Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 38, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 16 July 1940 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
* Test Your Knowledge Cea you answsr wm of these i tun gueecb.net Turn tn page Four for tbs answers i 11,1 111 -M a 1. In hia teat fight with Godoy] did Jo** Irnuls score a leehnlc al, knockout in the .lath, seventh or j eighth rouud? 2. Where la Mt McKinley National Park? 3. What does Pusu'u Rico mean? 4 Name thv American inllllonalre Irnra lu Kentland who gave away si fortune to libraries and other institution* I. How muny unita are tn a hek-| era doses? « la there any State In the t’a- ; Inn tn which a person who ha« only ‘ first papers for naturallMtUMi ran vote? 7. How many children did Prowldent Wilson have? 3. Where wa» the armlstne sign-1 <d in the first World War? • Are the winds. "God tempers j th*' wind to the »tioru tenth," in the Bible? io Who la tailed "Ciar of the Movies?" 1 " ■' •' 500 Nhccin n'jhll Sunrise Canary Second Sheet*, neatly wrapped. Me. The Decatur Democrat Co.
ACT NOW .. SAVE 50% BUY YOL't INDIANA STATE FAIR ADMISSION TICKETS NOW AT 25c... ONK-HALF OF THE RLGUbAR PRICE, WHILE 22M00 TICKETS LAST . . . ADMISSION 50c AFTER FAIR OPENS Tickets now on sale by county agents, farm bureau secretaries, banks, Hook Drug Stores, and Haag Drug Stores or write to manager, Stale Fair, Indianapolis Eight Big Dap ud Nights Asg. 30 it Sept. 6 Agriculture—lndustry—-Education—Science —Pageantry— Recreation—Music—Fashions— Amusement*— Art—Engineering L— - ( Lemons—doz. 19c ToMAToESr.x2lbs.lsc SUGAR $1.19 Skinless Wieners .Z, lb 17c Snusd§e *“ lb. 10c
THIMBLE THEATER Now Showing “A LITTLE BIRD TOLD THEM!" ■ Fmv health Bg\aan, W k l REMAINED* I SAMI 1 LemACtiNATiON 'AIERE 1 /Aa lt* X-*. I 1 f AN APPARITION THAT 1 I GONER TAKE A>j*J O / I k* NOT CARE A EW.K AN'PROVE kTwT 4 1 * B'l SEE AGAIN |T • M fwP w? ■«" Mt JMEkTB HBmmhßHmmmß _W ®te IF SB : 88 3*' .. B L O N I) IE IN ONE EAR AND OUT THE OTHER By Chic Youm .**'zfet7 Ji pw— ~"~ | j^LL' 3 ' » VIWMkCUUM-CLfAHeijAh© J - J X_OHYM SWEEP nc MDASiodoi J I w ’“L— r L*fJ _ii AA© soar our A- - fttauw - -J / i t. J(P6AP?> (pW ■ T! i\S u * L * UMDS 'j aH / f t \ _ \ T I * LfJi U■& ° / i-Hf i i \ V\B ■ !fw JJL /A R' 'nS Ww fi® — r IX\\L IliV **" ' «y* ~ ■ •- ~ > ~' l i \ ’Pt MmMh fl -if 7 ’/ ' ' >ni b|JJ|p■' 1 k<-.n , j
JAPS BID FOR ; cohriMVKp on raor thukwi •r of the Nall air tune coal In wed with considerable Mteaaa accord i Ing to London For a month now. the Royal Air Force has been . dropping tona of U.gh esploaltca on Herman bssae lu the Itehh Bel'alum. Holland. Norway and France The Germans repeatedly hate re ported Ugit they suffered no important military damage but that <lt Iliana were killed hi va.luu* t towns. i It would ae,-in lertaln that tier- ! man aerial bombardment of the ■ British Isles has < auged far more I damage than admitted al London rhe Nall high command reported today that Herman planes had laimbed auih .rOWded and Import ant points as Plymouth Cardiff Brighton and Pembroke to blast at lai torlea and communications lines. In .idditkm the Herman, lepott I> d th.it tbi* •• more British mor- | . haul men totalling to OOU tons were sunk and Ove others damaged In the English < tunnel yesterday, while a l'-hoat sank a Soon ton tanker lu a convoy. The British admitted that 33 ships totalling 111 137 tons wer* sunk In the week ■ tiding July 7. whuh means the i Nail aerial and I’-bciet him hade | of the British Isles la being tight- < neil steadily although it I- not yet
