Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1938 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Babs, Husband Visit India — ' 4; t f ' z £'4&isßFJl ffiKJ v»» 1 • , Countess Barbara and Count Haiigwitz von Reventlow MMch-traveled Countess Barbara Hnugwitz von Reventlow and her husband are pictured above arriving at Bombay, India. : .r a visit. Countess Barbara is the former Barbara Hutton, Wool* Willi heiress.
f Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page "* four for the answers. » • ♦ 1. How are seedless oranges propagated? 2. Name the capital of Bolivia. 3. Under what government deSPECIAL We will continue our money saving sale through the entire month of March. Special discount for cash. Liberal trade in allowance for your old furniture, piano, rugs and stoves. SPRAGUE 152 S. Second St. Phone 199 BARGAINS 1 1 Only 2-piece Living Room Suite $29.50 1 Only 4-poster Bed Room Suite $29.50 1 Only 4-piece Maple Bed Room Suitessß.oo 1 Only 9x12 Velvet Rug. SIB.OO These are cash prices, no trade in. SPRAGUE 152 S. 2nd st. Decatur, Ind. Phone 199.
BARNEY GOOGLE SOCIAL CLIMBERS By Billy Deßeck O - /” WAKE UP, SNUFF V ” ** •= / DAGGONE THEM \ I X ASSURE Nou EveßNTwng \ DOCTOR ELUEbA SANS NOU'RE / THAR. \H SATINY _ UNDERC^T^L-- 1 JUST ABOUT OKAN- f“ P\LL‘PEDDLERS '.'. Ufi?u ( q .WAfXftWN 5 / * I ACN' CMI GO UP ON DECR J V_—uuprufO'm / nvco NPn ' ON J hf>rT/>n A* “>—< 7 \^ OXN /A\ fCT EASV I CRT— y CASE.VtA HRPPN TO / WRE NOT N 0 / CS.~ f VM SNUFP/’ SAN, VS NO LONGER/, 'NT ERESTEO kN \ ' r S'FF'CATEO ISNUW-V , " <- CONTIGUOUS — / SNUFFN'S CASE'.' xSWU/V* \ • vSfck \ F %'Vr^ MT / A / telu us how long jMiffiiW-liL \ ° K • r —<—r sn THVS sturio ' ftkß - y X <■ I t-'Sh \ QUARANTINE \A\ TJ ' ", <1 (1l?A/'x\ 9 { Mx \ Business going / *X- w' S;. -i» / iD_4l ~ X to LAST «• I fXi n ‘. 3i. —- r - J '\ IMH / 7 ~ T=3[= -~ IcTp, W«. K.ng FeMi' r M SynHirrr Inc . WrwM ngV| 2 _ Fr 'j' ‘ I ' I I SMr \ S' I I ' C ~~N f THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“SHALL WE DANCE?” By SEGAR ?Q«GET OLIVE AMD WELL. H A6GV Si MCE 7 [HAM! I HOPEP POOPDECK I fpOOPDECK PAPPS'EH fHATE H IM. H AH! POPE-VE, LET US CHAT NOD AQE THE 1 SEA PAPPV MIGHT HEAC OF NOD STILL HATE HIM, IF HE WERE > \/ HAGGN\ Tell me.wellimgtokjJl momster-; iam itamd arrive with j , —.. HAGGy 2 v-t here i'dtear let us VODRMIMD?) BLIGHTED —r CARROTS Y%R>7 Z ft " vV-> PLACE « THE GOOM SVM Z ft ? FOB 1 Wf < • &Ly ; | ~ . I i...-. .3 ■*’*■ »r« ■ * ■■ok|Bßl < - )ur Creamed Cottage Cheese affords a dainty yet sub- A B z.M B|| || 1 F TTIVf ’TITTONf stantial foundation for tasteful and economical meat sub- bJF a tT I ■"% * . ILL mg §|L iy LiUrS VtirAJlN stitutes . It i 8 a Perfectly Pasteurized Product; notably QSII O t.l*O£l|Z i® I I m t n c l nourishing, easily digested; and whether served plain or in W» V ■■!■■« I Kall 1 H o a salad, adds healthful zest at little cost. Phone your < order today. PhOTIC -167
, partment is the Bureau of Fisheries? 4. Where is the island of Opara? 5. Who was Thoenas Ball? 6. What is the name for the larg- > est of the anthropoid apes? 7. Name the birthstone for the month of August. 8. Has the United States ever is- | sued a million dollar bill? 9. What are the principal rivers | of Georgia? 10. Who was nicknamed "The I March King?" 1. On what bay is Newport, R. 1-1 2. What is the date of Independ- ' ence Day in Mexico? 3. How much is the head tax on I each alien admitted into this coun- | , try? 4. What is the name for a female 1 terrapin? 5. What ie a gendarme? 16. Name the 'birthstone for September. 7. Does Cuba require American tourists to have passports? 8. Who was William H. Lippin- ' cott? 9. Fy what industry is Glas- ! g.»w gjwrttend. famous? 10. What is the title of the man I who has charge of caddies at a golf club? COURT HOUSE New Case A suit for ejectment has been filed by Joseph B. Brunnegraph against Chester Deßolt. Notice was made returnable. March 10. Assets Abandoned A petition was filed, submitted | and sustained in the liquidation of I. the Peoples Loan & Trust company J ! to abandon assets in the form of a 1 note of J. E. and Mary Ulman. Estate Cases j A petition by the administrarix I * TODAY S COMMON ERROR * I Never pronounce beneficent — j ] bean’-ef-i-cent; say. i | be-nef'-i-cent. | ,
