Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 172, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1929 — Page 1

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HOOVER SURE PROSPERITY IS HERETO STAY Optimism Rings Loud. With Pledges of Billions for Business Expansion. STOCK BOGIE ROUTED Federal Departments Join Private Industry in Forward March. BY LAWRENCE SULLIVAN, United Prrss Staff Correspondrnt WASHINGTON. Nov. 28— American business paused for Its annual Thanksgiving today with pledges of more than $9,000,000,000 in construction and expansion under the turkey platter. It also has the promise of cheaper money from the federal reserve advisory council, an agreement between capital and labor assuring maintenance of present wage levels and the word of more than 800 of the foremost leaders of industry and commerce that both production and buying will continue at high levels throughout the winter. Looking back on the series of White House conferences aiming at the uninterrupted forward march of prosperity. President Hoover feels the country has achie-ed another step more encouraging even than the figures which tell of the expansion plans for 1930, in that the business world has freed itself from the psychological domination of the stock market. Prosperity Is Forecast Seated around the conference table in the cabinet room, leaders in every branch of commerce, agriculture. and labor discovered the underlying economics factors which forecast prosperous times. The national business machine is primed for progress and prosperity, labor has cleared the track ahead, and the banking world has assured ample fuel in its pledge of reasonable money rates. Although hundreds of telegrams and letters have given the chief executive a most gratifying national reaction to the recent conferences, he confidently expects even greater results from the meeting of industrial leaders here on Dec. 5. The Industrialist’s committee, headed by Julius Barnes, chairman of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, will report then on its nation-wide canvass of business plans within the commodity trades. The President plans to address this gathering. Hoover Sees Leaders In his recent conference. President Hoover has met with keymen of railroads, public utilities, farmers, labor, the banking world, the major manufacturing industries and supply associations. Tire President has ordered all branches of the government to lay their plans for a steady forward inarch in building progranrs. The war department already has responded with a program for expanion of its housing program in 1930, and Postmaster-General Brown, in behalf of a special interdepartmental committee, has announced a foreign mail contract policy which is expected to call out some $200,000,000 for development of the American merchant marine. The treasury' department will push its public buildings program both in the capital and throughout the nation. The commerce department will continue its quest for new trade opportunities abroad. Oppose Wage Cut Both governmental and private organizations have pledged themselves to stand against any reduction of wages. A general wage increase policy has been announced by Henry Ford. Representatives of every branch of the industrial organization have assured the President their co-operaiion in maintenance of employment. Governors of practically all states have indicated their determination to stand against any slowing up in their plans for highways and public works. Public buildings and highways •lone assure more than $4,000,000,000 worth of construction in 1930, according to the reports from the White House conferences. VOTE COUNT IS CLOSE Becheck Shows Tennant in Lead by Eight Ballots. Eight votes remained today as the margin by which Maurice A. Tennant, Republican, was elected to the city council in the election Nov. 5. With all except ninety of the 257 noting machines rechecked on petition of Henry C. Denker, defeated Republican councilmanic candidate, one error has been found, cutting Tennant’s lead from nine to eight. The recheck will be completed by Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, Monday. Barefoot Man Sought ffV United Press LEBANON. Ind., Nov. 28.—A barefoot man wearing a hat and coat is hunted today in connection with a fight at a railroad construction camp here Tuesday night during which three men suffered serious knife wound* ——

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The Indianapolis Times Mostly cloudy with probably snow tonight and Friday. Somewhat colder.

VOLUME 41—NUMBER 172

Pitiful Thanksgiving Day Joy Is Snatched From Aged Woman

By Vtilted Pres* HICAGO, Nov. 28.—Sjjips of orange juice and V barley water from a glass tube comprised Mrs. Margaret McDonald’s Thanksgiving dinner. Nurses at the Cook county hospital shook their heads gravely as they held the tube to the aged woman’s lips. "Not much chance at her age with a fractured skull,” they said. Down In the hospital office, in an envelope

Clerk Boyce Is Rejoicing; SI,OOO Drifts His Way

CITY CLERK WILLIAM A. BOYCE JR. figuratively carved a SI,OOO turkey today, singing Hosannas in his heart for a real thanksgiving. The clerk looked forward to a dismal holiday as Clyde E. Robinson, county treasurer, refused to pay a SI,OOO warrant by the city council for Boyce’s services on the city election board. Treasurer Robinson refused to honor the voucher on the ground that the city clerk is an ex-officio member of the election board, and this service is one of his legally constituted duties. It looked like a bitter holiday for Boyce. But someone told Robinson that he would be cited for contempt of court if he did not honor the warrant—and the SI,OOO check was delivered.