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
. I . — n.„ i — —» - . — I near the .traugulailon point All of these aerial and uaval blows obviously are preliminary to' the big offensive which Home and Berlin have reported will be launched soon against the British Isles. They also are blows that the i Nasi-Fascist pr ess has sought to 1 exploit m Hi.-, iimtluuing war of nerves In an effort lo breah down the British will to resist by threatening everything from starvation lo Invasion and terrific bombardment ot London But the BtHtoh have ahowed Increasing rletlame rather than
v jpTITAN TOWERS
CHAPTER TWRNTY-EIGHT Linda faJteeod, "I didn’t wean to burden your family with my l.oublwa, Bill, but Mickey means so much to me.” "I understand.’' continued Bill, -but the bast thing foe Mickey, and ,<r yon and nil of wa. in to handle this thing with as little fuse as peeAible. Tea eould settle with the lorteea oat of react—tell them they may have the boy ..." Linda, doubting her ears, caught her breath sharply, end her heart—the heart in whleh aha had crowded Mickey over to make way for Bill ’items— stood still in her throat ”... of course, they won’t know it. but it will be only temporary,” Bill continued blandly. “I*t them have Mickey for a while and then they’ll drop the guardianship matter and, after we’re married, we'll have no trouble getting the boy back. There." he paused, looking for approval, “doesn't that fix it?” The room was very still when Linda answered. "Yes, Bill.” she said, and her voice was very, very quiet, “that fixes ■ verything." And Linda looked directly at Bill Blaine and, Anally, really saw him tor the first time. It wasn’t in that t-nso romantic moment age. sgu, high on a rooftop, that she first saw Bill Blaine. It was now, here, in the library of the Blaine mansion, where a girl's feet eould be on the ground—and her heart eould sink much lower. looking at Bill, she looked THROUGH him, and what she saw was another Mike, cast in the same .uold; taller, blonder, but still Mika Morton. Totally charming, totally irresistible—and totally shallow. Linda finally said: “Thanh yea. Bill. ITI try not to make 100 mock notoriety for yas. . . . I'll let yaa know my deeisiaa tomorrow." Leaving, she looked deep into Mr. Avon's face and saw a strange as* , reaaion there—of hurt mingled with heartfelt understanding. He looked as though, in one short, revealing statement, he had loot a ton—arm gained a daughter. 0 0 0 “Mommy,” said Miekey, "I want to help you write. Give me a pencil.” “Why, darling I" Linda said, surprised, "I thought you were sound asleep. Aunty Blauer told me you went to bed early.” “I waked up.” Miekey, clad in a plaid bathrobe over his pajamas, elimbed up beside her at tha kitchen table. White Miekey draw on his paper, Linda wrote: “Yoe ware kind. Bid. to try to AB boBMt WMBSB of IB* 884 give my aoa a father. Bat It woalda't week. Thanhs, though, for being noble. “Nothing will work far as. If 1 gave Miekey to the Mortens without a fight, it would hove torn oat a part as my heart, and there wouldn't ba aurh left for you. would there? “I'm sure yea woalda't waat what weald bo left. . . . L.” It's not Bill's fault, she thought, that he happens to be Bill. It’s Linda's fault, all Linda’s fault for playing a game that couldn’t possibly have ended happily. “Smart girl!” aha said aloud. “I'm smart, too,” Mickey answered. "Look, 1 made a pigl What nid you make, moaamy?”
