Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 13 March 1939 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer *e»un ot t .ess tan queeuons? Turn to pm* four for the suswers. » ♦ 1. On which coati ot Sooth America la the rapvoiic of CM!*? 3!» sat roman y. nhat la UM name ot the path described In apace by a heavenly body in Ita revolution around another body? 3. Name the Chief ot lhe French Army General Start 4. la aluminum a conductor ot electricity? 6 Name the two men who sen eg aa Secretary ot Agriculture in Woodrow Wilaon'a oabiket. 6. What college la located at Hanover, N. 7. With what eport la the name ot Ry run Nelson asaoclaled? 8. What it the correct pronnncia * tlon ot Q>c word longevity? 9 Name tha principal tributary ot the Rio Grande. 10. What la the name for the art ot (lying a heavier-thanalr craft similar u> aa airplane, but not provided with aa engine? 1. Haa England a written cuuatltut lon like the United Staten! 3. Name the preaident ot the American Federation of Labor. Dr. S. M. Friedley VETERINARIAN Special Attention to Cattle | Dwihi Tubercutin and Range Oieeaee. Testing of cattle. Worming of Horeoa. Riga . • and Poultry. Phone 9434 Office 1113 N. 2nd et.

The Modem Home Show Shrine Theatre Building. Ft. Wayne Thursday. March ’6 to Tuesday. March 21 inclusive WELCOMES THE PEOPLE OF DECATI'R Tuesday afternoon. March 21, is lor the home lovers of Decatur and vicinity. You are invited to attend this eshibit of beauty dealing with all that is new and modern in the home, as guest of the Modern Home Show Management. — j u st present this coupon between the hours of — 1:30 to 4:30 on Tuesday. March 21. . ■ 11 11 1 - Public Sale X will offer R>r sain al public ati<-tMlf‘|rt**niy larm. located mite South and 1 inlle West of Willshire. Ohio, the following property, commencing at lo ou o’clock a. m.. on SATURDAY, March 18, 1939 3 HEAD OF HORSES—One S year old roan brood mare, du? to foal in April, weight about 1750 a good one. one ! year old black gelding, broke lo harness; one year old light roan mare colt, am utatandiug colt 4 HEAD OF CATTLE One Holstein and Jenny row. with fourth calf by side, one brown spotted cow. fresh in December—the above co* are both < years old One t year old cow, with calf by side, one 3 old Jersey, will freshen about June 20th. These cows are all gi tftln and extra good milkers. FARM IMPLEMENTS Fordsotl tractor, tn good condition; John Depre*ll in. tractor plow, LH.C. diac and tandem. S ft. Osborne binder, in good condition. Soilfitter cultipacker: Oliver 2 section spring tooth haftow. Brown-Manley «n tooth drag harrow. 12 In. Oliver walking plols.,Oliver corn planter, with fertiliser attachment, like new; Superior grain drill; Ohio corn cultivator; John Deere X mw beet cultivator; com Cultivator: oue good wagon with rack; iron wheel low wagon; Ohio lime spreader, force feed, new; International end gate seeder, wiflb grass seed attachment, new; Thomas mower. 3 acts sickles, hay rake Moat of thia machinery is new, being used only one and two MuSfflr All metal hog feeder, like new; new Celina hog waterer; tank heateu^,2 seta double harness, collars; f. shovel plow; single shovel plow, double shovel plow; 2 iron kettles; lard press; sausage grinder; gasoline engine, pump Jack; Howe platform scales. singletrees, doublw-rrecs. water separator; 2 chums; small heating stove, poethoi. diggers: forks, and many other articles. DRAIN About IS# bushels good solid corn. TKRSIS CASH W. G. TAYLOR, Owner Roy E—Johnson Auctioneer William Patterson—Clerk , Lunets-eerv.-d by I'nion U. B Ladiea Aid " . I —I ■ ■ I—l UM, ■ —

