Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 1 March 1939 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

May Become Spain’s Royal Heads —wmhi e '" Hh * joSjc^q^jqiLg- .T.’ X*}.' X -JF. v . AS>t s§k a®x x ..X ' 1 ' / * *'** ! Prince Juan and Princess Maria Mercedes Prince Juan, youngest living son of former King Alfonso of Spain, and his wife, the former Princess Maria Mercedes of Bourbon, may become king and queen of Spain if Gen, Francisco Franco restore* the monarchy to that war-torn country.

►— ——— 4 Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of t’aese ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. • < 1. What is the middle name of Norman H. Davis, chairman of the American Red Cross? 2. What is the proper name for the front of a boat? 3. Name the U. S. Member of Congress who is author of a. proposed constitutional amendment to require a national referendum on war. 4. In what sea is the island of Ja-

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 SPRAGUE OFFERS MARCH SPECIALS! Lovely Living Room Suites $59.50 to $148.00 Modern and Period Dining Room Suites $78.50 to $135 Bed Room Suites $38.50 to $125 9x12 Axminster Rugs (Rug Pad free with each rug.) 9x12 Felt Base Rugs - $4.50 40 Innerspring Mattresses . $15.00 to $39.50 Liberal trade-in allowance for your old merchandise. Easy terms. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 South Second St. Phone 199.

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith SNUFFY NEEDS AN INTERPRETER By Billy De Beck ©ALLS O’ me. \ / jEE ".D\DM’T VOU V7 THERE YAU6T BE FWTY LETTERS "X —. bARKE W CRWTeRS \ GOOGLE. ‘X \ VNI N\RS. GOOGLE’S L GQTTR PiMSWER - VNHPiX’S TWS * \ fl n 'NRWE IX RGibA— \ iMRRFL ME BEEN |\ PRVsIRTE SECRETARY MOW- ''THE PROJECTED CHPiMGE THE ] w- - — '■f, : j RM’ TELL’EM TO / V4EESW -fORESE'E? \ CONSE (N RMO ' CEP.TIFICPiTE \NPiS FOUND MECESSRRV I l /aA TRUK kN ?LR(M / X HWN’T SEEN H\DE XF4KE R LOOK-- BEFORE THE I =AMPL\FtC«TION PL«M. / l ( UPI !* YA. EVER DRV / NERRRtRO’ME / ftov u Uftflc T k \TSELF. COULD ee SUSWVTTeD Zx- —-X / FER TWO THREE y ( cretX? tMnOuTMr, 1 TO STOCKHOLDERS - * ( pl STATES--jte ■l®’ )s gZJ J J / ~, l$W, K>r>| rr*f»>** Syadtmr In- U <*<M nghn rr»*f'.<d * -1 ' ——l n, „n ii.ii....,.! ■■ 1 »■ ■*— . . ' ' ' . —~ THIMBLE THEATER Now Showing—“CHILDREN SHOULD BE SEEN BUT NOT HEARD!” '■g WTA ' iK ‘? F ~ J ° UTH - Corimkh _ cSaui —,— — L, 1

tnacia? 5. How many avoirdupois pounds are in one long ton ? 6. For what part of Great Britain is Cambria the ancient name? 7. For which State is "Golden State” a nickname? 8. For what patriotic organization do the initials D. A. R. stand 7 9. Who was Samuel Colt. 10. Where is Mt. McKinley National Park? COURT HOUSE Set For Trial The suit on account of Hamilton Casket Co., against Otho Looenstein was set for trial March 17. Rule To Answer In the foreclosure of mortgage suit of the Home Loan Owners’ Corporation against Doy and Josephine Tumbleson the court entered an absolute rule against the defendants to answer on or before March 10. In the account suit of Dr. Edison Pishop against Esther and Fred Fulleukantp, a motion to dismiss with iitejudice to the plaintiff at defendant’s cost was filed. Release by j the defendant was filed, the case dismissed and the cost paid. Amended Complaint In the complaint on note to foreclose mortgage of Samuel Barger against Tillman L. Nussbaum, and others, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint in two paragraphs. A motion to separate the causes of action was set for hearing March 15. o Passed Bad Checks To Feed His Family Muncie. Ind., March 1 — (UP) — A father of two small children who said he could not get relief aid free today after- admitting he passed more than 1100 in fraudulent checks. He said he preferred to pass the cheeks than let his wife and children starve. Circuit Judge L. A. Guthrie suspended a reformatory sentence upon Harold A. White's promise he would restore the money he obtained fraudulently. White could not be given relief because he had not been a resident here for the required year’s period.