(weakness lo such threats and to fuggr.livns such ss Italian edilur Virglnlo Gayda made, that British must either submit or suffer a shat terlng attach In ’his lonneition thoie were new rumors of a peace move apparently as a pail at the i totalitarian war of nervao—but II I seemed extremely unlikely that He:many would make any pome gesture ala time when II had been rejr* led In advam a by lamdon and when the British <<mld exploit such an offer to build up fighting spirit la their own muatry ■ 0 1 Dance Wedntmdav SunSrt
"Momaw —Linda said, “• t mesa el things." Mickey studied bar shoot at paper , intently, without eernag what ho aougfat. But it was there. 0 0 0 0 I I Jade's wun<% for tbs nexl several days, was too occupied with two i strong infiuencoa upon her life to i notion the abeanro of a third. Tha coming custody battle over ; Mickey and tha revolatioa at tha real Bill Blaine—a man who was a i total etraagor from that Bill she I firct met on the ruof- so held her th lights during ovary waking hour that the failed to notice the absence ' as Stove Hubbard. It was as, the third day after tha family cuunsel in the Blaine home ... the night that Bill Blame had st-«>d revealed lo her the firat time ... that realisation dawnud on Linda that Steve was strangely missing from hie old haunto—chiefly from hi« daily romp with Mickey. When Stove failed to visit Mickey that day and the next, Linda began tn miso him That was why she went to the basement garage of Titan Tower and made inquiries of the manager. “No, Mtaa,” the manager said, “Steve isn't with us now. You know his hands got hurt. Besides. Miss, I don’t think he's coming back with us even after his hands heal. His uncle or aunt or somebody died and left him a ranch somewhere upstate .. luster, Linda tried to telephone Steve at his apartment. The operator told her that Steve’s number had been disconnected. She felt that Steve Hubbard had gone out of her life . . . withoot even saying goodby. too ... not even to Mickey, let alone Linda. Ym, Linda MUST have hurt him. more deeply than she realised. She couldn't let him go away like that—not Steve, who had been so kind and good to both of them. It wasn't like Steve to exit quietly, , from her life or anyone's, not the Stove who had entered it so brashly that bright day on the sun-deck as she waited for Bill Blaine. ... How could she And him? Where was it that Aunt Cynthia had said her ranch was? Maybe she could reach Steve there—was it Susanville? No, that wasn't it... Vacaville? Linda couldn’t remember. o o e Unda, had aba known it, would not have needed to look far tor Stove. At the moment she was seeking to reach him by telephone from her ot- ' flee, Steve was only a few blocks away, at a downtown bank. He had come from a lawyer's office, where the estate of Aunt Cynthia, which had boea in excellent order and quickly settled, was wound up, and had gone directly to the bank to transact business prior i to leaving for his auat’a ranch- -now Steve’s. With a friend for a chauffeur—one of the boys from the garage on ■ his day off—Stove was driven from 1 the bank to a failliar stopping tlace in a reaidential district. teve'e hands were healing rapidly but were not sufficiently sound yet to permit him to risk their full recovery by driving hie ear. I After a brief stop, Steve emerged to climb bach in hie ear end. look-
Injuries Fatal To Andrews l*hy»ici»n Andrews. Ind, July l< -lUFi Dr Ru>«oll Clymer. 3» dted last night at an Indianapolis hospital I from a shull fracture rv< rived in au aulomolille accident near Noun I Webster last Wednesday. gl; q || - 20 Ih W hi I * unwatcrm.irkrd miawoffrapOadapUblr for all kind* «' mimeograph work and nullable f« ink signature. *»<■. 1 The Decatur liemorrut (’<».
i(« bvek to wave at oomeoao la • wfiafow, drove away-aeroao th* city, over the hay bridge and earth toward Oroville and hia ranch. 0 0 0 -Jaa," said Je Mearas, burstioi intrnJaatee’e sdtee. "I need a lead burgles—come with aw!" Janice had been sitting idly at her typewriter and when she luukad up. Je noticed that her eyes were rod. “Whet did you eayt" Janice asked. "1... I didn’t hear you." “Hey I” said Jo. ’Snap out of it, kid The world len t coming to an end. You took like you’ve committed nil seven deadly sins and bad thought up a couple extra es your own to repent” “I’m sorry, Ju," Janice said. "I'm all right.. > “Lkstea. then." Jo went oa. “Here's oar big chance My big Gman hone ie a Gowe-msa. and I'm alone la the office. I cen t leave it fee long, so hurry aad come back with me. Now’s our chance to rifle hia files aad aae jest what they have oei l.iada. I need you to helkr ‘Hickey, the copel* If aayoao CBBMS. woe* For a moment Janice looked alive again. “Oh, Joi" she cried. "Do you think we caa find out something to help Linda . . . •'Well, wo won’t standing around here.” Jo urged. “Let’s get going.” A few minutes later the two girls were doing a very thorough job of rifling the secret film of Mr. Anderson, Jo's private detective employer. At one point, when a postman knocked on the outer office door to leave a special delivery letter, both girls swung around startled, their whirls synchronised like two dolls on a common nwchanism. And then, on a shoot of paper at the bottom of the file, they found something to reward their efforts and justify the risk they bad taken. It waa a letter to Mr. Anderson from Jack Blaine, and Jo quickly copied it in shorthand before restoring it to the file. Later, when Janice and Jo hurried to Linde's offteo to toll her the news, Jo read ths text to Linda from her notes. “t'aleee." Jack Maine had written, “some concrete evidence es misconduct is forthcoming, 1 foot that I will have to recomawad to ear elieate that the guardianship petition be withdrawn. “So far the case against the child's mother, charging that oho la unfit to have hia custody, la a circumstantial one. built ow suopiciea alone, aad without definite proof. "lakes your investigaUoa uncovers some clincher, nemo actual evidence of misconduct, I am afraid ws will get nowhere. “Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Merten are arriving Tuesday to be present when the ease come to court, and I know they wiU waat.. .* “Unda I” Jo enthrusted. “Don’t you understand, honey? We’ve got them licked I” And Janice said: “Jack did it—l knew it!” Neither Linda nor Je undsreteed. Jo said: “What’s ’jack’ got to do with its All the ‘jack’ in the world won’t help them!” (To bo continued) CavmsM Itli. "■» rvMMCHM, Im t>w,m,i«o », xta« riii—i miq.