VERDICT NEAR IN MOB TRIAL Four Union Men Soon Will Know Fate in Carolina. By United Press MARION, N. C„ Nov. 28,-The trial of Alfred Hoffman, textile union organizer, and three union members on rioting charges, was in fecess today while 'judge, attorneys, court attaches, defendants and newspaper men ate their Thanksgiving dinners. Judge G. Vernon Comper of Kinston, N. C., will read his charge to the jury Friday afternoon, after five more speeches are made by attorneys and a verdict is expected by Saturday afternoon at the latest. WOMEN IN AIR GRIND Bobby Trout, Elinor Smith After Record. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Nov. 28—The monoplane in which Bobby Trout and Elinor Smith, two nationally famous young aviatrices, hope to break the existing world’s record for refueling endurance flight, moved smoothly above San Francisco valley early today. They will have been in the air twenty-four hours at 9:40 a. m. Throughout the night the running lights of the ship signaled that all was well. The attempt is the girls’ second this week. Earlier they remained In the air 18 hours and 32 minutes, establishing a refueling mark for women. There had been none previously.

COMMUNITY FUND CLOSER TO GOAL

Pledges from Indianapolis people who are out of the city are expected to swell the $730,000 raised thus far for the community fund to a figure nearer the goal of $786,853, workers said today. The drive formally closed Wednesday. There will be little, if any, cut in the amounts to be apportioned to the thirty-five social organizations receiving support from the fund, it was announced. “A magnificent _ victory was achieved when all conditions existing are taken into account,” workers were told by J. L Holcomb, general campaign chairman. A gift of SI,OOO from Mrs. Thomas

LONESOME FIVE LIKE THEIR TURKEY, BUT THEY YEARN FOR HOMELAND DISHES

BY ARCH BTEINEL WHILE Indianapolis feasts today on turkey et al., five residents of the city would give a couple of rising stock markets to be able to dip their forks into the holiday viands of their native country—just for today. If they have not formed a League of Lintels and Luscious Raw Fish, it is because of courtesy to their adopted country. And although they ate their share of gobbler drumsticks today, they’d willingly aid in a world court of edibles, with the following cosmopolite meal for the day of thanks In which a food from each nation is represented thus: Appetizer: Basi Buba (A Filipino wine).

marked with hpr name, was Mrs. McDonald’s last dollar. She had set out to spend it on something to eat so her holiday, alone and friendless at 65, would not seem so barren. At a street intersection a truck knocked her to the pavement. In her worn handbag was a letter from a niece in Boone, la. “Here is $1 for a Thanksgiving dinner,” it said. “We can’t understand why you stay there among strangers instead of coming here with us.”

LIVES PERILED WHEN STORM SWEEPS CITY 1 Scaffolding Is Hurled From Circle Tower: More Snow Forecast. Swept in on winds that reached sixty-mile velocity, the first real snow of the season greeted Thanksgiving celebrants today. More snow probably will fall today or Friday, according to the United States weather bureau here. The storm that preceded It endangered hundreds of downtown pre-holiday shoppers Wednesday night, as it toppled a section of elevator-shaft scaffolding from the new Circle Tower, under construction at Market street and Monument Circle. Timbers hurtled through skylights in adjoning buildings, and crashed on the pavement fourteen stories below. Timber Falls in Studio One timber fell into the studio of Elmer Taflinger, on top of the Vinton-Pierce building, east of the Circle Tower. Another shattered a plate glass window in a neighboring candy shop. A window in the Banner Furniture Company was broken by the gale. Electric power and telephone lines, and windows in stores and home suffered as the gale roared through Indianapolis at 5:20 p. m. For five minutes it averaged fortyfive miles an hour, and for sixty seconds rose to the mile a minute speed. Three 4,100-volt feeder lines were blown down at Tenth street Indiana avenue, showering sparks through the air for several minutes. Several fire alarms were turned in at headquarters while the gale was at its height, but none of the blazes caused much damage. Snow in North Police blocked off Market street to clear away the debris from the Circle Tower scaffolding. Northern Indiana reported two inches of snow, near Ft. Wayne, Wednesday night and today, with temperatures ranging from 15 to 20 degrees. Precipitation here was onetenth inch. Central and southern Indiana probably will see snow within thirty-six hours, according to weather bureau forecasts. Temperatures are expected to drop slightly throughout the state. CHASES HAT; HIT BY CAR Aged Man Bruised When Struck by Brookside Trolley. Janies McCusick, 78, of 223 East McCarty street, was bruised when struck by a Brookside street car at Eleventh street and Brookside avenue Wednesday night. He was chasing his hat when the car, in charge of Harold Haskett, 540 Massachusetts avenue, struck him.

