Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 182, Decatur, Adams County, 3 August 1938 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

COMMISSIONER’* CLAIMS ALLOWED Al'Gl MT 1. UU Mlni‘«-ll»u»ou* Cltr ot Decatur light & power »0.2» Citizens Telephone Co. phone so.ku I rank Krick county fuel U7l.h< frank tk'hmlta county eunpiies ««.43 Walter P. &H.Co do ... 3.00 1 Holthouee Drug Co. do ... 13.4» Fern E. Blerly Deputy Hire .t>.ou ; Bernleee Dubach Clk Hire ... SO.**) I G. Remy Blerly C. of venue - 1M W . Mary Cowan deputy hire * I#.' l #- Mary K. Tyndall .Ik hire 59-0 u John W. Tyndall pontage . 10.00 Alice Lenhart deputy hire ... Ij'.ou E 11. Kauffman do ■ <4.00 Huth Hollingsworth postage b.ou I Huth Holuigsworlh Roe’s fee 110.13 Leo T. Glllig deputy hire 100.00 | DuUaa Brown mileage H. G. Delntnger deputy hire .... »3.<W W. H. Gilliom postage i so Win. Reichert Dlteh exp 13.-a James Halferstodl Jr do L‘»| CottH.'halk Tile Co. do llifton E. striker sal., postage 140.00 Margaret S. Myers Sal — #<>-0» L. K. Archbold salary .... 41.*# L. E. Archbold operating exp. 4*.JO . Mildred Koldewey salary 75.00 s E. J. Worthman do 00 oo . pr. F. L. Grandstaff H. C. sal. JS.aO I will Winnes assessing 7»0 Henry B. Heller Salary ..... W-V# A. H. Dull King drain 3«»«r00 A. H. Dull Teeple drain ■■ 1300.00 W. H. Gilliom do - J- 33 Robert Both Bleeke Drain .... #OO Pick Tonnelier do Fred Braun do *•““ Hugh A. Holthouse do «0U Adam Kiteuour do »!*•*» W. H. Gilliom Stalter Drain .... »-l» W. J. Schumaker Ct. House . WO.VO Mary McClure do I Decatur Lumber Co. do • Morningstar Bros, do #«••«« John Wilding Paper Co. Inc do ILaO , West Disinfecting Co. do ... Nor. Ind. Public Service Co. jail 13.00 Decatur electric Shop du l---> Dr. J. M Miller do . I Otho larhensteln soldier burial <5.00 S. E. Black do Irene Byron Sanatorium .. The Decatur Democrat Co. Adv. 44.». Berne Witness Co. do .. . *'• Alva Fenstermaker right o w. .>4.00 County lutirmary H. P. LaFontalne salary ■ , Clara M. LaFontalne do 33 .m Herbert lacFonlaine labor 40.0 V Dorothy LaFontalne do ol.ov | Florence Lengerich do 4<.ov Calvin l-’aib do ••••■• •‘jRev. Andrew Losler operat. ex. i. David L. Schwartz do . Miracle Mfg Co. do - -’ J V, M. Nusbaum & Co do .... }-•*■ The National Mill C. Co ds ... 14-«-Menno Amstutz do •-* Niblick and Co. do - *>*•’* Martin Gilson do 3 -? f Rtulte Home Grocery do »»■*» Moslem Ind. Oil &S.Co do . *4-33 . Vance & Linn do *•*’ Decatur Hatchery do | Sprague Lehman Co. do • • Rhodes Bakery do ' Nichols Shoe Store do jo.vv i ( Indiana Refining Co. do »'•*“ Standard Oil Co. do The U. S. Chemical Co. do . Auto Electric. Garage do • J.uv Decatur Bakery do - ■ ® Indiana Insti. Indus, do - James T. Merryman do • 34.vJ Welfare fund Fay Smith Knapp salary 10S.->->, ’ Bernice Nelson do Helen E. Mann do } Mary Schultz do - Luella Fronnapfel do - . ( Faye Smith Knapp do J’.oo , Btrniece Nelson do 11 ’•> Helen B. Mann do . »-•’» j Doris A. Reicheldefter do - i m, E. W. Baumgartner do - , Fave Smith Knapp postage 13. m Citizens Telephone Co phoine <■» '! D. F. Teeple freight * ov ( Ft. Wayne Ptg Co supplies. ... Highway Repnlr ■list. No- 1< ...- ... Hugo H. Gerke labor Glenn Meriea do » 3 -« Lh.yd Bowman do - Theodore Hobrock do a <«■"" | j Poland Hoile do 33 '' ■ Win. Bittner do Elmer Gerke do ] Robert Gerke do ‘•y" < Herman Miller do .... •’ Melvin M er do ] Albert Miller do _ Lawrence Doehcniau do ] Norman Stoppenhagen do - s mat. N<>. 2. ■ R. G. Martin labor - t R. F. Sauer do - JjJV-v c. H. Durkin do -