[KIT CARSON - EVELYN WELLS £

CHAPTER XVII While in St. Louis, Kit did purchase a "store-boughten” hat and studied eagerly the new percussion •« cap rifles and the breath-taking new ) pistols that could shoot more than once! Kit had lived sixteen years by his rifle. A gun had to be part of his hand and brain, “hair-flt” to his will. Now he primed and tested and squinted, and at last selected two of the wonderful new revolvers improved lately by Colt. “I’ll astonish the Injuns," he thought, grinning at the long blue barrels. And these guns would be wonders on the plains, where one bewildered chief, thinking the extra bullets must be blades, would stammer: "White man shoot once with riflesix times with knife!" Wherever Kit walked, to gun shop or hotel, a crowd followed. Shy Kit literally backed out of St. Louis and was cheered off by several hundred admirers at the wharf. With a fee) ; ng of escape he found himself on a brilliant afternoon in May, 1842, aboard the side-wheel steamboat ascending the Mississippi river. He would go by boat to Chouteau’s trading post near the mouth of the Kansas, then ride westward.

wesiwaru. He stood in his fringed buckskins, swaying to the slow motion of the boat, watching the low skyline of St. Louis . . . Adaline was hidden among those framework houses, learning to drop her sweet voice lower, to curtsey when spoken to, to say her prayers . . . Kit sighed. Evidently fame was not easy to escape. Kit became aware of many eyes watching him on the deck. His lithe body curled a little nervously, like an animal’s that dislikes being watched. His blue eyes became distressed as a child’s. Men were watching Kit, some in mountain clothing, and one in a glittering new army uniform of blue and geld. This man was poised, worldly, assured, and very handsome. His manner was stamped with the courtesy of France and of the gallant South, but there was diplomatic breeding about him. too, and an unmistakable military air. A man opposite as tWe poles to Kit Carson ’ The man watching Kit was a student, a diplomat, poet and glass of fashion —a polished man of the world. Small wonder poor Kit, who had never learned to write his name, squirmed under the clear appraising glance of the stranger. But they had this in common—youth I And a sense of daring such has seldom been duplicated upon this earth! Still the handsome worldling watched, while the boat pushed on between wild crabapple branches that fell like plumes into the turbulent Mississippi. Evidently he was TcatjinST «a v*MR v»a.n v>et<aa> «« ex newly printed page, and judged the Kit Carson he watched to be incapable of guile. At last, impulsively, he crossed t-ht* deck. “You are Kit Carson. I heard them cheering you at St Louis.” 1 Kit flushed. A slender well- 1 groomed hand struck his horny : palm. “I’m Carson.” “I am John Charles Fremont.” ' Carson! Fremont! Through the Hall of Destiny gongs sounded and bugles blared as their names smote together. On the steamboat’s deck, in the May sunshine, the moment seemed quiet enough. Two men stood beside the rail, one in buckskin garments, one in army blue, for Fremont was a Lieutenant in the U.S. Topographical Corps. In a low, cultured voice the fervid Fremont sketched his plans. ; There was a stirring in the east, in this year 1842. Men with restless blood in their veins looked uneasily across America, beyond the Missouri frontier. Men spoke thoughtfully of free lands te be had in the unknown West, and of an England threatening inroads upon the

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1. 1939-

Northwest, a Meat* glowering in . the south. I Men bought plows, oxen, seeds i and wagons, and spoke of the Santa . F 4 and Oregon trails. But who knew of the Oregon Trail! Only men like the pioneer , Jedediah Smith, long since killed , by Indian arrows, and like Jim , Bridger and Kit Carson. The trappers and adventurers, the mountain ■ men, were mute. Theirs the adventure and exploration, but theirs not the skill to map down these trails on , paper for the feet of eager fol- , lowers. “That will be my task," explained Fremont. “To draw maps, make notes, explore and survey. To map out the trail to Oregon and explore the land lying between here and the Rockies. That will strengthen the hold of the United States upon the West” Kit had heard in St Louis of this plan proposed by the United States Government to be carried out by the dashing young Fremont. Another matter that Kit remembered was the romance of Fremont, for his own dead love was still heavy on his heart. Fremont had eloped the fall before with the beautiful and brilliant Jessie Benton, daughter of that United States Senator Thomas