Taggart was reported. H. C. Atkins, chairman of an individual gifts committee, said: “Mrs. Taggart told us that she no longer is a resident of Indianapolis, but that her heart is here.” Members of Team 50 in the Individual gifts division and Zeo W. Leach of the utility division were to be taken for an airplane ride over the city today as a reward foi going “over the top.” Three divisions collected 100 per cent of their quotas. They aro’ The industrial group, headed by Howard T. Griffith, 104.5 per cent; utility, Leach, chairman, 111.5, and the railroad division, Edwin S. Pearce, chairman, 105 per cent. i

Meat: Raw fish (from Japan). Vegetables and starch: “Bap” (boiled rice) and Yimchi (radishes, pickles, lettuce), both of Korean nativity. Dessert: “Punkin” pie (America’s own). Sweets: “Chongo” (A Mexican candy). Liqueurs: Rhine wine (from Germany). Now that the meal is spread, meet those who furnished the courses, those whose thoughts today turned to dinners in their native lands. a u n ALEERT ESCULTO, Filipino, 4030 Guilford avenue, furnished the mental Basi Buba as

INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1929

Widow Fleeced of Last $5,000 by ‘Samaritans’ By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—Tears mingled with the suds a*s Mrs. Antonia Brajatenbak pushed a scrub brush over an office building corridor today. She had planned to take the holiday off, until she opened a strong box two young men had told her contained $36,000 they wanted her to distribute to the poor of the neighborhood as a Thanksgiving present. The widowed scrub woman had thrilled at the idea of doing a good turn for those less fortunate. She had given the polite young men the $5,000 her husband had left to her to put away against old age. They wanted the money, they told her, as a guarantee of good faith. In the strong box she found a bundle of newspapers and some stage money. DAMAGE HEAVY IN PLANE CRASH SIIO,OOO Fokker Wrecked; Whole Village Suffers. By United Press ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y., Nov. 28.—A survey of the damage caused by the crash late Wednesday of the new SIIO,OOO Fokker F-3 monoplane, the largest standard passenger land plane in America, showed today that six of the thirty houses in Carle place had been damaged, two of them set afire, and the electric and telephone service of the village disrupted. The plane, capable of carrying thirty-two passengers, was on a test flight with M. F. Boggs as pilot and Harry McDonald as mechanic. The men escaped serious injury when thrown from the machine before it exploded. A preliminary investigation Indicated that one of the huge plane’s four engines was out of order and not running when the plane left the ground. MOORE NAMED MARMON ADVERTISING MANAGER Aggressive Publicity Campaign 3s Planned by Company. Appointment of Nicholas Moore as advertising manager of the Marmon Motor Car Company, to become effective Dec. 1, is announced by T. E. Jarrard, general sales director. For three years, Moore has been publicity supervisor for the Marmon company and has had wide experience in newspaper work and advertising. Establishment of an advertising department and appointment of Moore is an important step in Marmon plans for the coming year, Jarrard said. Advertising plans of the company for 1930 call for un aggressive campaign in newspapers and other advertising mediums. NATION IS UNPREPARED i _______________ Months Necessary for Mobilization Says General Summerall. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—General Charles P. Summerall, the army’s highest officer and chief of staff, expressed the opinion today that months would elapse in case of war before the United States could make use of its potential military strength. Summerall discussed this problem in his annual report made public today. He emphasized the importance of incorporating machinery in the national defense of a country which has grown great in the machine age.