to re-appraise real estate was filed, I •submitted and sustained in the es-' tate of John Grady. The re appraise- [ ment was filed, submitted and sustained. The deed was ordered re- i ported, examined and approved. A petition was filed by the admin-
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CHAPTER XXVI Alec was bringing Tommy Gale to Baltimore. What, exactly, did that mean? Nothing, she told herself, except that she was to see again a young man who, the fall before, and again this spring, had managed one way or another to upset her quite badly. But all that was over and done with. Something that had never really begun, that had existed only in her own heart, had ended quite definitely weeks before on a moon-drenched beach in Connecticut. Had ended with her telling Alec that if it was what he still wanted, she would like some day to marry him. . . . So it was over. And Tommy Gale’s coming to Baltimore tomorrow didn't matter. It didn’t matter at all. And so it wasn’t the reason that she went the next day, between rehearsals, to a dress shop in an exclusive shopping section of the city. She went, she told herself, because she really needed another dinner dress. But her voice was soft and full of suppressed excitement as she said to the saleswoman, “I want a dress suitable for dining out and dancing ... a really beautiful dress, you understand. . . .” The saleswoman nodded sympathetically as she went away and she came back with a soft cloud of white chiffon- over her arm. She slid it over Caroline’s head and fastened a narrow silver ribbon about her slim waist. And being a really clever person, with a flair for selling clothes, she said. “It is lovely with pansies worn here, and silver sandals.” And then, because Caroline was young and eager-eyed, and so obviously in love, she added, “It’s a truly beau- 1 tiful dress, a copy of a very expen- 1 sive import—your best young man 1 is sure to adore you in it. ... ” And suddenly there in the depths as the mirror, Caroline saw Tommy Gale’s dark face with its straight- ‘ lipped mouth and incredibly blue eyes, and both the eyes and the ! mouth were laughipg at her be- J cause she was making herself lovely 1 for him and he was not her best ' young man and never would be. ... 1 And with trembling hands she ' snatched off the dress and pulled on : her own crumpled pink linen frock and fairly ran from the shop, leaving the saleswoman to stare after her, her mouth fallen open ludicrously, because she was a good saleswoman and knew her business, but she didn’t know that she was : seeing a strange young woman run i fleetly out of a Baltimore dress shop I' into the hot brilliance of an August afternoon, away from her own true ! love. Denying it, once more, along with the white chiffon dress and the : pansies and the silver sandals. .. i But as it happened, it didn’t mat- i ter one way or the other about any j: of those things because Tommy I I Gale didn't come to Baltimore that j weekend or any weekend. Alec came alone. And when Caroline said, “But I thought you were bringing Tommy down with you ...’’ he said. “Oh, yes . . . well, he was invited down to the Talbot’s place on Long Island, so he went there instead....” And after that, the weekends were the same again. And in almost no time at all it was September, and Caroline was back in New York. In Nprmandy, in a little town called Caudebec-cn-Caux, Gina received a letter from Barry Bedard lie wrote, in part, “I have arranged I two comm.ssions for you in London,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935.