Hart Benton whose passion was the dream of colonization in the West Benton, learning of the marriage, had ordered Fremont from his door. But love had won, and now Benton’s hopes were pinned on his handsome young son-in-law whom he had found a man after his own heart, scientific and scholarly, poetic and adventurous. The White House, Washington, New York, and all the East, were waiting anxiously the exploits of this good-looking, sHm-waisted, debonair lieutenant in his perfectly fitting uniform of blue, braided with gold. “You of all men know best the country I am to enter,” Fremont was urging Carson in his ardent manner. “I intended hiring Captain Drips as a scout but he didn’t reach St Louis in time. Will you lead us, Carson?” “Cap’n Drips is a good man,” countered Kit. “A o’ood man, but you st? batter. Why. even in Washington we hear of Kit Carson. I have young lads with me who will need tutoring in western ways. There is young Henry Brant staring at you—nineteen he is, my wife’s cousin. He will thrill to the marrow to meet the man who defied the Blackfeet single-handed. And there is Preuss our artist sketching you . . .” Fremont was winning . . . Kit, an adventurer born, agreed to lead the Fremont Expedition, for one hundred dollars a month, “west of the Missouri, to the South Pass in the Rockies, on the line of the K«nn« and Great Platte Rivers.” And with this verbal agreement, Kit Carson's real life began. The rest had been prelude. That night Fremont wrote of Kit in his diary: “I am pleased with him and his manner of address —a man of medium height, broad-shouldered and deep chested, with a clear, steady blue eye and frank speech and address—quiet and unassuming. . .” And six years later Kit Carson would declare to the United States Senate in passionate loyalty: “I am under more obligations to Fremont than to any man alive.” They were friends in their first moment of meeting. They would again be friends. But between there would be bitter unhappiness and misunderstanding. They came from different worlds. Kit was appalled by some of the members at Fremont's party. Soft handed and studious, with fine manners, they were emblematic of the East. Thera were Charles Preuss, the artist, and the two young boys, Randolph Benton, son of the Senator, and Henry Brant his aephew. But Cyprian Chouteau, the great St. fur trader, had aelected

the seasoned voyageurs for Fremont, and there were nineteen or these, all men after Kit’s own heart. There were the French-Canadian trapper, Basil Lajeunesse. who would sorely try Kit’s patience and end by winning his complete trust, and Lucian Maxwell who would become Kit’s partner and closest friend. . , Other voyagers hired in St. Louis were Clement Lambert, J. B. !>’Esperance, J. B. Lefevre, Benjamin Potra, Louis Gouin, J. B. Dumps, Francois Tessier, Benjamin Cadott®, Joseph Clement, Daniel Simonds, Leonard Benoit, Michel Morly, Baptiste Bernier, Honors Ayot, Francois La Tulipe, Francis Badeau, Louis Menard, Joseph Ruelle, Moise Chardonnais, Auguste Janlsse, and Raphael Proue. Nearly all these men were FrenchCanadians who had seen service with the fur companies of the West. Kit was astonished also at the strange purchases made by Fremont for his exp-d'Hon in the wilderness. These included toothbrushes, and soap. “What will you want with soap?" he blurted. The fastidious Fremont frowned. “For my hands,” he said coldly. He unwrapp-'d for Kit's approval an immense ruboerized bundle that