DURING OUR AUGUST SALiS I ( We are selling beaut if ul Living Room Suites in the J newest styles and cowers ' S4B-50 up Due to extreme low , prices, terms are cash. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. J 152 South Second St. Decatur, Ind. Phone 199

BARNEY GOOGLE SNUFFY COMES UP FOR AIR By BiUy Deßeck ( BOY U9SEN 5 Mfl s' ‘S') Y V7 QftVLS OF FIREyf I BLOW THWr J -J J . <• le ■ lo J \ THUMPIN' ON TH' PIANNY WHEN S'* . stew I 3W 'A t L®-1 Cjfc '"f K ’.vsiß ■r~~ -~r f ~. M C-rpr »*MK, King F.uty . Svndtcr.g. J*c . World n<h>» _ THIMBLE THEATER “IT’S ONLY YOUR IMAGINATION, POPEYE’’ By SEGAR NOBODYKIN TALK TO MI/1 WA H VAM"\ T ~ fWHV, POPEYE, WHAT X ~ /DEMONS’ DON'T n Z)ME LIKE THEM 1 GETGHA" ' Z» GO'NER . / "A . * ARE YOU THROWING I Zs» JBE SILLY- GEE. r \7 J Vi DIVE , f //L « ’ YOURSELF AROUND /— v' *Fx~A DO you BELIEVE RIGHT \ l Aft . • , LIKE THAT FOR? ThOSF WILD trouble, ft / o<y THE a hole. )_; M| - ' a z -- then they '{ l /T\ Hol / N f: r —A A-;^ 1 A <n ( *- WAS NO 1 ‘ KHI X you > /lets\ TO. //)', zcltx (<y z/ << At / j \ hole v rati /3 ol gJ, IN ) Kort wl /S-,JC7 ; .j. Yas/ 5 ? \Y - r “ \B4?z t4l A/ AA IM. s i r >■ j i— 11 1 r - 11— I&2 C*»r !*>i Ku<| Feature Nt. ’1 «>rM nghu rnttved |