| istratrix to sell personal property] ! in the estate of Alberi Burke. The ! property was ordered sold at prl-! vate sale without notice, for cash lat not less than the appraisement. | Real Estate Transfers Jesse O. Sellemeyer et ux to Wil-
both of which should prove highly lucrative and mildly amusing. One ’ is the debutante daughter of Lady - Hale Philips and the other is Henry • Hargrove, the actor. I havb also 1 written to a friend of mine who is ■ going out to India shortly, to spend ‘ the winter with her brother, and ■ asked her if she would consider sub- [ letting her flat on Half Moon Street. It is, or was, two years ago, a delightful place, and there is an elderly maid, Higgins, who goes with 1 it, who makes marvelous omelets. I ; can’t remember at the moment whether you like omelets or not, ’ but she doubtless does other things equally well. I simply happen to have always drawn an omelet when I lunched there. . . .” In conclusion he said, “I hope you ' are reasonably happy, Gina darling, and much less tired than you were when you left New York. If my present plans work out, I shall be in London about the same time you are. 1 hope to sail on or around the twenty-second of next month, and it would be pleasant if we could arrange to return together.” He signed himself, “Much love, Barry.” Gins was glad to get the letter. She thought it was sweet of Barry to go to so much trouble for her and it would be nice to see him again presently. But she would have given it all up gladly, the London commissions, the flat on Half Moon Street, and the love he sent her, to have been able to spend one small halfhour with Alec. . . . In New York, with the opening Os THE APPLE ORCHARD two nights distant, Carolina said to Alec, "Bernstein was right... you should have had Ainsley come hack from the Coast to play this part We both know I made a flop of it in Atlantic City ... there’s no reason to suppose I shall do any better here in New York.” She was brittle with nerves, worn out with rehearsals and the Atlantic City tryout, which had not come off too well. Things had gone badly, in fact, ever since her return from Baltimore. She had come back elated over going into rehearsal for her first important role and confident that she could handle it successfully. But almost at once, things had started to go wrong. Alec had run into al! sorts of difficulties getting a cast together and at the last minute tbe leading man developed influenza, with the result that lie had had to substitute an actor who was utterly unsuited to the part. Moreover, the play itself, which in script had seemed tender and whimsically appealing, had somehow managed to lose most of these illusive qualities in actual performance. , Caroline was sure that this was to a certain extent, at least, her fault. | She suspected that she was too ‘ young, too inexperienced an actress, ; to interpret the part of Jennie convincingly, and without that, the play floundered hopelessly, losing all meaning and vitality. But this was the first time she had actually admitted to Alec what she felt they both knew—that he had made a mistake in not taking Bernstein’s advice and getting Ainsley, or some other well-known actress, to play the part. Alec said, “This Atlantic City tryout doesn't mean a thing, Caroline. All it amounts to really is a succession of dress rehearsals which always go badly. The New York opening will tell the story. In the meantime. we both need to get away from it all, get into some formal clothes
I Ham H. Patterson et ux. 80 acres Ln ; Blue Creek twp, for $4550. Jacob D. R. Schwarts et ux to ! Christian Bauman et ux, 80 acres in I Monroe twp. for sl. Christian Bauman et ux to Jacob D. R. Schwarts et ux, 40 acres iu
f and go somewhere and have oure selves a time... He suggested then that they dine / the following night at one of the > hotels that had become increasingly s popular that fall. I Caroline was still living in the 1 apartment on Tenth Street, and, the - next night, calling for her half an . hour early, Alec amused himself as - best he could while he waited for - her to finish dressing. i He had come here very little this 1 fall and now everything in the place t reminded him of Gina. . . . • He had had three letters from her. > Three letters in four months. They > had been gay, brief, and somehow 1 managed, he reflected now, to tell him practically nothing about her- j 1 self. The Exhibition had been fun, j • he gathered, but Paris had been dull. ' She had gone, finally, to Normandy, ’ where she had discovered a dclight- ! ful small inn and done some really 1 good sketching. She had run dowr ' to Cannes for a weekend in August with some people she had met in Paris, but the Riviera hadn't appealed to her. She said, “Perhaps because I always expected so much of it. . . He knew that she meant that al- i ways they had talked of the time when they would be prosperous | enough to spend a winter in the south of France. That had been long before they had known that the winters there were apt to be cold and damp and not at all as romantic as they were pictured. Still, if they had gone there then, while they were still young and passionately in love, they probably, he reminded himself humorously, would have found them neither damp nor cold. But they hadn’t gone, and now Gina wrote from some obscure little French town that she would probably go to London before she came home. She said in conclusion, “I suppose you and Caroline have been much too happy and concerned with each other to miss anyone, but I have missed you both unutterably. . . He thought now, a little guiltily, that he had not missed her . . . not so much perhaps because he had been so happy—although he had been, of course—but because he had been so absorbed in his play. He had not approached any opening night of his in years with such excitement and high expectations as he had about this one tomorrow night But then, never before had it meant quite the same thing. Before it had been a question of glory for himself. This time it meant glory, he hoped, for Caroline. And somehow, all involved with it, was what it would mean to Caroline and himself. He could explain to no one, least of all to himself, just what essential difference it would make in their relationship, if she were to have tomorrow night a tremendous personal success. Yet he was convinced that it would make a difference. That then, secure in the knowledge that she was arrived, that she no longer needed him professionally, they could meet each other more squarely on equal ground. That then, and only then, he could be completely urgent and persuasive in his emotional demands on her. If the play went over, if she made good in it, then he would urge her to marry him at once ... something he had promised himself he would not do until she had achieved a definite personal success. (To be continued) CwiTltbl. I*3T. »j Klr>< Fnlurw Smlau. Ine.