e reeked of some strange chemical. L “A rubber boat,” explained Frei, mont with pride. "For crossing '. rivers.” s Kit swallowed hard. When the e expedition disembarked at Chou--1 teau’s landing at the mouth of the , Kansas, he hired two Delaware In--1 dian runners and sent them ahead across ths plains, to Taos, with a , message to his seasoned mountain ! men. the Taos men. ! “Tell them they are to meet at ■ Fort Laramie, prepared for a long t trail,” ran Kit’s message. 1 But he wondered unhappily what his buckskinned mountaineers > would think of Fremont with his t tidy uniforms, his toothbrushes and i rubber boat, and his forks and i knives’ i Then, as a finishing touch, Fre- , mont showed Kit a flag. It would be emblazoned upon pages n histories, this flag, but Kit, staring at it in bewilderment, knew nc’hing of • its future. "I had it made this way, Carso*, i I’m going to plant it on the highest 1 peak in the Foeki»s' See, the '■agle ' is gripping a peace pipe instead of arrows. I thought that would make the Indians understand that w<= are friendly." “Mebbe.” sighed Kit, “If we can 1 get close enough to make err. understand.” He marveled at Fremont. The i dashing young soldier seemed to 1 have no concept of the danger to be met on the plains— red-sinned, befeathered, carrying knives, arrows and spears. But Kit did not speak • OX Slich On June 10,1842. Kit Carson rode to the head of the Fremont expedition, and led them westward, away from Chouteau’s Landing on the Kansas River. He was followed by two dozen men on horses, all carrying rifles. After them trundled eight heavy carts, bearing the luggage, scientific instruments and stores. Jovial Cyprian Chouteau rode with them the first forty miles. He was disturbed, because the day was Friday. “Remember, if anything happens,” he said to Fremont, “that I warned you never to set out on a journey on a Friday.” Kit agreed with the fur trader. But Fremont, wild to be off, shook his head impatiently at the pair. He was eager to be launched on the great adventure. Young and ardent, but a scientist to his finger tips, Fremont frowned at the superstitions of the mountain men. He found himself eyeing Kit with disapproval. “After all,” Fremont thought with some contempt, “Kit is only ■ half civilized.” (To be continued) Copyrilht by Evelyn Wells. I Olitrlbuled by King Feeturei Syndireto tat.

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f ‘ RATES One Time—Minimum charge of 25c for 20 words or lees. Over 20 worde, I(4° P er Two Timee—Minimum charge , I of 40c for 20 worde or lees. Over 20 words 2c per word for the two timee. I Three Timee—Minimum charge of 50c for 20 worde or leee. , Over 20 word* 2J4c per word i for the three time*. | Card* of Th»nk* -38 c Obituarle* and ver»e» — 00 Open rate ■ dl»pl*y advertielng 35c per column inch. ♦ —-— ♦ FOR SALE FOR SALE — 15 used Washers, Electric and Gas, small down payment*. Heating stoves, oil ranges, sweepers at bargains. Decatur Hatchery. 10-10 tt ORDERED SOLD: Used business equipment —1 Underwood type writer; one Burroughs adding machine; one safe; one desk. No reasonable cash offer will be refushed. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 So. Second St. Phone 199, 51-3 t APPLE TREE SALE—Good clean large trees, while they last, $3.50 per 10. Evergreens, shrubs, ornamentals and shade trees. We make lawns. Riverside Nursery, Berne, Indiana. 39-ts FOR SALE—2-piece velour living room suite; automatic electric washer; dining room suite; dressers; chairs; tables. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson. 49-3tx FOR SALE—Briggs and Stratton 4 cycle gasoline motor. Aladdin mantel hanging lamp. Theo. Bulmahn, Preble Phone. 50-3tx 100 ACRES—Unimproved farm that can be bought at a low figure. It is located 2 miles north of Decatur, Indiana. Half the farm is in pasture. Must be sold for cash. Write K. H. Knowlton, Freeport, Illinois. 40 —? FOR SALE — Used furniture and Pianos —1 3-piece living room suite; 1 davenport; 1 piano; 1 range; several mattresses and springs: tables and chairs. No reasonable cash offer will be refused. Sprague Furniture Co.. 152 So. Second St. Phone 199. 51-3 t FOR SALE — Young cow. Heavy springer. Mile east of Decatur. Lloyd Bowman. Itx FOR SALE — Two 5-25x17 tires. One two-wheeled trailer. 211 N Sixth St. •* 51-Jtx o Rochester Saw Mill Destroyed By Fire Rochester. Ind.. March I—(UP) — Police today invesetigated a theory '.hat a firebug was responsible for a >20.000 fire which destroyed the E. P. Bright saw mill here yester-1 day. It was the third big fire in less than four months to stake the Rochester vicinity. A strong wind hindered firemen in attempts to save the sawmill, but the fire fighters succeeded in sal- | vaging lumber and logs stacked near the mill. Cause of the blaze was not determined. New Police Car Is Placed In Service The city’s new police car was (tvlivered last evening and ulaced in service. The new car is black, a two-door Ford and bears a white Decatur police emblem. t Appoint in mt of Administrator Notice is hereby given That the undersigned has been appointed Ad- ■ rninistrator of the estate of Peter Young:, late of Adams County, de- • cased. The estate is probably solvent. W. H. Patterson, Administrator Hubert R. McClenuhnu, Attorney Feb. 13, 1939 Feb. 15-22 Meh. 1 Q Z Decatur Riverside Community ; Sate Every Friday Afternoon. DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases of oattle and poultry. Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth St. Phone 102 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined - Glasses Fitted HOU RS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135