* " ATlt -A | Ono Timo—Minimum etorffS st JSo tor 30 w*' 4 * •* ° » words. F* '"•** , Two Ttawe-Mto'*** of *>s tor K wards or lose Over M words to per word tor , two two Mmes Throe Tlmee-MI"'""*" * M ’* Os MO tee as words er wee Over « words 3Vo« «*' •‘ >r * ter the throe limes Card of Thoako J* Obituarleo end veroee - • * Open rote— dlopiay oO.ortieiM toe per column too*. “BLIND” ADVtRTIMMBNTS Advertisements appearing to thio column wI. bout names , signed are "blind" “"bey are to be answered by letters, ad- | dressed to lbs box number la care ofl tba DaUv DumocraL | We eaa give ao u funaatloa | rnacernlag Hw parties advortia I Iff 4 HAUI FAHMEiW ATIBNTION - Call M»A al our uueaao tor dead stock removal The btadlar FroSuets Co, Fraak Burger, agent FoR SALE tkiufid baud bhyrie In A l condition Completely tebuilt Dick Mills. 187 N. iutb St l<*-3tx FOR SALE-Estate Healing stoves, fl down, pay as you can until i fall. Used washers, refrigerators Decatur Hatchery. . FOR SALE Burk s Growing Masb S 3 10. Burks Uyiux Marsh with cod liver oil. 1310, without. 1200 Burk Elevator Co. 1(7 ts FOR SALE -Order Michigan Raspberries and t'he/rles now Riady for delivery Thursday mm mux Call 7kl Decatur or Ed Koller. Craig- ' Ville phone. H»v-g3lx FOR SALE ' room house m Mou roe. Sec- Jim Andrews or Walt .Johnson at Graham Insurance Agem y g l«fi-3t rREUNION CALENDAR I Sunday. July 2fi Haggard family reunion Lehman Park. Berne. 1 Horne Annual Reunion. Sun Set Park. Hoafman Reunion. SunHet Park Harnett Reunion. Sun Set Park. Barker Reunion. SunHet Park. Sunday, August 4. Sc haffer reunion. 1-eglon Memorial Park. Decatur. The annual Fuhrman family reunion will be held at Hanna-Nutt-man park. Sunday. August 4 Roebuck Annual Reunion. SuuSet Park. Hinkle Reunion (rain or shine), Sun Set Park. fiungsy, August 11 Fruoi ble annual reunion Hamm Nuttmaa park. Annual Hawkins reunion. John Hawkins, 2 miles south of MonI roevtlle Fisher annual reunion, brick pavilion, Franke park. Fort Wayne. Relllg and Reahm Reunion, SunSet Park. Annual Dellinger Reunion. SunSet Park. Wesley Annual Reunion. SuaSot Park. Sunday. August Ifi Blossom family reunion. CCC <amp. Bluffton, rain or shine. McGill Family Reuntou, Sun Set Park. Annual Mays Reunion (rain or shine). Sun Set Park. Liby Family Reunion, SuuSe' Park. Sunday, August 25 Chattanooga Zion Lutheran Church Picnic, Sun Set Park. Walters Annual R-uulon, Sun Set Park. Sunday. September g M O. Braun Reunion. Sun Set Park. MtrtiK or rivtt. uErri.KWichT or KOT vrr 50. SUM, Notice Is heroby gives lo llw ■ rudltors heirs aud legs lees ot Prank U ■lerrionrf to npeear ; In th* Adams Circuit Court, held ai Ifecalur ludteua. on the !nd day of , Nofitenilmr. ISIS, and show cause ■if any. why the Final Hellh-meni Accounts with ibe estate us ■<»! dwedem should not hr :>i>t>rove,l and Mid hrirs ar. omitted to ih„ and thorn make prui.f .J Iniramu and receive their distributive shares' Margarat Lose. Adniliilatratrlv in slur Indiana. July It. ISIS. Ham T. Grube. Atloraey. ARE YOU THE MODERN TYPE? Thon why have a iMO kitenen when a 1940 West•oghouae kitchen coste no more See our Westinghouse electric ranges and stoves. Decatur Electric Shop ’M So. 2nd St. Phone 244