lIWT-ADS I
,• RATES One Time—Minimum charge of 25c for 20 word* or less. Over 20 worde, 1 !4 e P er wort) Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 words or less. , Over 20 words 2c per word for I I the two times. Three Times—Minimum charge | of 50c for 20 worde or less, j ‘ Over 20 words 2'/ a c per word || j for the three times. ! I Cards of Thanks -———3 s c | i Obituaries and verses.— SI.OO Opes rate-display advertising 35c per column Inch. FOR SALE FOR SALE — Farm lease blanks, three for sc. Decatur Daily Democrat, 106 No. Second St. 276 ' tf FOR SALE — 10 feeding hogs, weighing from 75 to 100 lbs. 1 Hugo Thieme. 6ft miles northeast I of Decatur. 50’31 ‘FOR SALE —Collie pups. Ernst Thieme. 7 miles northeast of Decatur. 50-3tx FOR SALE—Two brooder houses, 10x12, Bxl4. Built 1936. Good Yellow Corn. Elmer Gerber, 5 miles south of Magley. 50-3tx . FOR SALE—S year-old Jersey with calf by side. 8-year-oid sorrel i horse, white mane and tail, 1,800 i pounds. 3 quarters of beef. Lewis Yake, Decatur R. R. 2. Craigville phone. 50-3tx FOR SALE—Heifer calf, 3 days j old. Victor Bultemeier, Hoag- ‘ land, R. R. 1. Itx t FOR SALE — 2 quarters of beef. ■ Herman Weber, Phone Hoagland. | ' 1 mile east, % mile south of Wil-1 Hams. 50-3tx | FOR SALE —New pianos: Grands, studios and consoles. The very newest styles, selling from $lB5. $215 to $275. Liberal trade-in-al-lowance for your old piano. ' Sprague Furniture Co. North Second St. Phone 199 —152. 50-2 t i FOR SALE—Semi-modern house; ' 5 rooms and cellar. Hard and 1 soft water in the house. Priced' $1,600. S6OO school loan available. I 710 Dierkes St. Inquire Rosie R. i Baumgartner, Geneva R. R. E. 50-3tx FOR SALE — Used Living Room ' Suite, excellent condition; kitch-1 en ranges. $8; oil stoves. $3 to slO.l Stucky & Co.. Monroe, Ind. 47-5 t | FOR SALE — English coach baby i cartage. Phone 1244. 48-3 t 1 FOR SALE or trade for feeding hogs: 1938 Dodge coupe, A-l condition. Hugh Gehrett, 354 1 miles west of Bluffton, Ind. 47-6tx ’ FOR SALE — Team of young' horses, three and four years old. Both well broke. C. A. Sheets, phone 894-M. 49k3tx FOR SALE — Four-year-old Guernsey cow, calf by side. R. H. Buuck. four miles north, Vi mile east Magley. 48-3tx FOR SALE — 15 head of sheep, j Some with lambs. Also span of' I miles. Homer W. Arnold, Route ] !, Decatur. 48-3tx J FOR SALE —Two men s overcoats,' size -M); slightly worn; one heavy I dark; ue medium light. 224 No. ! Second St., Decatur. 48-3tx — FOR SALE —Three day old Shorthorn male calf. Telephone 874-E. 48-3tx o Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q When speaking to friends, should a wife refer to her husband as “Mr. Gibson”? A. No. In social conversation she should say "my husband’’ or "Charles.’' When speaking to a servant, or employee, she should say, "Please tell Mr. Gibson that I have gone.” Q. Is It all right to hold a sand- , wich In the fingers while eating it? ’ A. Yes. Os course a largo chicken sandwich or club sandwjch requires a fork: and oftentimes a i knife. Q. When an employer introduces , his secretary to a business v isitor. ; should the secretary rise? A. If the secretary is a man, yes; If a girl, no. Monroe twp, for sl. Orley A. Krick et ux to Albert Wittwer et ux inlot 24 in Linn Grove for SSOO. Emma Grady, Adm., to Wilbur L. Reideubach et ux, iniots €4B and 649 in Decatur tor SIOSO. Arman J. Hirschy et ux to Marcellus Davison, 60 acres iu Monroe • trwp. for sl. Jacob Koos et ux to Chalmer Sheets, 80 acres in Union twp. for $1DR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence 430 Ne. Fifth st. ‘ 1 Phone 102.