For Radio Repairs Call MILLER RADIO SERVICE Phone 625 134 Monroe St. Ragldenoe

MISCELLANEOUS FARMERS ATTENTION — Call 870-A at our expense for dead stock removal. The Btadler Product* Co. Frank Burger, agent. NOTICE—Parlor Suite* recovered. We recover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Decatur Upholster*, Phone 420. 145 S. Second Street. 44-31 t NOW HATCHING two batches of Baby Chick* every week, all leading breed*; also Baby Ducklings. Reasonable prices. Model Hatchery, Monroe.lo-tt REAL ESTATE and LOANS—I can make 5. 10 or 15 year farm loans at No commission. City 1 loans at 5%, no commission, or FHA loans. If interested in selling or buying a property call or see C. D. Lewton. Phone 406, Decatnr. "wanted WANTED—To buy or rent house with 4 or 5 acres of ground. Phones 835. 50-3 t WANTED — Experienced ladies’ shoe salesman for local store. Single man preferred. Write box 103 Democrat. Give age, references and experience. 50-3 t WANTED —Middle aged or elderly lady as companion for elderly lady. Very little work; small wages. Address Box 102 care Democrat. 49-3tx WANTED —Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts of title. French Quinn. 33-m-w-f WANTED—Meat to cure and Smoke. Gerber Meat Market. FOR RENT FOR RENT — 6 room house. All modern at 447 Mercer Ave. F. V. Mills, Phone 383. 49-3 t FOR RENT —2 unfurnished rooms on Monroe St. Phone 1291. Itx FOR RENT — Nicely furnished room, close in; continuous hot water Shower. Phone 1107. 51-3tx o MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks: easy and quiet. Bonds: irregular; U. 3. governments higher, some issues at record high. Curb slocks: irregular. Call money: one per cen’. Foreign exchange: Netherland guilders at record high; others steady. Cotton; easy. Grains: wheat and corn, firm up 1-2 to 5-8 cent a bushel. Chicago livestock: hogs, strong steaedy to weak; sheep weak i Rubber: steady. i Silver bar in New York; unchanged at 42’i cents a fine ounce. o School Bus Driver Commits Suicide Claypool. Ind.. March 1 -(UP) — Kosciusko county coroner Leslie A. Laird continued his investigation today into the suicide of John Drudge, 43, driver of a Clay town- [ ship school bus, who hanged himself at his farm home yesterday af- ' ter delivering pupils to ’tie Claypool school. Coroner Daird was unable to discover any cause for the act, late yesterday. Drudge apparently had I been in best of health. His body I was dicovered by a neighbor who conducted a search for Drudge when he failed to call at the school to return children to their homes. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER Book your sale early. Trust Co. Bldg. Phone 104 Phone 1022 March 2 —Sam Dellinger, 2 mile South of Willshire on No. 49. March 3 — Cawley, Gentis & Smith. 2 miles South and 1 mile West of Waynedale. — Mar. 4 — Mrs. John Meyer, ’/a mile South and 1 mile West of Decatur on Peterson Road. March H—F. O. Miller, 5 miles East of Decatur on Piqua road. Mar 7 Chas. Miltenborger, 4 miles South and 1 mile East ot Convoy. Mar. B—John8 —John Reina, 1% miles Southeast of Rockford. Ohio. March 9 — Joseph Moiftnier, 3 miles West and 2(4 miles North of Monroeville. March Hl—Elmer E. Tricker. 2 miles South of Decatur on Mud Pike. 90 acre farm and personal I property. March 13 —Rots Downing 12 miles East of Wapakoneta on No. 33. March 14 —Steven Sibert, 4 miles South and 2 miles East of Chattanooga. March 15—Tracy Locker, 4 mile i North aud 3 mile West ot- Albion Marell IS—Adam Bent> 5 miles £ast and 3 miles North of Decatur.

