Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 68, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1933 — Page 1

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POLLUTION RUINING FISHING GROUNDS OF GEN. LEW WALLACE Industrialism Blights Spawning Spots; Big Sugar Creek’s Banks Reddened by Iron Refuse From Wire Mill. BACTERIA COUNT IN WATER IS HIGH Open Sewers Dump Crawfordsville's Waste Into Stream; Youngsters Duck Into B. Coli-Laden Muck. BY ARC H STEINEL Tim*n Staff Writer The General's fishing tackle hanirs unused in his study. The study resembles a cold mausoleum. “Rubbernecks,” lovers of curios—if only to look at them —study the case with its unused fishinj? tackle. The tackle is human. Stronpr soldierly hands that have held sword and pen with equal facility have graced them.

Tho General's farm now is a country club, hubs and not so dubby jfolfors try for birdies and cables on its slopes. The General's fishing grounds face extinction. The deep creek he loved to scull in a rowboat doesn't give of its fish as it did in past years. Industrialism wastes its spawning grounds. The creek's banks are reddened by the iron refuse from a wire mill. The Oeneral wouldn't like that. He wouldn't like seeing children and grownups swimming above or below the electric light company's dam in water that The Indianapolis Times sampled and proved in state laboratories to contain from 10,000 B coli per cubic centimeter above the dam to 100.000 B coli one and one-half miles below. The General was Lew Wallace, author of "Ben-Hur.” A saga famed in its book, movie and talkie versions. His study is in the well-kept grounds of his former home at Crawfordsville. This is the fifth of a series of articles on stream pollution in Indiana. The sixth, to appear Monday. will tell of conditions in the Wabash river. The farm now is the Spring Ledge Country Club. The creek, more like a river compared to some they call that in Hoosierland. is Big Sugar creek, where the man who wrote "BenHur’ fished between chapters of his books, and taught a grandson, Lewis, the best use of a fly. In Crawfordsville when you speak of the General, you mean Lew Wallace. The General is the town's history. The General knew things besides books. He knew how to get the most out of a cocktail, with “slushing it around with your tongue " The General knew how to fish. And he would have told of a certain disciple of Ike Walton who was in the last few days trying to catch a "mess' within a bowling ball's journey of an open sewer on Big Sugar. At that point on the creek the (Turn to Page To EGG BARRAGE ON DAVY COSTS GIRL $25 FINE "Expensive, but Worth It." Opines Miss; Assessed $5 I’er Throw. Psi I mtrd I,as ANGEI.ES. July 29—For throwing five eggs at David L. (Iron Man* Hutton $25 Miss Jane Thomas, attractive 27-year-old stenographer, had that bill to meet because she tried to score hits on Hutton's ample bosom when he appeared in his vaudeville crooning act at a Hollywood theater. 'Five dollars a throw was pretty expensive.'' blond Miss Thomas sighed after she was fined in municipal court for disturbing the peace. Still. I believe it was worth It." After spending the night in jail. Miss Thomas, who originally was booked as "Jane Jones." came into court to explain that an "irresistible impulse” forced her unsuccessfully *io attempt to splatter the 250-pound husband of A:nice Semple McPherson Hutton 4-H RESULTS SCANNED Girl Winners of Judging Contests to Be Announced Soon. Results of the contests in which 300 4-H Club girls judged Friday will be announced soon, according to Janice Berlin, county girls' club leader. Miss Berlin stated that it would take until next week to score the contests, which were held in the auditorium of L S Ayres A- Cos. The 4-H club girls judged foodstuffs, clothing and health Times Index Book a Day 3 Bridge 2 Broun Column 4 Classified 10 Comics .11 Crossword Puezle 9 Curious World 11 Editorial 4 Financial 9 Hickman Theater Renews 6 Radio 9 Serial Story 11 Sports 12 Stream Pollution—A Scries 1 Talburt Cartoon 4 Vital Statistics 4 Womans Page 5