Barney (ioogle and Snuffy Smith A “MARCHING” SONG By Billy De Beck i *UMwwßßt \ : ‘‘• r f xwtßewas pU- i STOP MKROUUG I ,74 PfcCUUfcR ) _ '"A ftNTS kN NW V>'mcJv Y. jkSn J \® c ;.«©aas-OXM; t=- ? S'JKcz ytE3 • j Hl • — 1 »»r* 11, **m» '•*■* fflm *" 1 ~~ j■ > 3 " '' "' '" — ' ■ " _ IJI l t - THIMBLE THEATER Now Showing-“ITS ALWAYS POLITE TO KNOCK” ‘ H~ /z|'fAj^ T r^i|sSlß^ u |rr~~ /tSS cb<<us! 2 i& aCH _ :' \w’ ■’ EUc/qE]>, t ePtSS Rjcßtar w'V^v. BKk ' a ®®W‘ftT/W x *— S 5 J I -■^'■< —* ". ■ - w-»>—— -. ■-. i .- <' «i

5 What proportion of an iceberg Is above water? 4 Name the aacrcd mountain ot .'wpau. 6 lu which eountry did the tango utlginatc? • How many brotbera had Chrtalopher Columbus? 7. What do the letters Y. W. C. A. stand for? 8. Which country hue the oldest unaltered flag? ». Name the chairman ot the »W---ate Foreign Relatione Committee. | !• What atrait separates '.he State ■of Washington from Vancouver laj land? o- — ■ 500 Shceln 16-lb. White I‘nntgon Hond typewriting paper Me. lhe IMcatur Democrat Co. ts Sppelnlmeal at ASwoalafreter 80. mea Notice ie hereby given, That too usder signed has bean appointed Administrator of the estate of Alwilda Helm, late of Adamo County, de. ■ eased. The estate ie prooauly solvent. llyssss B Wooda Administrator. l>. HuMritr I aelev. Attorney reb. s’. i»J». Feb. st M>-h s-u ————■——■— DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases of cattle and poultry. Office A Residence 430 No. Fifth St Phone 102 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST !' Eyes Eaamlnod • Glasses Fitted HOURS 1:30 to 11:10 12:10 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8:00 p. m. Telephone 115

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1939.

MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks: lower and quiet. Bonds: Irregularly lower Curb stocks: Irregularly lower Chicago stocks: irregular. Cail money: one per cent. Foreign exchange: steady In re latino to the dollar. Cotton steady. Grains: osay; wheat, off about ape; corn, off around tgc. Chicago livestock: hogs, weak, cattle. Steady to weak. Sheep. - - - 1 — -

KIT EVELYN WELLS f

lbw——siwaßswnwmMwiwasmssmawmsMMiaMagMM CHAPTER XXXI Rut while Kit could not boast of himself, he could talk without end of Fremont. And while he talked. Jessie listened, the flame of love in her clear, young cheeks. He* told of Fremont signing the treaty of peace in California. He told of Fremont loading his tattered battalion into Monterey; into Loe Angeles. He told of Fremont the Governor. Fremont the Conqueror. Fremont the Pathfinder. In the following year he was ir Washington again, and thio time Jessie met him. kissing him on both cheeks, as an old, dear friend. But this time there was no joy between them, no Jubilant pride in Fremont Fremont had met with trouble in California. President Polk ordered his return, to temporary disgrace, to face court martial, on the grounds of “mutiny disobedience, and conduct prejudicial to order and discipline." He was found guilty of all but mutiny, but punishment was cancelled. But the true charge and one of which Fremont was held thoroughly guiltless by his adoring public, was this: He had been premature in taking California. On this trip east, in 1848. Kit Carson did not carry only the news of Fremont’s trouble. He was the only courier to travel east this year. Kit carried to the President the tremendous message that gold had been discovered in California! This report to President Polk was written in California by a handsome young friend of Kit's, one Lieutenant William Tecumseh Sherman. . . . The news carried by Kit thrilled all the world but left him unimpres. ed. Tempted by neither gold nor titles. Kit returned to Taosi in New Mexico. President Polk made Kit Carson a lieutenant in charge of fifty troops to be led through the dangerous Cbmanche country. Later Kit found the lieutenancy had never been confirmed by the Senate. But to Kit, the real honor was conferred by • Jessie Benton Fremont. When he left for the West, she pressed a miniature of herself into Kit's hand. “Give it to him," she whispered, wet-eyed, “wherever he may be." Fremont was marching eastward to Washington and court martial, in disgrace, at the tail of Kearney's army. Fremont when dead would lie with the miniature carried to him by Kit Carson over his heart Kit led his troops to safety, and retired. In Taos he told his young wife he was through with adventuring. There was much to hold Kit in Taos. In his adobo on the Plaza were Josefa, his wife, Terrains Bent, the tiny daughter of his murdered brother -in law Governor Charles Bent, and his friend Dick Owens. And around Taos were other old friends of his adventurous mountaineering days—Captain Ceran St Vrain, Alexander Godey, Oliver Wiggins and Lucian Maxwell. Maxwell was living now like a king on his grant the Beaubien and Miranda on the Rayado River near Taos. This raneho of 1,700,000 acres was the largest private estate in America. “Settle on my land,” Maxwell urged hia friends. “There is plenty of room." And to Kit in particular he begged: "Be my partner in farming. The Apaches will not dare trouble a man of your reputation. Wo will be | safe on the Rayado." And the Rayado became a military outpost, and Kit’s young friend