markets® DAHV REP ORT AND FOREiGN Bradys War kft ,.. taf Cra'g- r *t 12 Nojonnn.ssicu \ eals receive ion to r.’H ih ß 140 to )!)„ 160 to Uni to r.!! :a " Ul 230 to 25(i Iby fitas 250 to 300 to 350 lbs an,i up Swl Roughs > earing -k laxbs ji Yearlings WHOLESALE EGG AlB POULTRY QUOTATIQIW, Furnisbed ay Metz'* Egg 4 p outtry Decatur R •A'l'crted March < Price* for first claw Clean large white and OVPT nor n 3 g£ Clean iarc- ' rown ffgu. Heavy Sy sn Heavy t:. i> d !h 5 , Heavy hens, over 6 lbs Leghoi ■ - ih s Leghorn S, ■ ingers, !b Heavy Stags ft ~B» Leghorn S'ags, ft CHICAGO GRAIN CloH Mar. May Wheat 1 Corn ts ,51 i Oats ,29‘e CLEVELAND PRODl'fl — H Cleveland ui. Mar. I Produce: H Butter, uns. tt’.-d, extras, standards, 29c. B Eggs, mist uied; extra M clean. 1 ■»< , extra firsts. rent receipts. 16>.c. H Live pouiny steady: hmi.M 5 lbs., and up. I' ?'.. dute.H 6 lbs., and up, 16-lk; mUKoM I small. 14-15 c. Potatoes Mu lagau russeU ' $1.50 bag of l<ni lbs.: Ohiol [ $1.15-sl.4it. ka’ahdin. $1«1 wa - I • ■ vania. $1 30-$l to, Maine il Idaho, $2: Texas red. $1.75 50 lbs.. Florida red. 11.15-12 150 tuS. EAST BUFFALO LIVES? I, East Buffalo X. Y. Marl I —Livestock: Hogs. 400; active; str* , mostly 5 and I'ic higher: ;o choice 190-215 lbs. SS.6M?6 . 150 lbs., SB.IO-88.40; trocli ' 140-220 lbs.. $Mi)-$8.35; ft i 300-lb. butchers. $7.75-$8.15. Cattle. 100: cows and I steady: fleshy dairy tye $5.755«25; lightweight bu ■ 18.50: meaty strong welgl ! ed $7.25. Calves, 100: dependable : trade, steady: good and cM ! to largely $12.50. .1 Sheep. 500; lambs steady! , and choice 95 lbs., down let ! sorted. $9.50; quoted top few shorn lambs SB. FORT WAYNE LIVESTO Fort Wayne, Ind.. Mar. 1 'l—Livestock: ’l Hogs. 20c higher. 200-22 $8.10; 230-240 Ihs.. $7.95; 1 ’ lbs.. $8; 240-260 lbs.. »7-«® 1 280 lbs.. $7.65 . 280-300 ib*. I 300-325 lbs.. $7.35; 33H» ’ $7.20; 140-160 lbs., $7.45; 1 > lbs- $7.20; 100-120 lbs.. $«•» i Roughs. $6.50; stags. I Calves, $11.50; lanM r INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTO . Indianapolis, Ind.. Mar. 1i —Livestock: Hog receipts, 3,000; ho 76: market steady to lot’ 160-250 lbs.. ss-10-SBJW: lbs- $7.75-18.05; 300-400 lbs, $7.65; 100-160 lb"- , sows 10 to 15c higher, < $6.75-$7.40. Cattle, 800; calvfb, and cows strong '<> -5c « heifers strong; most ste • $9.50; bulk heifers, »' vealers weak to 50c °* ■ | Sheep. 1.000; little ■, on lambs, most bids 25t LOCAL GRAIN MARKEI BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected Marcli t Prices to bejiaid toinorro’ I No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better , I No. 2 Wheat, etc. ■ - , , Osts. 30 lbs. test 27c—28 No. 3 Yellow Corn New No. 4 Yellow Corn i No. 3 Soy -Beaus Rye — —•■■■■■ CENTRAL SOYA COi i No. 2 Soy Beans ocrat Co.