G. Lonhe do 120.001 V. Llnlffer do * 120.00 Harold Bauer do - — HO.uii J. Musser do 00.00 Sal. Ektaer do -120. W John Brlte do 116.00 I A. Schlrock do vo.oo I Hunry Sauer do Hi.4o It Shady do ”«.oo A. Spangler do .—- M.oo I D Nelreite/ do 10.00 j Robert MeßrKle do 7-°0 Joe .Murtaugh do . IVb.VU DlMt. >o. 3 Elmer Beer labor — 124.&& John Fol >!'• 1 ■ Fred Leirhty do 35.70 Norman Jacoba do • Hiram Wittwer do 21. H Milo Fueha do .. 22.76 .Win. Eley do *.06 Herbert Tlnkham do 0.30 ' Helmer Girod do .... 6»*o Tillman Beer do ®.o«> | \\ m. Bertach do o.t><» IliNt. \<>. 4. J. C. Augaburger labor 112.75 Edwin Spichiger do • 123.60 i Chauncy Heynolda do 120.»0 Amos Steiner do 70.V0 \ln K Ist ler do • 1 ••' I Norman Augsburber do 35.35 IJ. M. iXeuenachwander do ... 6.35 John Tonner do 1*75 J. M. Kaeiir do 37.K0 Arman Habegger do 88.00 MlaeellnneotiN Jacob C. .Miller op exp 35.00 ; 1»-A Lubricant Co. Inc. do 261.37 National Cylinder Gas Co do 13.31 Gottschalk Tile Works do 15.75 Ft. Wayne Spring Service Co. 2.80 Shell Petroleum Corp do 1.73 i David L. Schwartz do 8.6 U Auto Electric Service Inc. d 0.... 6.08 l Yoder Bros, do -43.65 Jacob C. Miller do 3.:00 Mrs. Herman Uleman du 40.n0 i Goodyear Service do 2.50 G. Remy Blerly do I* ?;. Fred Baker do 1 Moses Henry do . w,4 . & I Carroll Coal & Coke Co. do .... 307.13 England Auto Parts do »•*< Runyon & Son Garage do Walter Brlntzenhofe do ( The Mossman-Yarnelle Co. do 193.0* Mary C. Miller do J 0.60 Cash Coal & Sup. do .... 172.5 V Johnson Repair Shop op exp 3.46 Harry Knapp do The Schafer Co. do Izora Roop do K. G. Deininger salary 2 • / W. H. Gilliom do mileage —. a®-6* Yost Bros, material 1»&J ™ John W. Karch Stone Co. do I®*’' Dick Tonnelier do Meshberger Bros. S. Corp do Certified this 3rd day of Aug. 1J«. JOHN W. TYNDALL Auditor Adams County July 29 Aug. 3 ——o — Statement of Condition of the GENER %L REISSI RANCE CORPORATION New York, N. Y. 90 John Street On the 31st Dav of December, 1937 E H. BOLES, President S E THOMPSON. Secretary Amount of Capital paid , ouo>ouo ou GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate unincumbered » 312,000.0# Mortgage Loans on real estate (Free from any prior incumbrance).... 2«6,3bv.vv Bonds and Stocks owned (Book Value) 14,117,4»O.»» Cash in bank and offices ion interest and not on interest) 6b1.,4b< 44 Accrued Securities (Interest & Rents, etc.).. Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection ss Other Assets -40, Total Gross Assets 716,310,812.21 Ded , U , C ;L A ’ SetS N °‘ Ad '» 1 «22.15»,«5 Net Assets 31a,285,6v3.1>> LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $ Losses due an I unpaid., a, < Lessee adjusted and not due ... . 7 None Losses unadjusted ana in suspense None 1J paid an " A “° Unt ’ Un l Taxes •• 321,171.2Other Liabilities of the Company -ll),V8-.vV Total Liabilities » surplus 3 #13.04 Total — >15,233,653.1# STATE OF INDIANA, offb e of Insurance Commissioner. I, the undersigned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition ot tlie above mentioned Company on tlie 31st day of December, 1'337, as Shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and afflx my om<ial seal, this 21st day of June, IJ3B. (Seal) GEO. H. NEWBAUER, Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. JULY 27—AUGUST 3. 50d~lSheets B'/ 2 xll, 20-lb. White Automatic Mimeograph b'ond $1.05. 500 Sheets B'/ 2 x 11, 16-lb. Special Mimeograph, l WhMte 35c. The Decatur Dei ocrat Co. ts

pTest Your Knowledge * ( Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. » « 1. What la the horizon? 2. Name the representative flower of Nevada. 3. Under what river is the Hoi-