The Indianapolis Times

VOLUME 15—NUMBER 68

TROOPS CALLED IN MINE STRIKE Pinchot to Defend Right of Workers to Assemble. Hu I nilr<l pm M MILFORD. Pa. July 29 Governor Gifford Pinchot today ordered the Pennsylvania national guard into Fayette county to preserve order in the bituminous strike districts. The governor announced he was preparing to declare martial law in the county as soon as detachments of guardsmen arrived from their training camp at Mt. Gretna. A trainload of troopers was ordered out from Mt. Gretna at 7:30 a. m. The detachment consisted of onp battalion of infantrymen. The Governor's decision to take over Fayette county followed refusal on the part of Sheriff Harry F. Hackney to withdraw his deputy sheriffs and allow state police to patrol the strikp districts where numerous disorders have been reported. The proclamations declaring martial law had been printed and would he pasted in the county immediately. it was said. The Governor instructed the national guard to protect all citizens, miners and operators in their constitutional rights and to allow peareful picketing and the right of assemblage. Hp declared the sheriff had refused strikers the right to assemble and organize Prior to the decision to call out the troops. Pinehot telegraphed Hackney to withdraw his deputies and charged that the sheriff was "deliberately provoking disorders.” NAB SUSPECT ON ROOF Youth in City Only 27 Hours Is Held on Theft Counts. Nabbed on the roof of a hotel at 506 East Washington street. Claude O'Pherna, 21. of New York, who said he only had been in thp city twenty-seven hours." is held today on charges of burglary and petit larceny. Police said they found O'm. minus his white shirt and shoes tnd wearing a pair of gloves, after he is alleged to have entered a room in the hotel and stole clothing. In addition, police said they found money, a watch and miscellaneous articles m his possession.

I hider the Hooked Cross Germany's Four Months of Hitlerism A notion in the remaking—while the rest of the world anxiously looks on—is vividly described by Morris Gilbert. European staff correspondent of NEA Service, in six striking articles which will appear in this newspaner . . Here will be the true, accurate story of Hitlerism's dramatic sweep to dominance over the New Germany. Pon t miss this absorbing series—starting Monday, July 31. IN THE TIMES.

War to Limit Declared in City to Crush NR A Blue Eagle Racketeers Federal District Attorney to Prosecute Offenders Relentlessly: Business Army Is Formed to Watch Code Compliance. The distant rumble of the drums of economic action—silenced for four years while depression held the American sector in a relentless jrrip—were heard in Indianapolis today as the big Berthas of business were trained on unpatriotic employers.

SUSPECT PLOT TO KILL BANKER State Financier ‘Spotted' by Kidnap Gang, Police Believe. Ril I mini Pirn* CULVER. Inti.. July 29 Belief that a "spot" killing here had been thrwarted with the arrest in Wisconsin a few days ago of Peter Stevens and Roger Toughy, in connection with the William Hamm Jr. kidnaping in Minneapolis, was entertained by local authorities today. That was the only solution that could be given as to why the name of William Osborn, cashier of the State Exchange bank here, had been entered in a notebook carried by Stevens. Possibility that Osborn had been put on the spot” because of failure of two attempts io rob the bank was the only explanation authorities could offer. The latest attempt to rob the institution resulted in ihc capture and conviction of Daniel McGooghegan. Chicago, and three companions. They now serving long prison sentences. The other member of the gang was killed during the holdup.

NEGRO HERB DOCTOR SUCCUMBS TO BURNS Gasoline Stove Explodes in Tent Laboratory. George W. Percy. 54. Negro herb doctor, died in city hospital today of burns suffered Friday night when flames swept his tent home at the rear of 415 West Ohio street. Suffering from paralysis, Percy was trapped when a gasoline stove exploded, filling the tent with flames. Percy's home, police said, was in Birmingham, Ala., where his sister lives. His assistant. Walter Kruse. 21. Negro, of East St. Louis. 111., was burned severely on the hands and arms as he pulled Percy from the blaze and pulled the flaming clothing from his body. The paralyzed herb doctor pitched his tent a month ago. The tent was his living quarters, store and laboratory where he concocted herb medicine over a gasoline flame. DIVER STILL CRITICAL Youth Hurt in Gravel Pit Plunge Has Fighting Chance to Live. Mino Foster. 17. of 353 Kenyon street, injured June 2 in a diving accident, still is holding to life by a slim thread. Methodist hospital physicians reported today. His neck broken and spinal cord crushed, young Faster, son of Mr. and Mrs. George M Foster, is given little chance to pull through. Plunging into shallow water in a gravel pit. Faster struck rocks, falling on his back and neck. He suffered paralysis of the shoulders and has been kept under the influence of medicine for the last few weeks.

Fair and continued warm tonight and Sunday.