MISCELLANEOUS ! NOTICE — Parlor Suits recovered We recover and repair anything We buy and sell furniture. Decatur Upholsters, Phone 420. 146 South | Second St. 30-30 t I NOTICE—We make Federal farm loans at 4% interest. Schurger ’ Abstract Co. 31-30 t WANTED MAN for Coffee Route. Up to $45 first week. Automobile given as bonus. Write Albert Mills, 4449 j Monmouth. Cincinnati, O. Itx WANTED—Loans on farms. East ern money. Low rates. Very lib eral terms. See me for abstracts ot title. French Quinn. 152-m w f FORRENT FOR RENT—4 room modern furnished apartment. Heat furnish- ‘ ed. Private entrance. Phone 79. 49-3tx j FOR RENT — Furnished 4-roont apartment. Above Madison Theatre. Inquire Mrs. Julius Haugk 48 3tx o LOST AND FOUND LOST — Yellow Angora cat. male, hair thin on legs. Answers to name of Sandy. 115 S. First St. Phone 529 or 414. 49-3tx MASONIC I A regular stated meeting of Chap- ; | ter 112 of Royal Arch Masons will [ be held at the Masonic Hail Tuesday evening, March Ist. Business of importance will be discussed. All members are requested to attend. High Priest. o CARD OF THANKS We wish in this manner to thank I the neighbors and friends during ‘ the illness and death of our be- | loved granddaughter and niece, ' Barbara Jacqueline Venis, and also ' for the beautiful flower offerings, i and also to the Rev. James A. ! Weber for his consoling words. Ernest O. Krugh and Family. OBITUARY Barbara Jacqueline Venis. daughI ter of Merlin and Madonna Krugh i Venis. was born in Decatur. Indi- | ana, September 4, 1929, and departed this life January 28, 1938. at the age of 8 years four mouths and 24 days. She leaves to mourn her loss, the father, the grandfather, Ernest : Krugh, and the grandmother. Minj nie Venis, and a host of relatives and friends. Her mother and sister having preceded her in death. A precious one from us has gone A voice we loved is still. A place is vacant in our home Which never can be filled. V tBAMI KIVBR BITCH assiwsmfxt vcrricF. Notice is hereby given to al! perI sons assessed with benefits in the base of Willjam Fennig. Ex parte et I al. now pending in the Adams Circuit Court, the same being known las the Wabash Jliver Drain, that asIvsessments in said matter arc due to ■ be paid in eash on or before Maicli I 15, 1938. It payments are not made in tash on or before that date to the treasurer of your county, then bonds I will be issued tor the amount of I such assessments. These bonds run J for a period of not less than ten years at six per centum interest, and tile cost of carrying the matter by I bond issue is approximately oneI third greater than thg original assessments. Homer Teeters Commissioner of Construction Feb, Jo Mr U. ■■ NEURALGIA Rheumatism, Neuritis, ..Periodic Pains, Arthritis, Lumbago and all aches and pains arfi quickly relieved With AITm ComiHHiiMl AAinterarcen TnbletM. Positively guaranteed. At all drug stores or send 11.00 to Union I’harmacal Co., Bluffton, Indiana SALE CALENDAR Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Decatur Indiana Claim your sale date early as I am booking sales every day. Mar. 3—Chas. Decker, 9 miles Southwest of Ft. Wayne on Liberty Mills Road, closing out sale. Mar. 7—Luther J. Adams, 1 mile sout hand IVi miles west of Rockford, Ohio. Mar. 10 —Sol Ternet, 4 miles North of Monroeville, livestock sale. BOOK YOUR SALE EARLY. ROY S. JOHNSON Decatur, Ind. Trust Company Building N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyst Examined • Glasaet Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. Mhl i D ta 8.30 to 1130 12:30 to 5:00