an appetizer, but Esculto would not partake himself. He was educated in the mission schools of the Philippines, and tells how each village sets its own Thanksgiving celebration date. “Rich and poor are invited to the feast. The best sheep of flocks are killed as an offering to God.” “Sumaldic, a rice cake, and Basi Buba are eaten and drunk,” he added. BUB THE raw fish was brought to the all-nation spread by Goro Katsuda, of the Y. M. C. A. Goro, a student at Butler university, knows Thanksgiving in Japan, as “Machi,” which, trans-

OGDEN LEAVES GIANT MERGER UP TO BOARD Commission Must Decide for Itself as to Action on Insull Project. HEARING OPENS MONDAY Attorney-General Vague in His Definition of Jurisdiction. Made “judge of both the law and the facts” by opinion of AttorneyGeneral James M. Ogden, the Indiana public service commission Monday will begin hearings in the house of representatives on the proposed $70,000,000 Insull utilities merger. The attorney-general handed the problem back to the commission late Wednesday, in an opinion which did not define definitely the commissioners’ jurisdiction. Although the opinion was in reply to questions of one commissioner, Calvin Mclntosh, the attorney-gen-eral said “members of the commission may determine for themselves whether they wish to accept it as official, so far as they are concerned.” Ordinarily, Ogden’s rulings interpret and define jurisdiction with precision. In his replies to Mclntosh, however, he cited restrictions to the commission’s jurisdiction, but left the commission to determine whether they apply in the Insull merger. Tip to Commission The opinion holds “the ultimate decision as to whether utilities are similar in service or product is a question of fact in each case for the commission to decide from evidence and that the commission may determine whether the merger falls within the section of state law under which it operates. ' The only limitations imposed, according to the opinion, are those of interpretaton of the section which sets out that merging corporations must render similar service or products and must have intersecting or parallel lines. Interpretation of this clause Is vested In the commission, the opinion holds. The opinion was requested by Mclntosh without knowledge of the other commissioners, according to. Commissioner Howard Ellis, who will conduct the hearings. Opinion Is Brief The opinion briefly sets out in substance the following answers to four questions propounded: Q —Does the commission have any legal authority to authorize or approve mergers other than that provided in Section 95% of the act? A—The commission has authority to allow in its discretion the merging of two or more public utilities which furnish a like service or product and are doing business in the same municipality or locality, or whose lines intersect-or parallel each other. Advisability of such merger rests solely and only with the commission. Q—Would that authorize the merging of transmission lines, Ice plants, heating plants, gas plants and bus lines into one corporation? A—The commission would have no authority to authorize mergers not falling into the classification already outlined. Q —Does “doing business In the same municipality or locality within the state” permit merging of nrooerties from to Gary and from Terre Haute to Richmond? A—The word ‘locality” Is held as not broad enough to embrace “more than a community or settlement and can not be construed in any broader application.” Must Parallel Each Other Q —What Is the restraining effect of the law which says that transportation utilities to be merged must be those “whose lines intersect or parallel each other within the state?” A—lt seems quite clear that only utilities rendering a similar service or product could be so related to each other as to fall within the meaning of intersecting or parallel lines when applied to competitive service rendered and would require an actual intersecting or parallelling of its wires, rails or pipes, as may arise in different cases.

slated, means “waiting for the festival to come.” “They celebrate three days, clothe themselves In finery, have fireworks, ■wrestling matches, drink Sake (a liquor), eat red rice boiled chestnuts, and raw fish,” he asserts. Goro’s Thanksgiving in Indianapolis was without the sake, without the fish. u b a NOW to Chai Hoon Kim, another Butler university student, who brought the “Bap” and “Yimchi” from his Korea. Kim is studying soil fertility. He wishes to give Korea a bit of America’s poultry, some of her turkeys, a little of her Thanksgiving. For in Korea the soil is

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Fostofflce, Indianapolis

Leads Loyola at Bowl

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Clarence (Brute) Galle ONE of the big reasons Loyola of the South gridders, Butler’* opponents in the bowl this afternoon, have won most of their games is Captain Clarence (Brute) Galle. He plays at tackle, and his great defensive play is spectacular. His weight and speed enable him to rip big holes in some opposing lines fr hs lght back field mates to charge through. Galle earned his spurs against Notre Dame last season with a magnificent bit of work which enabled his teammates to hold the South Benders to a one-touchdown mafgin. Galle is a senior.