— 1 .. " steady. Rubber; lower Silver bar tn New Yoik unchanged at 43Mv fine ounce Busy Life Led st 85 TiH.ngsbble. Australia <U.R> — I Robert Fergusou was too busy on' hia alih birthday tn do anything more than just carry on hie regular work—that of running a f1»»i acre farm single banded He at tends to hia orchard, picks and

Captain Beale, with whom he had crept through the Mexican lines to •are Kearney's army, was stationed there with ten soldiers of ths First I'ragooaa a The army had entered the West, never to bo driven beck. And while Kit purchased plows and sheep for his farm, another friend arrived in Tsos, in Jamiary, 1849. This was Fremont, rescued from the horror of the Fourth Ex peditlon. the only one he ettempted without Kit Carson aa guide—the only expedition that failed. Ten of his men had died in the winter-f:osen Rockies. Twentythree survivors, bony as skeletons, had wept like children when found in the snow by a rescue party and carried on mules into Taoa. Onethird of hia party had starved to death. "But I will go on." said Fremont, propped in Kit's bed in the small adobe, one foot badly froeen, being rubbed constanUy by Josefa in enow brought from Taos Mountain. “Kit, will you not go with me?” The proud Fremont was pleading But Kit looked helplessly at Josefa, the wife who was still so very young, who was to bear hia child. And he stammered that this time he could not—there were certain responsibilitiea. “But I may join you later, with my family, in California,” said Kit Fremont remained three weeks in Kit's home in Taos. He wrote his wife of the luxury of having chocolate in bed brought to him by Josefa. He wrote of hit great joy that after the awful tribulations of the Fourth Expedition it should be Kit who welcomed him to safety. After Fremont left. Kit moved his ‘ family to a small adobe on his ranch 'on the Rayado. fifty miles east oi Taos. Kit bad to earn his living in this great naked territory, in the Gnat American Desert wherein prowled 120,000 Apaches and Navajo*, Comanches and Ute* roused to fury by the white invaders rushing to California in '49. But of them all. Kit and hia friends agreed, the Apaches were most to be dreaded. Other mountain men, emboldened by th* farming project, moved with their families to the Rayado. A ommunity sprang up around the farm where K.t plowed his land and 1 herded his sheep. Ho did not eare that north and south of him men and women were ' streaming past by thousands, in 1 wagons, on horses, afoot He did not eare that as they marched they : shouted, "Goldl Gold!" The gold stampede was on, over trails Kit 1 had first followed. The world was ' turning now to Kit's California. By ths end of '49, one hundred thousand Americano wore in Cali- ’ fornia. Kit did not eare. He was content ' with hia farm, Joaefa. a tender-eyed 1 young mother now, brooding over ' their first-born son. Charles. His . friends too could always be called: away from farming for a hunting 1 trip after antelope or deer, wild turkey or prairie chickens In June, 1 with Oliver Wiggins and two others. Kit went on a buffalo hunt and into their first noon camp rod* seven of , the dreaded Kiowa Indians. They did not know Kit Carson, but his name was known to them. , They smoked the peacepipe, and Kit made out their guttural comments. He said rapidly to Oliver: “They are planning to kill us. Their weapons are elose to hand. Train your guns on them aa I speak.**