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MISCELLANEOUS RBFINANCS or buy y*tr term—lowest Intoroot-M year les—repayable enytlme-toesl orgsmxatton. Henry B. Melter. NFLA Ses'y Tress *» ■« |2S HEW ARI) ter uny '«• Christopher corn and rallus naive won't remove It has removed milI lions of torns since IMB Pries 3&*I Mail orders filled promptly- BffM hy E J Milter grorery. distributor. West Adams St. Decatur. Indiana 164-311 IF YOU ARE bothered by rood dust, for information on state approved road-oil write Arthur Girod. lh-iatur. R- No. 2. Craigvllte phone SINGER SEWING MACHINE AGENCY. «U S First St I’boue HI New and guaranteed used ma<him bargains, off payment plan, tfeoing taught tree. All makes repaired Pai to. lb i fill NOTICE Upholstering, reflntehlng and repair work ot all kinds Wo buy and sell good furniture. Decatur Upholstery Shop. South Second St. Phone 420 140-JOT WAITED WANTED To do combining Have new Minneapolis t-ft. rut. Wm. Rehhert. Monroe, lud Heine Phone 2011. 14»-3tX WANTED Young girl wants office work or clerking. Phone Mfi3. IMdtX 1 o — LOST AND FOUND LOST — Wheel from wheel chair near Sun Set Saturday. Inquire box 144 care ot liemocrat office. itt-UU NOTICE I will be out of my office July 17 lo 2U. inclusive. l«» 3t R E. Daniels. M D MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks: Firm In moderate trading Bond- Higher. U S. government mixed. < Curb «tock»: Higher. Chicago I slocks firm. Call money. One percent. y Foreign exchange; Lower In relation to the dollar. Cotton; Futures off as much as LW a bale, other oplions h regular. Grains: in Chicago, wheat higher ! up around 14 to IS cents. Cora irregular, up to off >, cents. Chicago livestock: Hogs steady to easy, cattle alow and irregular. Sheep weak. Silver har in New York: Unchanged al 34% cents a fine ounce. ♦ a TODAY S COMMON ERROR | I Never say. "can't seem;” say, | 'seem unable, or "do uot seem , able." as, “| M em unable to I solve this problem “ will); W FIX «| VKI-Ii V MV.VT <|» v vi vn. JK paaa ,s'itl. r )■ hereby SH-n to the I- lltors. I.Hrs « U( | tegs tees us , v hrl»t J, Lie, tnj . iK. t„ appear in th« Ail.ims Clr> u|t Court, bald at lie atur. Indiana, mi the iod day ot September. I»|u, 411(l , b „ w ~u , r . , it «nr, why the Pinal Settlement A>-c,>Ußte with the estate ot snld « r(t-‘i,t -Imuld hot Ih> approved “Im ‘••‘to. are notified to then and there mak* pn«,t of beirehlp. and receive their distributive •hares Hen Lie- hty . Chrte Lte* bly, Admlalalratora I l-e atur l.m.aua J‘o* “ 9 " Vloeeot Kelley, Attorney July 14-33 *'**l<l. 11l MIV-HI •llil;>T> lo <be team. CfrowM tmsrt, , VoeoMoo Tbereef, I IMO I lartlttea Meal I . la te THt; JriATE UF iShMht r ahamh cocxtt it * uoTm! *•*'*’■ *• Mwu1 ? "•"'*• *er." UM i uteim fiz; th« h.,1, j L*!