(Vahiz 1 corliss

’ SYNOPSIS Three couzins, Scott Prentice a lawyer; Whitney Prentice, a debutante; and Todhunter Prentice Jarvis, a newspaperman, had grown up together in and around Boston. Whitney had been 15 when she fell in love with Scott, then 20 and a sophomore at Harvard. Now, herself twenty, Whitney is returning from a summer in Europe expecting to be formally engaged to Scott that Fall. As soon as he is established with his law firm and Whitney has come into her inheritance they are to be married. She relates all this to wealthy young Jay Nowell, who fell in love with her in Paris and followed her to America. Tod—not Scott—meets Whitney at the pier. He wonders how he can break the news that Scott—only four days before—married Olivia Paul. Enroute to Tod's apartment for lunch, Whitney wonders why Scott didn’t meet her, but she wouldn't let Tod see that she was disappointed. CHAPTER VII Whitney smiled at Tod and said: "Nice of you to meet me, darling. Thank heaven, you weren’t out of town, too ... it would have been a dreary homecoming if you had been.” She had a lovely smile. Clear and direct and sweet. "Yes,” said Tod, "that’s what I thought. So I stuck around. Tell me about your trip. Was Paris as much fun as you had hoped it would be, and how is Helena?’ He wondered if after today she would ever smile in quite that same way again. He thought that probably she wouldn’t. “Paris was all sorts of fun and Helena is fine. She wants me to visit her this winter in New York. She sent you her love and some fifty-year-old cognac. She said she hoped you’d get to be one of the most successful young newspapermen in America.” Tod grinned. It had been Helena who had backed him up in leaving college. She had said: “We’re the misfits in this family. Tod. We don’t belong. *?eople like you and toe have to work out our own salvations. I Mine is living in New York and I writing fashion reviews and going to first nights; yours is getting a job on a Boston newspaper. You'il probably end up writing editorials for the Herald twenty years from now; on the other hand, you may land on Broadway with a secondrate play.” So far he had simply managed to hang on to a good-enough job. And he'd never had any desire to write a play. Or a novel. But journalism was different . . . and in time there might be another war. Whitney brought him back abruptly to Tremont Street. “What’s been happening here at home? I feel as if I had been gone for years instead of only three months. Did you have a nice summer?” Tell me about Scott was what she meant. Tell me what he has been doing and if he has missed me. And why isn’t he here beside me instead of you, Tod? You’re nice. You’re sweet and I love you, of course. But it’s Scott I want. Not you. Tod thought, “My God, don’t you suppose I know that?” He said, casually enough, his lean, tanned face composed, that he’d had a fair summer. He’d worked, of course. And it had been hot in town. The office had been like a boiler room. But he’d got out to the farm quite a bit. And down to Marblehead Neck. He’d got in some good swimming and quite a bit of tennis ar. 1 ?»me sailing. Whit»v thought: “He’s talking all arou-J '-ouiething. He’s making convers"'4«* He’s never been like this with r..c before....” She stared at him. And saw him, really, for

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, AUG! SI 3, 1935.

( laud Vehicular Tunnel? 4. What is the name for the period of life extending from ‘, 1 puberty to adulthood? ! 5. Who wou the 1938 Women’s i singles tenuis championship played ’at Wimbledon. Eng? I 6. In what relative positions <, should the engagement and wedd- , Ing rings be worn? 7. What is invar? IJ

the first thne. A lean, almost gaunt young man. Not good-looking in any definite, spectacular way. Just another young man with an angular jaw and good teeth and close-cut tan hair. Nice eyes, of course, and a pleasant smile. She’d always thought of him as her own age. She realized suddenly that he wasn’t. That he was four years older. For the first time she thought of him as mature. Completely adult. The summer hurt done it. Hardened him. Given him a confidence, a casual sophistication that he had lacked. But today this was overlaid with something else. Something that had to do with her. Staring at him, she saw that his face was guarded. That in repose his mouth was grim, his eyes tormented. She said, abruptly: “What’z wrong, Tod? What has happened?” He didn’t look at her. He said simply: “We’D be at my place in

"Scott’s married, Whit,” said Tod, putting his hand on her shoulder.

five minutes, Whit. Let’s skip it 1 until then.” ] She started to speak and then I ■ slumped quietly back, her eyes fixed i ■ on his profile. Suddenly she knew. 1 1 Knew that whatever it was it had ! to do with Scott and her. She said 1 finally, in a voice that sounded curi- 1 ’ ously empty: “It’s Scott, isn't it?” I Tod nodded. “Yes, it’s Scott.” ' “Some girl .. “Let’s wait, Whit.” ’ She said “All right,” staring ■ straight ahead, her hands clenched < I whitely in her lap. I I Tod lived on the top floor of a nar- ’ row brick house on Charles Street. . 1 There were three rooms altogether. 1 A fairly large one with narrow f casement windows facing the street, 1 a tiny dark kitchenette and bath 1 along a narrow passageway and a s bedroom in the rear overlooking the - basin. Today the front room had 1 been obviously cleaned and put in - order. A card table laid with a Hnen cloth and silver for two stood g in front of a small, wood-burning g fireplace. e Whitney walked over to a shabby d chesterfield covered with blue rep r and sat down. She had been here