iMi ta all hia ?n»lt and other prod ucta, niiika nine «x»w* tales dally and during lhe past tew mull ths has re-palntad three bouses o RETURN Ot R CANS All ennn with nnme I'kncrlenf Creumerie* must be returned to uh al once. Thia la a alate rulingThia does not apply to our cream agent a. Cloverleaf Creamer lex, Inc. 1 (1 St end

Then he sprang to his feet and snarled at them In their own lan‘Xd Dogs do you know who I am? 1 am Kit Carson- the Avenger. Take a good look at me before you die." They dropped their gun* and bows while Kit scolded fiercely. “Shame on you I Go, tel! your chief you have seen Kit Carson - and he has ordered you to live— to skulk and shoot nothing but rabbits! And the next time you smoke lhe peacepipe -abide by ita laws!" Th* Kiowas slunk out of eamp. "If they had been Apachee.” said Kit, "they would not have been cowed so easily." Apaches attacked the settlement at Rayado. and were avenged by Beale with bis First Dragoons Kit rods with them to ths attack and the soldiers took scalps as evidence. But that fall more terrible news reached the lonely settlement. Apaeb.es attacked a party coming over the trail from Santa F 6. All the party were murdered but one. and eh* an American woman. The wife of a Santa Fe merchant named White and her little ten-year-old daughter were taken captive. At the same time other Apaches, sweeping down on the military port at Rayado, ran off with all the horses of the poet. While Beale and his First Dragoons hastily hunted new horses,* other men of the lonely settlement, among them Kit Carson, dashed across the desert to the rescue of Mrs White and the child. The rescue party had been hastily organised. In the excitement not Kit Carson, but a man named Leroux was made leader For three weeks they followed the Apaehe trail. Somewhere in the desert Mrs. White and her little girl were being driven from camp to camp with the Apachee. What she was enduring the most hardened mountaineer dared not think. White women had been rescued from Indian tribes- - mutilated, mad Others were ransomed by families or the government. Others, ahame.l beyond human reason, had refused ever to look upon whits faces again, and remained loet among the savage tribes. Usually, however, white women captured by Indians died within a few weeks. After three weeks of hard riding th* “Indian sign" grew p4ainer. They were in southern New Mexico and nearing the Texas border. Kit. riding ahead, saw tepees of ths Apaches. “We can waste no time." ho told ths avenging party. "We must ride fast among them—scatter them -if we hop* to rescue Mrs. White alive. If w, jrive them any warning they will murder her. Follow me." And haring said this Kit dashed his horse on ahead. But Lercux, the appointed leader, halted hia horse. “Stand back, men," he ordered sharply, “I am in command hero!” Ths soldiers who formed part of the party halted. Kit drove hia horse into the village, and turned hia head to find himself alone. Helpless, he plunged on —he charged th* Apache village alone! Squaws ran and screamed, and braves sprang for their weapons. Kit's party, realizing his danger, charged, and the Indians scattered. (To be continued.) r-rmsM St Soln wuu

~ WSNTADS'

