premiums & Accounts i due and.tn process ot I I collection 3, <Ol, • 46.10 jAccounts otherwise secured . • I Agents’ Balances (Suspense Account 683.13 i Total Gross Assets >210,170,982.66 I Deduct Assets Not Ad- ■ mitted I 288,411 03 Net Assets .. >209,882,551.63 j LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure I outstanding risks >183,286,427.05 I Losses due and unpaid 7,066.03 I Losses adjusted and not due None (Losses unadjusted and in suspense 830,893.85 I Bills and Accounts unpaid 70,701.90 Amount due and not due banks or other creditors None ! (Other Liabilities of the Company y . 17,955,869.18 I Total Liabilities 1Z0Z.t50,958.01 ; Capital 4 None (Surplus > 7,731,593.62 Total — >209,882,551.63 ' STATE OF INDIANA. (Office of Insurance Commissioner I, the undersigned. Insurance Com- I missioner of Indiana, hereby certify ■ that the above is a correct copy of j the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1936, as 1 shown by the original statement and I that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof, I hertuato | subscribe my name and affix my Dffi- 1 cial seal, this 9th day of July, 1937. I (Seal) GKO. H. NEWBAUER, : Insurance Commissioner. ; •If Mutual Company so state. Aug. 19—21. COURT HOUSE Laura Gifford to Guy B. Bess, i one half interest in in-lot 7 in Decatur for $75. Ralph E. Fuller et ux to Buri dette Custer et ux, part of in-lot ■ 517 in Decatur for S3BOO. Alma Bcvcn to Heber C. Dow- ( I en, 11.15 acres in St. Mary s twp. .for sl. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur Bppol.itme.it of Exri-utor Vo. S42S Notice is hereby given, That the | undersigned has been appointed Ex- i eeutor of the Estate of August Wat- I t< r. late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. J. Fred Fruchte, Executor Ferd 1.. I.ltterer. Atty. Aug. 20, 1937 Aug. 21-28 Sept. 4 XOTJCE TO TAX PAYERS OF 88 tSIHM.Tin TOBBSSHII* Notice is hereby given that the j trustee and advisory board at their I regular meeting to be held at Trustee Office in Decatur. Indiana September 7, 1937 at 7:30 p. M. will consnier additional appropriation of 6200.00 in Township Fund for legal I advertising and records and $350.00 I in Special School Fund for transpor- | tation of school children and school : supplies. John M. Doan, Trustee Aug. 21-28 SELLERS’ Kitchen of your dreams! Complete in every detail. We’re sure you have never dreamed of the wonderful conveniences Sellers furniture could give you. Visit our display soon and see for yourself. ZWICK’S
MARKET REPORIj I DAILY REPORT OF LOCaJ AND FOREIGN Brady’s Market for Decatur, Cratgvllle, Hoaqland and WilltiH Closed at 12 Noon. Corrected August 21 ® j ; No commission and rm Veals received every i 100 to 120 lbs {Jjj 120 to 140 lbs. 140 to 160 lbs 160 to 180 lbs. 180 to 230 lbs. 230 to 250 lbs. to 275 lbs 275 to 300 lbs 300 to 350 lbs 350 lbs., and up Roughs Vealers Spring lambs K Spring buck lambs | Yearling lambs . . FORE WAYNE LIVESTOCK® Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 21. I —Livestock. Hogs 5 to 30c low. 1 180 to 200 lbs. 160 to 180 lbs 200 to 225 lbs 225 to 250 lbs. * lEj 250 to 275 lbs. 275 to 300 lbs. 300 to 350 lbs. 150 to 160 lbs. j 140 to 150 lbs 11.45 i 100 to 140 lbs. 1 120 to 130 lbs. 100 to 120 lbs Roughs, $10.50; stags. $12.7 Calves. $11.50; lambs. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET I BURK ELEVATOR CO. I Corrected August 21. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better No. 2 Wheat, etc. New N'a. 2 Oate i Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow New No. 4 Yellow Corn CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 18 —— o 89 Leg Broken, Boy Hitch Austin. Tex.—(U.P) -Charle 1 er, Jr.. 20-year-old Wichita . newsboy, with his leg in a • hitch hiked 150 miles to thank : James V. Allred for getting hospitalization from the al Rehabilitation department. I O a Jail Pay $1 a Day K Larmie. Wyo -(U.R) Not one can got paid for serving iin jail, but Hazel Burro can ; is being held as a material in a case set for trial in ( She will receive $1 a day, or proximately $125. Jfe PUBLIC AUCTION Beautiful Building Lot I Friday, Aug. 27thI 6:30 P.M. g Located on the NortheaH corner of Jefferson and streets. Decatur. Ave fl choice lot. Very few, if atfl lots of this kind left in Defl’ tur. Come to the auctifl and buy this lot before priefl go higher. Don’t wait! |B. Sale held on the lot. Old Adams Co. !>am By Clark J. Lutz, Special Roy Johnson, Auct. ® PUBLIC AUCTI(»I I, the undersigned, wfl offer for sale, Tuesday, August 2fl at 1 p. m., at Craigville, Indiana, building 50x150 feet, all fl part, also about 30.000 usfl brick and slate roofing. TERMS — Cash, or ternfl to responsible party. Walter J. Scholl. J OWN Efl Herman Strahm, Auctioneer J MORRIS PLAN LOANS Comakers Chattels Automobiles SB.OO per SIOO per year New Cars financed $6.00 per SIOO per year Repayable montnly. The Suttles-Edwards Col Representatives.