S Whut Is the inline for the I game of table-tennis.’ 9. Who invented the air-brake i (or railioad ears? 10. What is archaeology? Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Monismlth and daughter Kathleen of South Whitley were among the fair visitors yesterday.

i perhaps a dozen time# in the last • two years. She had helped uod • choose some of the furniture. Ihe : wine-colored rug had been her sug- ; gestion and the pine bookshelves 1 built across one end of the room, t And the old gilt mirror that hung t over the scarred white mantel. She pulled off her hat and pressed • her fingers hard against her fore- ; head. It felt hot and tight. She said: “Open a window, will . you, Tod?” He opened one and a chill little . wind rushed into the room. For the i moment it had stopped raining. Ho 1 said: “There’s food in the kitchen, i I’ll go get it” But he didn’t. He came over to , her and sat down beside her and put his arm around her shoulders. t She said: “Well?” ' “He’s married, Whit." I Watching the color drain slowly i from her face, watching he? eye#

grow dark and still and enormous, he thought: "My God, I’ve done it badly. I’ve made an awful mess of it. Any fool could have told her better than that...” His arm began to shake violently about her shoulders. He took it away and fumbled for cigarettes. He couldn’t look at her just then. If he did . . . if he looked upon the havoc that was taking place in her face, he would have to go and find Scott, track him down and lay hands on him. Savagely. He wished she would speak. Would say something. Anything. He wished she would cry. He hadn’t seen her cry for years but it would be better than this. Just sitting there, staring at nothing, her lips looking so white and tortured. He realized suddenly that, whatever she had expected, it hadn’t been anything as final, as irrevocable as i marriage. He said, miserably: “Listen, Whit, do you want some brandy? I have some.” She shook her head. “No, I’m all right. Or I will be presently.” (To be continued) CopnKhL I>3L #r KiM futuru SrndleaU. 1M

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7 — ♦RA T E 8 One Time—Minimum charge of 25c for 20 word# or !«•«. Over 20 word#, 1 P er * /or< i Two Time#—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 word# or l##>. Over 20 words 2c per word for the tw® times. Three ilmes—Minimum chsrge of 50c for 20 words or les*Ovsr 20 words 2'/a0 per word for the three times. Csrds of Thsnks - 380 Obituaries and verses >'-00 Open rste-dlsplsy advertising 35c per column Inch. FOR SALE FOR SALE — Coming 5-year-old grey brood mare; extra good worker or will trade for cattle. VVm. Radenbeck, 5 miles northwest of Decatur. 181-3tx o —— FOR RENT FOR RENT —Two-room furnished apartment. Private bath. Refrigerator. Call at 410 N. Fifth. Phone 1082. 18 °- 31 FOR RENT —2 modern sleeping rooms at 246 North 6th Street. Phone 1370. 180-3 t FOR RENT—6 room, all modem house on North 3rd St., 2 blocks from town. Phone 662 or 200. 180-3 t FOR RENT—Modern 7-room house on North 4th St. Possession Aug. 15. Office rooms above Sorg Meat Market. Inquire H. P. Schmitt, Phone 967. 180-3 t; —— » FOR RENT—Six-room, all-modern apartment. Heat furnished. Boxi 525, Democrat. 182-3 t — <| I CHOICE HEREFORD STEERS I and Heifers, 300 lbs. up. T. B. 1 and Bangs tested. Truck or carloads. Your sort. Uniform in size. ! Priced to sell. Buy direct from. owner. Write Gale Dooley, Birm-1 Ingham, lowa. Itx OWN YOUR OWN HOME. Win. Bracht six-room home, acre good ground. Magley, six miles west Decatur. Sell at auction on premises. Aug. 8, 6 p. m. Aug. 1-3-6 FOR RENT — 5-room all-modern house, south First street. Call 79. Dyonis Schmitt. 181-3 t o MISCELLANEOUS CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead stock. Will pay for live horses. Day or night service. Phone collect. Harley Roop 870-A. 152-ts NOTICE —Parlor suites recovered. We re-cover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Decatur Upholsters, Phone 420. 145 South Second St. 155-30 t 500 Sheets 8’ 2 xll Yellow Second Sheets, 35c. Decatur Democrat Company. ts o Appointment of AdminiMtrutrix No. 3500 Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Administratrix of the estate of Robert A. Drummond, late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Mary A. Babbitt, Administratrix < . L. Walter*. Attorney Juny 29, 1938 Aug. 3-10-17 . ... -uStatement of Condition of the IMTED STATES CASUALTY’ COMPANY New Y’ork City 60 John Street On the 31st Day of December, 1937 NORMAN R. MORAY, President WALTER D. OWENS, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up M 1,000,000.00 GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate unincumbered None Mortgage Loans on real estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) .. ! Bonds and Stocks owned (Book Value) 8,012,135.38 Cash in banks (on interest and not on interest) and in Company’s office 581,346.20 Accrued Securities (Interest & Rents, etc.) 146,002.50 Other Assets . 333,739.53 Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection 1,428,931.29 1 Accounts otherwise secured None Total Gross Assets 511,551,384,90 Deduct Assets Not Admitted J 2.137,245.40 Net Assets I 9,394,139.50 LIABILITIES Reserve, or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks . | 2,395,133.71 Losses due and unpaid.. 3,504,167.94 Losses adjusted and not due None Losses unadjusted and in suspense None Bills and Accounts unpaid ... 15,000.00 Amount due and not due Banks or other Creditors None Other Liabilities of the Company b 68,381.93 Total Liabilities S Capital $ 1.000,000.00 Surplus -1 1 721,455.92 Total —.-I 9,394,139.b0 STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commiss’oner. I. the undersigned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy ot the Statement of the Condition of the, above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1937. as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 21st day of June, 1938. (Seal) GEO H. NEWBAUER. Insurance Commissioner. I *lf Mutual Company so state. JULY 37—-AUGUST 3.