RUSSIA AGREES OK PEASE MOVE Negotiations to Start for Manchurian War End. By United Press MOSCOW, Nov. 28.—The Manchurian government has accepted preliminary conditions specifWd by the Soviet government for settlement of the Russo-Chinese conflict and the way has been opened for peaceful conclusion of the dispute over the Chinese Eastern railway. Soviet officials announced Wednesday night that General Chang Hsueh-Liang, head of the Muken government, had agreed to restore the status quo ante of the railway and that a conference at Habarovsk would fix date and place .for peace negotiations. In addition to restoration of the Chinese Eastern railway to joint Russo-Chinese control, Chang was reported to have agreed to the reappointment of Manager Emshanoff and Assistant Manager Eismont, ousted by the Chinese when they seized the railway last July. The Soviet will demand release of Russian citizens arrested in connection with the dispute, which flared in serious form recently with a Soviet invasion of Manchuria, and then will liberate Chinese who have been seized in Russian territory, it was announced. Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m 24 8 a. m 24 7 a. m 24 9 a. m 23

GIGANTIC RACKET BARED IN CHICAGO

By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—The inside workings of one of Chicago's most lucrative “rackets” have been revealed for the first time, but whethei the revelation will be of any use to the state in its efforts to break up a so-called $1,00,000 slot machine syndicate was a matter of doubt teday. The revelation was made in a statement by David C. Rockola, machine operator, which the state Wednesday presented to Judge John P. McGoorty in an effort to force Rockola to testify at the trial of twenty alleged members of the syndicate. Seven of the twenty defendants are police captains. Rockola made the statement to the grand jury last spring and the

poor. Cattle and hogs are at a premium. Poultry is gold. “The non-Christians have no Thanksgiving. Cereals celebrate the thanks of the Christians,” he relates. b n a REACHING the “Chongo” in our foreign food dinner we meet Mrs. Ines Samper, of Mexico. 4412 East Twenty-third street Mrs. Samper, a friend of Mexico’s president, Ortiz Rubio, is eating common every-day fare when she eats turkey on Thanksgiving. “Our holiday dish Is chicken, roasted, with red peppers. Turkey Is almost a daily dish—but we had turkey today. You see my

Pickled By United Press MILWAUKEE, Nov. 28.—A woman came before George E. Page in district court Wednesday on charges of drunkenness. Judge Page inquired: “Your name?” “Mary Pickle, your honor.” “Were you pickled, Mary?” “Yes.” “Five dollars and costs.”

MANIAC IS SOUGHT Slugger Escapes Pursuers, After Lawrence Attack. A maiac who attacked Mrs. Floyd Groves, 28, at her home In Lawrence on Wednesday, still was being sought by deputy sheriffs today. Posses all Wednesday scoured the woods and swamps near the suburban town, looking for a short, rough-ly-dressed man, with several days’ growth of beard, and extremely dilated blue eyes. He seized Mrs. Groves on the back porch of her home, ripped her clothes and beat her with a stove poker before she could escape to a garage across the street, where she summoned aid. Purdue Building Dedicated By Times Svecial LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 28.—Purdue university’s new union building, a memorial to its men who served in the World war, stands dedicated today, following a program which included a reception by President and Mrs. Edward C. Elliott and inspection of the building and a dance.

wholesale trial resulted. Now he refuses to testify, on the grounds he might incriminate himself. The statement was not given to the jury, so unless Judge McGoorty rules Friday that Rockola must take the stand, the revelation will have no bearing on the outcome of the trial. Rockola told the grand jury of his slot machine business, which extended “all over the south side,” of the almost monthly division of huge spoils between district police, “political fixers,” the “downtown police,” and himself—2s per cent to each.