MARKET 801 Brady’* Market for Dee . ( Cralavllle Ho,g lind . n*o* Corrected Febr U#ry a No commission TTd no n Veal, receivedever,! 100 to 120 lbs. 120 to 140 lbs 140 to 160 lbs 160 to 200 lbs 200 to 225 lbs. 225 to 250 lbs. | 250 to 275 lbs. 7 i 275 to 300 lh a . 300 to 350 lbs. | 350 lbs., and up j Roughs I Stags I Vealers . I Spring lambs | Buck lambs I Yearlings CHICAGO GRAIN CLOI May J »>l '' hpat -M% .88H ( C° n > .59 | Oats 3l INDIANAPOLIS LIVES?! Indianapolis. Ind., Feb. & —Livestock: Hog receipts, 4.000; h o y 221; weights above 160 1), higher; lighter weight* | I steady to 25c higher, top ij ■ 160-200 lbs.; sows, 10c highs $7.15-87.85; good light wag $8; 160-220 lbs., $9.30-$9.40:1 I lbs.. $9-$9.35; 250-300 ll» $9.10; 300-400 lbs., $8.35-18.81 ' 160 lbs.. $9-$9.25; 130-140 lb*, $8.75; 100-120 lb*., SB-88.25. Cattle, 1,500; calves. 4(6 loads of steers, steady at otherwise little done early, ' tone steady; light heifers to strong: several loads a and good kinds. $7-$7.65: all ' cows steady, few loads gw( jtngs, $6; low cutters and e $4-$5; bulls, steady at 18.58 [ vealers. 50c lower; good and l $lO-sll. Sheep, 3,000; no early sa bids. FOR WAYNE LIVESTO Fort Wayne, Ind., Feb. 2S —Livestock: Hogs. 20c higher; 160-1$ $9.25: 180-200 lbs.. $9.15; 1 libs., $9; 220-240 lbs., $8.75; 1 lbs., $8.55; 260-280 lbs.. SbJI : 300 lbs.. $8.20; 300-325 lbs, 1325-350 lbs.. $7.90; 14O1S8 j $8.65: 120-140 lbs.. $8.40; 1 ■lbs., $8.15. Roughs. $7: stags, $5.75. Calves. $11; lambs, b. 15. EAST BUFFALO LIVEST! Hogs 2.100; steady; bulk & choice 170-240 lbs usmßJ ' aging 180-220 lbs. 59.65-Ffl 250 lbs. $9.40 9 60; track’d i ■ 1 220 lbs. $9.25-9.60. Cattle 1,100: steers a yo ■ 25c higher; good steers l*i 1 mixed yearlings $8; bulk a ' . to good steers $7.25-8.25; Cat $7.50 down; some held k ' cows $5.50-6; light weights' ' under. I Calves: 650; vealers uncta good and choice largely lit I mon and medium SB-10.50 Sheep: 2.800; lambs 25c1 quality and lenient sorts « ■ ed; good and choice HI selections quoted toward .11. > turn end mixed grades sls CLEVELAND PROOUC ! Cleveland. 0., Feb. 25.-I J Produce: i Butter, steady; «!*> , standards. 33c. i Eggs, steady: extra g™* 1 17%c; extra « rs,s ' •' receipts, 16c. Live poultry, firm: he llß ' • 19c; ducks, green. 6 It*- 1 23c; heavy white. 21c; • and small. 18c; turk ; i L ■ 24c; stags, heavy breed, horn, 16c. pa Potatoes. Ohio R« :a 11.20-81.25 100-lb. bag, ' ograms. $1.75-SIM ■ a • Mountains. •H-K-l 1 '’"- . $1.60-$1.65; New York ® $1.25; Texas new No. M No. 2. 85c-$1.15 50-lb. bol I new No. I.sM<>4 1 1 6,; SI.OO. local grain BURK ELEVATOR —— — II Corrected February ! No. 1 Wheat. 60 lbs. or heR ■ I New No. 2 Oats •• ; New No. 2 Soy Boa |1S " ’: Ryo 2' central SOYA co. > New No. 2 Soy MARKETS AT A Stocks: lower s Bonds: lower and «»• eminent issues b, "'L ii ar lr» Chicago stockForeign e’ tcb<inS ,° ran( . firm. ’ tion to the dollai• Cotton: more tW Grains: whea ‘ fr#i . t joß Chicago h? 0 ad y. sheep strong. RtnVbei: steady , jcl : Lil-.erba r > n '\ fllie , ed at 44% cents