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1933

Mobilized with a rapidity equalled only in actual warfare. Indiana's industrial army led by business men endowed for the emergency with military titles; complete with air corps and infantry of gray-uni-formed mail carriers, answered an early reveille today. War on racketeers who exploit the emblem of co-operation with the President's program of recovery —the rampant eagle of blue and gold—was trumpeted from the field headquarters of the new army. Nolan Promises Probe Val Nolan. United States district attorney, announced that he would investigate immediately activities of persons who have been calling on local merchants offering to sell the emblems, obtainable only through government channels. •We will arrest and prosecute every person who is trying to defeat the government program in this patriotic and altruistic effort to lift us out of the depression." said Nolan. "This is no time for quibbling with petty crooks and slackers." A survey of Indianapolis business to determine extent of compliance with President Roosevelt's recovery program and to codify a list of unemployed was made following a meeting of the Indianapolis recovery council, with thirtyeight members, in the Chamber of Commerce building Friday. Canvass to Be Made The canvass of local industry will be made, according to Louis J. Borinstein, president of the Chambet: of Commerce, as soon as a general, a lieutenant-general and three colonels, are made to direct the campaign. The spirit of co-operation in the enlistments for economic warfare is evilent as city mercants made haste to return to the postoffice signed agreements to join the President in his offensive. Many of the agreements were signed and returned to the postoffice within an hour of their delivery Friday. Leslie D Clancy estimated that at least 15.000 agreement letters were distributed in Indianapolis. Air Roundup Planned Plans to have two army airplanes pick up the 75.000 covenants in cities throughout Indiana were underway at the Chamber of Commerce. where itineraries are being planned. Hoosier industry continued to rally today with unprecendented rapidity under the standard of re- ! covery. While local merchants rushed agreements back to the offices of Frances Wells, Indiana recovery director. announcements of co-opera- | tion came from Anderson. Bloomington. Huntington. Ft. Wayne, Kokomo. Newcastle. Noblesville, Petersburg and Princeton. Pledges from 1.800 Anderson merchants: announcement that Bloomington will henceforth be "a 9-o'clock-in-the-morning city," with stores opening at that hour; indorsement of the recovery program by seventy-five Huntington merchants and predictions from Ft. Wayne that every industry in town would sign the agreement, were some of the developments in the state. Florists of Indiana have been invited to meet Tuesday night at the Severin to formulate a state code. The Indianapolis Co-Operative Council, an organization of Marion county funeral directors, adopted resolution pledging support at a meeting Friday. Thirty-nine lumber companies in the Indianapolis area signed the blanket code agreement at a meeting Friday at the Architects and Builders' building and an executive committee appointed to arbitrate disputes.

ROOSEVELTS LEAVE FOR HUDSON ESTATE President and Party Are En Route From Capitol. By l mini Prrtt ABOARD ROOSEVELT SPECIAL TRAIN EN ROUTE TO HYDE PARK. N. Y.. July 29.—Accompanied by M r s. Roosevelt and a staff of White House attaches. President Roosevelt was on his way to his estate. Krum Elbow, on the banks of the Hudson today where he will spend a vacation away from Washington but not from official business. Mr. Roosevelt will remain away from the White House a month with the exception of a brief interlude when he was expected to return to Washington to '■peed the administration of the national recovery act. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a m : Overcast: ceiling estimated at 3.000 feet; visibility. 7 miles; southwest wind, 15 miles an hour: temperature. 76; barometric pressure, 30.11 at sea level. HOURLY TEMPERATURES 6 a. m 73 9 a. m 78 7a. m 74 10 a. m..... 79 8 a. m 76