He usually left the money, ranging in amounts from $250 to S4OO, on the desks of police captains, he said, and they knew what it was for.

children—l’ve two of them—are truly American and they’ll have nothing else.” B B B AND now to close the meal with the bearer at the Rhine wine, Herman Bried, of the Y. M. C. A. He tells of his Germany’s “Bach Kuchen” (a sweet cake): of the village merry-go-rounds; of the dancing, the singing. He came here three years ago. Three Thanksgiving have gone by and he still wishes, in talking to visitors, that he had a Zeppelin —something with which to make a quick trip so “I could take you there some feast day, so you’d understand.”

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BUTLER ENDS SEASON WITH LOYOLA TILT Strong Line and Fleet Backs Feature Open Attack of Invaders. DIXIE TEAM FAVORITE Bulldogs in Best Condition of Season; Eight Men to End Careers. Butler’s Bulldogs were to write the final chapter In the 1929 edition of Indiana collegiate football this afternoon at the bowl, opposing Loyola of the south in one of the important Turkey day intersectional tilts of the country. Boasting a string of victories over strong outfits below the Mason - Dixie line, including Georgia, conquerors of Yale, the Wolfpack entered the game a slight favorite. Use Open Attack Coach Shaughnessy has a squad light speedboys’ who employ an open attack. Junior Lopez, regarded as one of the outstanding quarter backs in the south, is the chief threat. His open field running has been one of the features of Loyola games this season, and his passes, which he tosses equally successfully with either hand, are a constaut worry to opponents. Joe Tetlow, another lightweight, shares groundgaining honors with Lopez. The line, which at the start of the season contained but two veterans, has shown improvement steadily. Captain “Brute” Galle, husky tackle, and “Pee Wee” Allen, veteran end, are two of the mainstays. Haskell Among Victims In addition to their triumph over Georgia, the southerners hold a verdict over Haskell Indians, who In turn defeated Butler here. Both teams went through light signal drills at the bowl Wednesday, Butler is reported in the best condition of the season for the final test. Cqach Clark will have his entire varsity squad back field. A shift in the back field, bringing together Captain Hosier, Royce, Cavosie and Hinchman, has added power to the attack. Royce has performed at end most of the season, and his return to the back field gives Clark another running threat and a capable passer. Cavosie has been out with an injury and will be back In uniform to handle the punting and share In the passing. Hinchman has been starring at half back. Eight End Career* Clark has indicated he may start a “shock troop” eleven, giving his varsity a chance to study the invaders’ attack. Eight of Clark’s stellar performers will end their collegiate careers today. They are Captain Maurice Hosier, Francis Royce and Alonzo Watford, backs; Howard Crosby and Robert Maney, ends; George Nafhuger, tackle, and Willard Worth and George Fredenberger, guards. The kickoff is scheduled for 3 o’clock. Probable starting lineups follow: BUTLER LOYOLA Brock L. E Fannin Puett C Flvnn McCarthy R. G Keller Walsh R-T Chachere Wolfe R. E Allen Hosier Q. B Lope* Cavotsle L. H Heler Royce R. H Pesfcln Hinchman F. B Bridge! IMPEACHMENT DROPPED Township Trustee Wins by Ruling of Court at Washington. By United Press WASHINGTON, Ind., Nov. 28. Impeachment proceedings against John A. Waggoner, trustee of Washington township, charged with embezzlement, were dismissed by Judge M. 8. Hastings in Daviess circuit court here, when he held that Waggoner’s plea In abatement was proper. The judge ruled that C. G. Gardiner was not legally appointed deputy prosecuting attorney and that he had no right to be in the grand jury room while the investigation was being made. The case was to have gone to trial Monday.

‘Turkish King’ By TJnitea Prrss BUCYRUS, 0., Nov. 28. Today is Paul Pfleiderer’s day because his commodity, turkeys, is the standard piece de resistance. Turkeys is why Paul is wealthy at 24. This year Pflelderer ra’oed 2,400 turkeys on his turkey farm, cne of the largest in Ohio. His flock is va’ued at approximately $12,000. He had to raise 3,000 turkeys to net 2,400 because of average losses. Pflelderer has a prize hen turkey that laid 113 eggs last spring He decided when he was graduated from high school that If a farmer was to get a decent break, he shoud specialize. He decided upon the turkey and took over fourteen acres of his father’s 110-acre farm for his business.

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