• s 1 ♦ “ RATEB One Time— Minimum charge of f I 250 for 20 words or loss. Over 20 word*. Ifte per word , Two Timeo—Minimum charge ( I es 40c for 20 word* or les*. Over 20 word* 2c pei word for , the two tlmoo. I Throe Tlmoo—Minimum charge ’of 50c for 20 word* or lees. ■ Over 20 wsrdo 2Vs« per word ( I for the three times. I Cards of Thank* ........ No I Obituaries and verse* .. 8100 Open rat* • display advertising 35c per column Inch. FOR SALE — APPLE TREE BALE—Good ileaa large tree*, while they last. 88 50 per 30. Evergreen*, shrubs. orn*-l menials and shade trees. We make lawns. Riverside Nursery. Berne. Indiana. 394 t FOR SALE—IO used electric gaooime washers trout 114.60 up. Smail down payments. Sweepers,, oil stove*, electric relrixerator* at; bargains. Decatur Hatchery. mt FOR SALE—Holstein Jersey heifer calf. 3 days old. Lawrence | Heckman. Decatur R 1. 8 miles, nortk on 37. 80-3 t FOR SALE — 19 head bred ewee. Lamb tn April. 1-4 years old. Albert IWrtson. Four miles east Monroe toad 134. <O-3tk i FOR SALE—3 cows, 1 with calf by side, gilt to (arrow soon. 9 pigs- 60 lbs. each Otto Hartmann. Poe phone. 81-3tx FOR SALE—Antique Cheat Drawers; Dining room Snite; Clock*. Radio*. Itreeeers, Buffets. Hall Trees. Mattresaes. new and used Oil Range*, gas stoves, tables, odd chairs. Frank Young. 110 Jefferson 81. <l-3t FOR SALE—Electric refrigerator* and stoves. Announcing the new Frigidalre line (or 1939. See them at Vhrick Bro*. FOR SALE — Decatur Quality Chicks every week. Book order now (or March-April. Early chicks make (all layers. Order today. Decatur Hatchery, phone 497. 67t6 FOR SALE - Zenith and Phllco radioe Free home trial. Ea.-> payments. Phone 7873. 6»-3t • FOR SALE - Tractor plow, new McCormick Deering Lillte Wonder 13-lnch. plowed about 35 acres only. 10 mo old. Roy Johnson, first farm west ot Decatur on rtv<r r.>Hd , 61 3tx | FOR SALE— Kalamazoo wood or coal range, in good condition Phon.- 757. s>3tx FOR SALE —Two Guernsey cows, J and 4, fresh now, calf at aide. Gilt with six pig*. J. N. Burkhead I’* miles west ot Monroe 55-a3tx FOR SALE — 5 room, all modern house; close in. Andreas Box 11V Cure Democrat. 69-Jtx FOR SALE — Three good Case ateam boilers. One new re*t»uilt Case thresher and one used thresher. C. H Walter. VeVre Crus Ind. 4 , _ «l-3t FOR SALE—Used niercbandlse 3 kitchen cabinets and 1 breakfast set, like n«“W; 8 kitchen ranges, A-l condition; 10 dining room chairs: I library table; 1 book | case; 1 lied; 1 organ. No reasonable offer will be refused Sprague Furniture Co., 153 So Second St. Phone 19h 61-31 ' FOR SAIJS— Some new 1938 model refrigerators. Big reductions t Phone 7873. Uhrirk Bros. 59-3 t FOii RENT FOR RENT—Two or three furnished house keeping rooms. Bath Private entrance. Furnace beat. Garage. 887 North Fifth. <O-3t4 FOR RENT—B 9 acre (arm, cash rent. Close to town. Paul Gould. Monroe, ind t'hone 88. «9-3tx FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping rooms. Private en trance on ground floor. 360 North Third St. 5»-tt | - FOR RENT —7 room, modern house and garage, 604 N. Second St. Phone 574. C. D T«-ple. • S9.Hx 1 FOR RENT 7 or I acres good ground, cash or crop rent. Inquire 13<>H W. Monroe St 61-3 i

— _ -- ■. . CONTENTED RADIOS . o DON'T C==3S 3QUAK 4 -.' ” -■^* l k CALL MILLER RADIO SERVICE Phono «4S 1S« Monroe St nxalHenoo Phnnx n?j