CONTRACTS NO BAR TO PAYING OF NRA WAGES Members Must Adjust Pay to Be Able to Show Blue Eagle. RULE ON 6 PROVISIONS Oil Official Quits SIOO,OOO Job Rather Than Not Serve President. BY H. O. THOMPSON I'nitrrt Pres* Staff Corrrsponrirnt WASHINGTON. July 29—President Roosevelt's vast scheme for higher wages and more workers in industry was given official interprei tation today that may affect the very foundation of Labor's relationship with capital. While business men by the thousands were signing up under the code of the blue eagle, the National Recovery Administration issued interpretations of six principal clauses in the President's blanket code for ‘ business. Most significant of these decisions ! makes it mandatory upon members of NRA to conform to all the wage ! provisions of the code, even though the provisions conflict with existing labor contracts. The interpretation hinges upon : Section 7 of the code, which requires that pay shall not be re- | duced even when hours are shortened. and orders that "equitable readjustments" shall be made to increase wage scales above the minimum. He said he believed that influence j of labor unions and public opinion would be powerful "persuaders.” Can’t Adjust, Can't Sign Other interpretations issued by NRA concerned methods by which employers may settle difficulties peculiar to their businesses, set the date for compliance "in good faith" j with the code, settled passible conflicts between the blanket code and j the codes of individual industries, set forth rules about increasing prices of commodities and listed workers not subject to the code. "It is not the purpose of this ! agreement to interfere with mainI tenanee of contracts entered into by | exercise of collective bargaining." 1 explained Donalt! Richberg. counsel | for NRA. "It does not force the breaking of contracts. "No contracts are affected by the agreement. If the employer can't j adjust his contract, then he can't I sign the agreement. The agreement | neither authorizes nor requires the breaking of contracts. But the employer can not get the blue eagle until and unless he complies." Include Professionals Such workers include professional men. employes of any governmental body, farmers, domestic servants and salesmen working on commission. Signing of the President's "honor role" was spaded up as postmen the nation over hastened delivery of 5.000.000 letters to as many employers. Mail cards returning to Washington were bulging with the pledge cards of early signers. The only major dispute in the whole enormous campaign was revealed with the resignation of James A. Moffett. SIOO,OOO a year vice-president of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey when his employers refused to let him join an advisory committee of the NRA. Moffett's resignation was announced by Walter C Teagle. president of the company, who is in Washington in connection with efforts to set up a code of fair competition for the oil industry. Teagle told Moffett either to refuse appointemeni as an adviser to General Hugh S. Johnson' or hand in his resignation. Felt It Was Command Moffett chose the latter course because he said he felt that the invitation to serve as ar. adviser to General Johnson was "the equivalent of a command from President Roosevelt. “I have been a lifelong Democrat. a supporter of the President, and am in accord with the President's program and policies,” he said. "My views as to the policies to be pursued apparently are not in accord with thase of the board of the New Jersey company." Johnson himself was in Cleveland, flying there from Detroit where he obtained agreement of the automobile industry to a code based on the thirty-five-hour week. That agreement brought all the j "key" industries into the movement to bring prosperity back to the nation. Steel, coal and oil codes already have been submitted. Increase to .750.000 In handing in their code, the bituminous coal operators of Pennsylvania. eastern Ohio. West Virginia announced that they had given w age increases to 350.000 miners, i adding more than $60,000,000 a year to their earnings. Minimum wages in the northern fields will range from $3 to $4 per day and in the southern fields from $2 60 to $3 60. Still another push in the drive toward good times was contained in the release of $63,000,000 for the Grand Coulee project in Washington —another Tennessee valley development on smaller scale. Approval of this expenditure by President Roosevelt before he left for Hyde Park was regarded as a mere starter to public works contemplated by the administration in states west of the Mississippi. The public works board also inj tends to approve immediate resump- ! tion of work on the nine-foot chan- ! r.el for the upper Mississippi and to spend $21,000,000 for flood control and land reclamation on the South ‘ Platte river in Wyoming.

STATE POLICE OR TROOPS MAY BE ORDERED OUT TO HALT DRAUGHT BEER SALE

•TIGRESS’ CAGED

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Her husband dying of gunshot wounds, a bullet wound in her own hand, bedraggled and in a steel cell —that war, the end to which the notorious Barrow gang's robberies and murders had brought Mrs. Blanche Barrow, above, when this picture was made at "he. Platte City <Mo.> jail after her capture by a posse.

CHICKEN THIEF OUTRUNS COPS

Drops Fowls. However, So Relief Kitchen Will Have ‘Feast.’ Today was to be lried chicken day at the city relief kitchen on Maryland street. And it all results from a half hour’s chase early today or. the north side. Patrolmen John Roman and Harry Hayes sighted a Negro sneaking through an alley east of College 9 venue, just south of Twenty-second street. After him they went. In his hand the Negro clutched a sack Through alleys and streets the trio went. Finally, the pursued man dropped his sack and fled for dear life, wit '4 full steam ahead. Roman and Hayes investigated the interior of the sack. It contained several chickens, all apparently stolen. They turned them over to the relief kitchen. Hence the smacking of lips on Maryland street todav. ELECTRIC RATES PARED 12.2 Per Cent Cut for Carthage Given Commission Approval. Agreed rates for Carthage, representing a 12.2 per cent reduction by the Northern Indiana Power Company. have been approved by the public service commission. Commissioners. at their Friday conference, authorized the Southern Gas and Electric Company of Evansville to discontinue an interurban line from Evansville to Patoka, Aug. 15.