WANTED WANTED—lx>»n# on farm#. Eastarn money. Low rate*. Very liberal term#. See me for abstract* ot title. French Quinn. 152-m-wt WANTED Two roomers or a few boarders. Inquire box 524 care of this office. 182-3tx WANTED — Chief Engineer and four firemen. All non-union men. Chief Engineer 18 to have enough past experience to justify his position in a two hundred room hotel. Would prefer to have all of these men thirty years of age or over and married. Write this pauper, box number 426, stating qualifications, how soon you can report for duty, past salary you have been receiving. etc.” U WANTED WELL DRILLING — special Harvest prices; any size, anywhere, any depth. Huffenbarger 627 N. Seventh st., phone 989. 182t30x NOTICE—WiII start making cider Tuesday, August 2nd., will make cider every Tuesday and Thursday until further notice Peter Kirsch 178-ts —o 0 — Marion City Council Rejects Federal Fund Marion. Ind.. Aug. 3. —m,R>— The Marion city council last night rejected a federal allotment of $500,000 for slum clearance and a large I low cost housing project here by a vote of 6 to 1. | Members of the council said I that the project would increase | taxes, decrease income and be in I direct competition with business 1 men who have property and real . estate for rent. o All Half-Price State Fair Tickets Are Sold Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 3 —(UP) —Lieut, Gov. Henry F. Senricker, head of the Indiana state fair to be held Sept. 4—to 9, announced today that the entire supply of 175,000 half-price 25-cent admission tickets has been sold. Last year the board of agriculture offered 150,000 half-price tickets for sale and disposed of them 20 days ' before the fair. This year there was a sell-out a month ahead of the exposition. o Name Harry Ferguson U. P. Sports Editor New York, Aug. 3— <U.R> -Harry Ferguson was appointed sports editor of the United Press today, succeeding Stuart Cameron who resigned to join the Steve Hannagan associates. Ferguson has been with the United Press 10 years and has < overed numerous spnr’s events and practically every other major news story in this country during that time. He was in the death chamber when Bruno Hauptmann was executed at Trenton, was assigned to the last two national political conventions and spent two years covering politics in Washington. He was in the press box at the last Kentucky derby and the last two world series. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. 344 s Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Levi Moser, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 6th day of Septi mber, 1938, 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 receive their distributive shares. Oren Moser, Administrator with will annexed Decatur, Indiana, August 1, 1938. Heller A Schurgrr Attorneys Aug. 3-10 A p|Hiin t men t of AdmlniNtrut rix With Will Annexed NO. 341 M) Notice is hereby given That the undersigned has been appointed Administratrix with Will Annexed of the estate of Henry Thomas, late ot Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Olive May Thomas Administratrix with Will annexed >’rii<*hte and Litterer, Attorney*. July 20, 1938, July 27 Aug. 3 HIGH - TEST “MAJOR” GASOLINE GALLONS SHEWMAKER SERVICE 825 Ns. Second St. 1 ■■ in I JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence f 430 No. Fifth st. ' Phone 102. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:3Qte5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone ,135. J