MISCELLANEOUS c FARMERS ATTENTION — Call 879-A al our expense for dead stock removal Th* Stadler Product* Co. Frank Burger, agent. IHt NOTICE Parlor Suttee recovered. 1 We tocover and repair anything. ' Wo buy and sell furniture. Deca- 1 tur Upholater*. Pboac 438. 146 8. 1 Be. ond Street 44 311 ' NOW HATCHING two batches of ; Baby Chirks every week all I leading breeds; also Baby Duckl- I lags. Reasonable prices. Model I Hatchery, Monroe. DMf : MATTRESS REBUIUHNG — All ; kind*. *!**» Also white pbp 1 < orn (or sale. Sc lb. Bertie Bedd ' Ing Co. Mile north, two east ot Berne. • 81-3 U WANTED WANTED - Middle-aged lady to stay with elderly lady. Not much work. If interested, write Box 113. ' Democrat. 60-3tx WANTED—3 or 3 room furnished apartment by April 1«. Box 114. WANTED — A single (arm hand, I between the ages ot 18-40. 3 mile j -sat ot Monroe and one mile eoath. Wm. Neadotlne 61-3tx ! WANTED — Jackets repaired, relined, lippers replaced. Special carrying case* made by Leo MH ler, 115 North First St. 68-it WANTED—Ashes, black dirt and rubblab to haul. Also general nauling Phone 1188. »-a3tx WANTED— Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts ot title. French Quinn. 38-m-w-f WANTED — Woman to do bouee- i work two days a week. Call 594 4lßtx FARM DEMtiNSTIUTURS WANTED in your home county Good. paying, permanent proposition for reliable man over 88 to demonstrate to fbnncrs a big repeating product that practically sells Ita self. Nothing else like it in the country. Thia means a lifetime job with big earnings by making a few simple d<-monstrations every ■ •lay. A good car and larm eager- ' ieuce necessary Write giving age and experience to Box 111, care* Democrat. 61— I STEADY WORK - GOOD PAY — Reliable Man wanted to call on I ■ fanners in Adams County. No ezpcrleno- or capital required Maks ' up to 313 a day. Write McNew Co. i Dept. 8. Freeport. Illinois. Itx reads la A «m>m Tews » neeatar 1 - ■ II U . '•j, I .*! l>r.UM|(|AT M HOIII. Fl Ml latana Notice l» hereby given that the principal and Interest owing us the respective i>chn<d fund loans herein»ftei mentioned were long past due 'and unpaid ■>« the nrst day of danunry, l»j>. and still remain unpai-i; therefore, the undersigned. Victor H. Klehrr, as Auditor of Adams County, state of Indiana, will, at ths rail door of ins Court H»um tn l»e- ■ ntur In said - ountr, on Mandat, tbe X?(b day at Marrb l»a» betweru the hour o( tea o'clocg A M. and « o clock P. M. on said day offer tor sale at Public Auction, and will sell to th» hlgh'-t blatter, lue following rteu rlbcd tracts ot real 1 (.state situated tn Adams County, I State of Indiana, towlt: l oan v». tWJtt I North Hos outlot No. 374 In the Joseph Crabbs Zrd western a<ldl-1 tlon to the town, now city of De<a-I tur, Indians, 33* N Eleventh Hl reel;' also I*4 stcry frame house on said 10lThe sals of said tract ot real estate I will be made to satiety the principal. Interest, damages and coau and accruing interest and co»L upon a certain mortgage on said r«al **■ I late. eae> used by Maude A. md Millon K. Hower, in lav»i ot the Plate of Indiana tor use ot Congieselonal ih-hool Funds aa follows:. Amount of unpaid prin- ipal of sale loan: Bl3M.ee; nmount of interest , cost and damages. IsTo.eu; total a--nonnt due ->n said loan on day of , sale; isetaoo i.Ma No. less Commencing at the southwest cor- 1 ner of ths northwest quarter ot section 31 tn townanlp 3» n<»ren of range fl east. Ihe n» nor’t, .3 chsina and thlrty.three links, thence in a soum ■ I east direction so ns to strike the Uno dividing the north east ■uusr-i ter ot the north west quarter from ■ the southeast quarter of the north I west quarter of said section 38 1* ■ chains and Si links west ot the esat I line of said quarter them e west to ■ to the northwest corner of the «nn»h vast quarter of Hie north west quarer of said section, them e suutn «" i chains end to llnku, (hence west to the place »l beginning containing I 41 Slid >: ioe acres. The mi* of seld tract of real »»-| tale will be made to satisfy the prtn- , <lpal, interest, damages and costs and accruing Interest and coat, upon a certain mortgagn on said real estate, ezecuted by Charles W. and Edith J. Johnson, In favor of the Hate of Indiana for use of Common H- hool Funds ea follows: Amount of unpaid pilnclpal of sale loan (ssnoeo: emnnnr of Interest cost and damages lt> n oo total amount dus on said loon on day ot sale: ISlvneq At r-ait. sal* said ae( era! tracts of real estate wilt he offered separatelv and all the rights, title and Intereats Os the. reeoectlve mortgagors in ■nd to real estate, and of all persona firms amt cm noratinn claiming or holding any rights, title or Interest in and to said real estate by and through said mortgagors, nr so much thereof as may he necessary, to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage will be sold term* m »*)» 58 , v«tor H Eirhsjt. Auditor ot Adams ijitan»