T ATONIA RACE TRACK, COVINGTON. Kv., July 29 —Today is the ■*-' last day of the Latonia meeting at the old Mildale course and the thirty-one day meet will be topped off with the running of the Latonia Oaks for 3-year-old fillies at a mile and a quarter distance. While small, the field certainly has plenty of class and it is going to be one real battle between Bamboula and Bright Bubble, the latter figuring a shade the better. The field and jockeys:

Edith A. 1! S. Renirk -l Ewff MS K. Horvath *-1 Brirht Rubble 11 W. Curran S-! Bamboula lIS H. Sehutte S-S Knithtv Gal lIS J. Karala 1-1 Get-away-dav and almost anything will, or could happen in the mud. which probably will be fetlock deep by afternoon. Volwood who loves mud and who has been asleep for a couple of months is due to wake up in the fourth and we hereby hang a tag on the old boy as the best thing of the day. He should be a fair price on his recent races. Plumage is another sweet bangtail in the mud and should step down and grab the fifth heat while the Mose Goldblat—C. V. Whitney combination figures to cop the seventh with Gyro. Dawn Mist will be sent out there high wide and handsome and should the going suit her fancy she will be home free. Can't get anything, but Mati Hari from the Clyde Van Dusen-Dixianna Staoles in the fifth at Arlington in the Arlington Futurity with a $25.000 added purse. She has a running mate in Far Star which is no slouch herself. Mati Hari has yet to be defeated. Coldcheck is a dandy in the second and Pairby pair will be a tough egg to catah in the fourth.

Entered Second Cl Mutter at l’ostofficc, Indianapolta

LINDYS MAKE AIR TRIP TO BAFFIN LAND Take Off Friday in Plane From Greenland Over Arctic Region. Ril In Hril Pmm COPENHAGEN, July 29—Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, braving a flight over territory left usually to Eskimos and Arctic explorers. took off in their plane from olstonborg. Greenland. Friday, for a visit to Baffin Land, according to word received here today. They were expected to return at once. The flight took the Lindberghs westward across the 200 miles of Davis strait that joins the Atlantic with Baffin bay. just north of the Arctic Circle, above Hudson strait and Hudson bay. They had been flying along the Greenland coast for some days, looking over the territory with a view to a northern Atlantic air route. On Thursday the Lindberghs flew j over the Greenland ice area, a great ; cap rising to from 8.000 to 10.000 feet that covered the entire interior of the great island. They reported when they returned to Holstensborg that they found a good landing place on a fjord in the interior. The Greenland government reported from Godthaab today that the steamship Jelling, depot ship for 1 the Lindberghs' survey, arrived at Holstensborg Thursday evening. Apparently. Lindbergh decided on the Baffin Land flight as soon as the ship arrived. The Jelling's mastei. Captain Dam. reported that the Lindberghs would fly to Scandinavia were published Friday. Previously, Lindbergh had | intimated he thought the season too i late to continue his flight to the European continent. Baffin Land, a barren tract of 236000 miles, lies north of Canada and is one of the dominion's Arctic islands. It rises on the east to 5.000 to 6.000 feet, is low inland, and on the west has an elevation of 3.000 ' feet. Part of it is permanency ice covered. in the rest vegetation grows | luxuriantly in summer ume, end the temperature sometimes reaches 60 degrees. There are Royal Canadian mounted police posts at three points. Pangnirtung Fjord. Ponds inlet and Lake Harbor A government ship visits them once each year.

BARS 3,2 SALE BY NEBRASKA MASONS Edict Prohibits Selling Even Though Legal. By In it* and Prt ** LINCOLN. Neb.. July 29.-Archie M. Smith, grand master of Nebraska Masonry, has issued an edict, prohibiting any member of the lodge from selling 3.2 beer, even though it has been legalized by the state. The edict has been sent to every Blue lodge in the state If an offender is found guilty before a Masonic commission, he may be ousted from the order.