MUMEIita AMn V r REPORT OF FOREIGN Brady’s M.rk ßt , #r . J® Closed at u N . 4 |W Col ' ,u,t^_Au ßllßl H No coim 111Msl()11 ■ Veals received 100 to i2O lbs' ' M 1-0 to 150 Ib„ M 150 to 200 lbs |H 200 to 230 lbs H 230 to 250 lbs. 250 to 275 lbs. fln 275 to 300 lbs. 300 to 350 lbs. H 350 lbs , and up 98 Roughs Stags Vealers Spring lambs 99 Spring l,u< k S Yearlings ... H INDIANAPOLIS LIVEsH Indianapolis, lmi„ H —Livestock; M Hogs, 4,500 ; steady to 25. lowei, $9.20-s9.7i>. . J1; 300-100 lbs.. $8.50-$9.50. ■ Sows, steady to $6.50-SB, cattle, 1, WU; val M very dully trade undertone w. „k : > classes, pt, l( U1 ~| y ~, ...S Vealers, steady at uJH spring lambs, 3"s<'< htgbH good and < o<>i(, ter ewes steady at ,3 FORT WAYNE t IVs J Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug.H —Livestock: B Hogs, steady to 5c 220 lbs., $9.05, isu.jw 160-180 lbs.. $9.45; $9.35; 240-260 lbs, lbs., $8.75; 2SO-300 lbs.. IM 325 lbs, $8.25; ::25-350 IbM 140-160 lbs, $9. 129 140 100-120 lbs, $8.25. ■ Roughs, $6.75; stags, |M Calves. $9; lambs. 18.50 M lambs, $6. ■ CHICAGO GRAIN ClB Sept. Dec. liM Wheat . .67% .69 ,?oB Corn 54% .52 B Oats 23% .24% EAST BUFFALO LlVifl East Buffalo. N. Y. —Livestock. S Hogs, 500; slow, nB $10.25; early sales col weights trm ked ins, $9.53 Cattle, 300; cows and bti ed steady but late sales 1 around 25c off; grass st( heifers, 25-50 c lower; lot and cutter cows. $3.50-$> fat cows to $5.75; lightwei $5-$5.75. Calves, 100: active, good to choice vealers, I mostly sll. Sheep, 300; spring lamb slow, 10 to 20c lower; choice ewe, wether and bm $9.50-$9.65, sheep and J about steady; yearlings, $ CLEVELAND PRODU Butter: steady; extrt standards 29. Eggs: steady, extra gral 23, extra first 21, current 20, ordinary first 18. Live poultry: weak; henl 20; ducks: fancy 6 and u| erage run 12. Muscova and Potatoes: West lirgi# 1.30; New Jersey $1.2M1 Cobblers $1.20; Pennsylvai ( 1.30 bag of 100 lbs. 0 Long White $2.00-2.15; Ida $1.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARI BURIf. ELEVATOR < Ccrrrected August 3 Pricea to be paid totnot No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs., or bet No. 2 Wheat, etc •< New N/o. 2 Oats Yellow’ Corn New fjo. 2 Soy Beans Rye 1 CENTRAL SOYA CC Ne w No. 2 Soy Beans MARKETS AT A GtM ’Stocks: irregularly loWBonds: irregularly lo»« ■governments irregularly Io" Curb stocks: irregular am Chicago stocks: lower. I Cali money: one per cen • ’ Foreign exchange: dolls' ' high for year and longer to major European curie Cotton: easier. Grains: wheat firm. «P Corn irregular, up I S » Chicago livestock, hog-- ■ cattle steady to weak, s Rubber: steady. , silver bar in New Yolk ' at 42 3 i cents a f * ue 0 J 500 Sheets White Paragon writing paper <w • catur Democrat to.