MARKETREPojJ ■rady's M.rb.t far D U ’ P Closes at ia ' * ' -Cd March ' No cmiiiiiu,-,.,. <|)(1 vm;. re.c.stt I'lo to 180 lbs IO Ito I- ... to . 19<> to 330 ib> , Bb<l to 30) , 300 to . 350 lbs, an>l up Rough. Veal, re - Sprmg Vesillng , ■ WHOLEB^T tw avß huultrv quota? o M ■ Furnished ty HH m*u* tea a Pouivy Oecetur Corrc. ted Ma-.b ;; . A>| i-an iarpr . ■ . K<g , and over, is r ■ ate l|n| clean lore- *■ MR h. . . Heaty h.-t - ~' U ghcrr. I, . , ; C .j- V la-shorn ’’ d CLkvtLAND Produce Hue. .. standard*. 26Egg*. . 1., (Ivan. l'< M rent rexeipts. , 5 lbs and ~ „ and small. 12< 11 i. <>( 50 lbs. • Ear H \ Mall.P) Liveptrx » .•> D :■■ I(8 4(>; II" ■! * I 86 50-86 75. ■ 85.55 n good and ■"i ■ < '■ B-* Sh. . p .1 ■ ■ d..hic ' trade b' l.». :r 1 «o.>d and ch. .. - MB mostly I'*." .tr:.l *'■»■■ !MM|n weights. t'.‘. ».. !»' ? 34.65-35 INDIANAP L S L VtS’OC* Bl —Livestock Hog receipt133. markci -i. !■..-:> 17 70-17 1 ; 8(10.400 lbs. 67--5 3 - ' ’ ’ Cattle, I- 5 "" Steady oil .ill ' ‘ fi-lin?,.. hulk I-:: vealera 60c lowr. i'>i> 111 Sheep. 20" . r-.ush -»fJ make a market FORT WAYNE LiVltS T Fort W«ync Ind 1 —Uvesto-s Hoss, steady. 2'4‘-. ’ lb ’ 230-340 lbs. 4'.'65. !•>"- 01 ' 87.70; 310-260 lhe lbs.. 87 85. 280-300 |h» ». 335 lb s. 17.05. 325 35" Ho-160 lbs. »72" »**' ?« !»5. 100 120 Ihs. ‘'l7" Hr Roughs. H 35. sues i-» i Calves. Ill; lem l ’'" ■ CHICAGO GRAIN ClOSt MH Mai J” 1 / Wheat «7\ (Mia - - LOCAL GRAIN m * R ** T I BURK ELEVATOR CO. M ■■ Corrrcicd Mir I’’ 1 ’’ |H Prices to be paid tom'OTP’ H No. 1 Wheat. 69 It"* " r b '"' r ’ S NoN. 8 Wheel. et< Oats. 3" lbs test 37c -* ' No. 3 Yellow Corn - New No 4 Yellow Corn M No. 3 Soy Beaus Rye B CENTRAL 80' * cs ' B NO. 2 Soy BMW B