* be1 C'ln ult '’'lurt „n thJ*x7! J h * temterr. :»ti th. ’ ot Jurldl. lai lm» ***"‘« tlw *•» term thereof* 10 1 r *« ular r Court In “•• < Ohl DM)IV HIM P*‘«ur, for PlniniMf Mnwhwa, attorney i <.r*Mte ”' uu n g KS* **•' , July 3.' IH# ' **•*•*, Clerk ■ ' *‘“ ** out «f mv offteo i irom Juh 25 | n Am* a a . one wi>.hi.J ’’ Al *y E>en < r Ito «f iwT f <b *** «tted phune No. 123 lor appointment lye *2” Th|, o*iN A- BIXLEH ®*tometri»t taamiaag . Gtoeaaa Fitted •Murday* g !SO ! i«
TUESDAY, JCLY l(
MARKETREPnI DAILY Rtaoar ns ...E ANO FORtiqp ffrady s Market »«, r- H Cralgvlllo. Hoag ~, Cteeoa at tj Corm t.d j S(f ■ No coatmtesmn , u 4 Vaals race >«< 100 to I2u lb. I 13u to 140 |bs ■ 140 to I4i> lb. I 140 to 26<> lbs ■ 2&0 to 27.'. lb. ■ 371 to Joo lb. ■ 30U to BM> lb. ■ 3&0 Ibe. and up H Roughs M Stage ■ Veals ... ■ Npnng lamb. H Bpiing hu<k 14.111.. M Yearlings ■ WHOLEkAit Ui J POULTRY QLOTsyS Furn,th«o t , ■ Mau'S Egg A J , D-catur e. w S Corr. H..! J., 3 ■ Prices tor first < u* Clean, large white I Hrown or mh.d -ggt ■ Heavy bens, lb ■ la-ghorn hens b H Old heavy It.-. ... , Leghorn broilers 1\ j, fl over ■ Old Leghari. K , ,t fl lhavy Sprite u. White Ro. k- 1 White Rih k. 1 Jfl CHICAGO GRAih Cjfl July Sept ■ Wheat 74S sfl Corn Oats .80% fl CLEVELAND esOftfl Cleveland 'lip. Jiyilfl Produce; ■ Butter un». . <’*■ Eggs, unsdtied. tel c lear, l>c. I Live pouliiy - * ,i><4flfl heavy, 17c. d . k. u- isl Ibe. and up U !’■< ■ Potatoes \l.t> . .\> isl 12 38; Calltoii... - .xtfl 88. I EAST BUFFALO LivtSfl East Buffalo \ Y JIM <UR> Livestcxk ■ Hogs. 100. ski* -l-y'ufl Cattle 100. strvrs MM vealera. steady ll"P ■ steady. I Sheep. 600 iii . «■' no! ed. lambs, ideady H" I INDIANAPOLIS UVUM ludlaiiapoli. lud J-ffl —Livestock; I Hogs. d.OOo. .-.ki'idfl Ibe.. 10-20* high. : •teady. hi-sti. - I'''"'-* leia-M-fio. ito"- ••'-‘fl Cattle. 20O». ~ilr*. *| steady to strouj. venters. 5m high. Sheep, l.Ooci. lambs 33 50 I FORT WAVNt LIVMW Fort Wayne lud — Livestock: Hogs. 15c hu-'h.r. JSM 34 7s, Mfi-24" lb- »»*fl ibe.. MH; I*' 1'" 3fifi lbs.. 34 4" 2*o-300 Hm. 35 05. 325-35" I'- 15 „J Ibe.. 85.75; 15<> to" »* 150 lbs. »5 4c> LtelriMj 120-130 lbs. fl"' ! 14 45 J Roughs »4 75. - **■ Calves. 8» s<>. Uiut*LOCAL GRAIN tD'tfl BURK ELEVATOE M M — K Currec '.d Jul? Prices to be MO ”*1 No. 1 Red Wheal I No. 2 Red Wheal | No. 2 Rye | No. 2 Yellow Com I No. 2 Hoy Heul.s | Old (Mto. 8&-lb te»‘ tl X./Uc l *jJ ic n I v/© Today r wun- ' ' "■'» r " the blac k and whii'- » l * M way markings Black and white HS»» *' long, placed eilhc-r y. Isontally Vertical f regulations speei H«"‘ u keep In iane. drive to '" ie perking. Horitoiitel Informative material ’ 4 various cities, name*" . rivers, state Hue- cd? torical landmarks Besides titese bUl ‘ 0 arrows are used to >“• tloa—one-way streetIff future issues I will use of these sigu* “ abuse. Mrs. Adam '"J I home witt a too' to'*