RACE TRACK S selections BT O. RE VILLA

Today’s Selections Latofiia—1. Leaflet. Brilliant Rose. Miss Flip. 2. Prestige, Arouse. Two Slippers 3. Legality, Woodland?,-, Good Politen 4 Volwood. Deemster, Camp Boss 5. Plumage, Inah, Running W'ater. 6 Bamboula., Bright Bubble Edith A 7. Gyro. Depression. Loeust Moss S. Dawn Mist, Sweet One. Ballyhoo. Best —Volwood. Track—Muddy. At Arlington Park—1. Sarazan 11. Morsun, Prefer. 2 Cold Check. Bedight, Volta Ma id. 3. Topple, Grey Sash. Durga. 4. Pairbypalr, Mr. Sponge. No More. 5. Dixianna Entry, Singing Wood, Hadagal. 6. Polydorus, Watch Him Action. 7. War. Poedy Boy. Peace Lady. 8. Anrumessic, Sandwrack, Cog Air. Best—Dixianna Entry. Track—Faou

Capital EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents

Fry Hurls Threat Against Northern Indiana Brew Dealers. FACE REVOKED LICENSES Keg Brew Openly *on Tap’ in Ft. Wayne and Lake County. Threats that the state police or national guard will be j called out to enforce sale of bottle beer only, in Indiana, if local law enforcement ofli:ials refuse to act, were hurled today by Paul Fry, state ex cise director. Fry accepted as an open challenge the activity of beer sellers in the north part of the state who, during the last twenty-four hours, began the sale of the 3.2 brew on draught. Fry said as soon as he received definite evidence of the sale of draught beer bv persons holding state licenses, he would revoke the writs. "It then will be up to the local officials to enforce the law." he said. "I'm the licensing authority in this state and I wil 1 revoke them when I find they are selling draught, and not bottle beer. Beer Dealer Released "Then, if the proper authorities in these places refuse to taxe action. I'll throw the state police or the national guard into the field to inforre this law " Sale of keg beer was open in Ft. Wayne and Lake countv. In Ft. Wayne twenty dealers we p selling draught beer without intereference of the authorities there. Others were clamoring for equipment to start sale. The rush for draught oeer followed the release of August Halfman after his airest. In releasing Halfman. City Judge Bert A. Fagan said the people of Allen county "want a mild interpretation of the state malt and beverage act and there is no reason why they shouldn't get it." Insist on Licenses He also declared that, as far as his court was concerned, licensed beer dealers would not be prosecuted for the sale of tap beer In Lake county officials said they will demand that sellers of beer have certified Indiana licenses, but that they would "wink" at the sale of draught beer. Prosecutor Robert G Estill took a defiant stand against enforcement of the sale of beer in bottles The people want draught beer and I favor stretching the law to givp it to them." Estii] said. Estill's statement followed dismissal of charges against Matt Domkowski. of East Chicago, who is the holder of a state license, but who was selling the brew on tap. No Keg Brew Sold Here The move had not spread to Indianapolis today, although many of the beer places arp in possession of petitions issued bv a draught beer organization, in which it is planned to make a demand on Governor Paul V. McNutt for a change in the law Several downtown Indianapolis ber places already have their equipment for draught beer. but. so far. have not shown any initiative in a move to handle it. Chief Mike Morrissey said that if Indianapolis retailers burked the state law. he would arrest them immediately and leave the action to municipal courts. "The law is on the books, and I intend to enforce it." he said Lake county has been the seat, of insurretcion against the beer law previously. An East Chicago city councilman lost his fight in the state courts for sale of the tap brew ar.d was arrested after he defied the orders against him. SWINE CLOSE WEEK AT STEADY PRICE LEVELS Cattle Unchanged With Receipts Extremely Small. Hogs ended the week with prices firm in a range steady with Friday s average at the city yards The bulk of sales, on 160 to 275 pounds. wer madp at $4 60 to $4.70; 275 pounds up. $4 25 tos4 50: 140 to 160 pounds, S3 75 to $4 Light pigs sold down to $2 50 with packing sows bringing $3 25 to $3 75. Receipts were estimated at 2 000 Holdovers were 762. Cattle were quotabiy steady on light receipts of 100 Beef steers were 25 to 50 cents lower for the week Heif“rs earned most of the steer decline. Most steers sold in a range of $5 75 to $7 10, low'er grades $4.25 to $5 50. Top on heifers was $6 with the bulk selling, at $5 50 down. Vealers were unchanged at $5 50 down Calf receipts were 100. Sheep were quotabiy steady at $8 25 down. Receipts were 200 FAIR. IS FORECAST Warm Weather to Continue for Week-End, Say* Bureau. Fair and warm was the forecast for the week-end. issued today by the United States weather bureau here. Temperatures in the mideighties was assured for this afternoon when the mercury rose from 73 at 6 a. m. to 78 at 9.