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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 20
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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 20

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

to of 10c 8 5 3 3 9 1 to 0 0 5 0 0 0 1.150 0 9 1 9 0 0 9 not 0 09 8 1 0 0 0 THE DAILY PANTAGRAPH, BLOOMINGTON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1933. PHONE FADS Markets, Financial and Business SWINE TRADE KEEPS ACTIVE: Top of Choice Chicago Of- ferings Advance 5 Cents to $4.05. was an active trading interest Friday and hog prices advanced moderately. Total receipts for five important markets were 33,100. Chicago received 20,000 and was and to 15c higher than Thursday.

The top on choice offertings advanced 5c to $4.05 and the average price paid was around $3.80. Cattle receipts amounted to 4,315. Chicago received 2,000 of this and the market was genamount, to 15c higher. The top on vealers remained at $5.50 and the average price was around $4.60. Sheep held Arm throughout.

Total receipts were 17,500, of which 12.000 were received in Chicago. There WAS an active interest in lamb trading and the top on choice lambs advanced 25c to $7.50. The average price was around $4.65. BLOOMINGTON LIVESTOCK (Friday's Quotations.) HOGS--Receipts, 600; top, 210 to 300 pounds, $3.50 3.70; 150 to 200 pounds, $3.40 3.60. down.

LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK ESTIMATED RECEIPTS. CHICA estimated ceipta Saturday. CATTLE 500 7.000 HOGS SHEEP 6.000 PEORIA LIVESTOCK. PEORIA Receipts 2.000: Se bigher: top. bulk.

$3.65 CATTLE- Receipts, 100. Price Range steers $3.50 5.00 Bulk to choice 5.00 5.50 Steers. rood fair to good 3.50 5.00 Steers, common to fair 2.500 3.50 Heifers, good to choice 5.00 5.50 Heifers, fair to cond 3.50 5 5.00 Heifers, common to fair 3.00 Cows, good to choice 2.75 Cows, fair to good 2.50 Cows, common to fair 2.00 1.50 Canners And cutters 1.00 Bulls, choice 3.00 Bulls, heavy beef 2.00 2.65 Bulls, choice bologna 2.00 1 2.50 Bulls, common and light 1.50 9 2.00 STOCKERS AND FEEDERS Steers. good to choice 3.50 5 4.00 Steers. fair to good 3.00 3.18 Heifer.

good to choice 3.25 0 3.15 Heifers. fair to 3.00 3.50 CALVES -Receipts. 150. Fancy selected 25 8 5.50 Geed to choice vealers 4.50 9 5.00 Common to good vealers 3.00 4.50 Fair to best heavies 3.00 3 4.00 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. CHICAGO.

000. including 8.000 direct: active, to bulk 170 19 evenly strong higher: 300 pounds. top. 84.05: and light lights, 83.00 3.75: bulk 83.00 3.25: light light. choice, 140 160 pounds, 3.65: light weight.

160 pounds. medium weight. 10 250 pounds, $3.90 4.05: heavy to 350 pounds. $3.50 4.00: packing medium and 275 to 550 03.50. and choice, 100 te 130 pounds.

83.00 3.40. CATTLEsteers 1.000 pounes unevenly higher, mostly 15e Up: Thursday's decline other classes 16e to 15e higher: choice to 1.361 pound steer. 85.50 0 5.60. 1.073 averages. 85.90: steers sealing 403 pounds, 86.00: bulls.

83.00. vealers: pounde. to pounds. 1.300 84.15 84.00 5 5.88: common 83.00 4.15: 854 to 150 15.00 5 8.50. medium.

83.000 5.60: 83.00 4.001 commen cutter and 81 35 9 excluded. cutter. drum. 1.00: sealer. 84.00 0 8 4.00: cull common.

9 3.50: stocker feeder Steers. 8504 choice 19 1.690 peante. 83.25 4.50: common 82.50 0 3.25. SHEEP- Receipts. 12.000: interests esther active fat lamb trade: 8004 choice lambs, 87.00 to moetty best 2414 around sheep pounds 1.50, to 150 and choice.

0 3.00: medium. 81.850 CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE OF TRADE Press.) Open Fri. Higa LOw Close Fri. Fri. Fri.

.85 .83 $6 .88 .86 .88 .52 .52 .54 .54 .32 .32 .37 .36 .59 .55 .66 .63 .40 .46 .48 4.42 4.65 4.40 4.57 5.20 3.45 5.20 5.42 5.62 5.82 5.57 5.77 4.00 4.20 3.97 4.20 5.50 5.50 5.45 5.45 STOCKS LOSE PART OF GAIN Market Firms Up in Face of Sharp Advance of Dollar. NEW stock market firmed up Friday in the face of one of the sharpest gains in the dollar in several days--a gain based on growing strength of anti-inflation forces. The anti-inflation sentiment was given a great spur before the close of the market when Former Governor Alfred E. Smith attacked the Roosevelt monetary policy. The statement resulted in the market for United States government securities extending its gain, while foreign currencies slipped off further in relation to the dollar.

Stocks lost some of the 1 to almost 3 points gain they had recorded in earlier transactions. 1 CHICAGO CASH SALES TIMOTHY 96.00 per ewt. CLOVER per cwt. CHICAGO, ILL. Sample grade hard, 78c; sample grade northern spring, 78c: No.

mixed, CORN -No. 2 mixed, 45c; No. 3 mixed, No. 2 yellow, 454 0464e: No. 3 yellow, 45c; No.

yellow, No. 5 yellow, 44c; No. 6 yellow, 43c; No. 2 white, No. 3 white, -No.

2 mixed, 0444e: No. mixed, No. 4 mixed. 40c: No. 2 yellow, No.

3 yellow, 414 7 43 No. 4 yellow, 3014 042c; No. 2 white, He: No. 3 white, No. white, 414 6 42c.

OATS--No. 2 white, 33e; No. white, No. 4 white, RYE-No. 2.

65c. BARLEY-400 70e. POULTRY -Live. 52 trucks, strong; hens, 799c; leghorn hens, rock springs, 10011c: colored. 99 leghorn chickens, roosters.

60: hen turkeys, young toms, 11e: No. 2. Se; ducks, geese, 9c: dressed turkeys steady, prices unchanged. POTATOES -118, on track. 282: total United States shipments, 533: dull.

supplies moderate, demand and trading slow: sacked per United States No. 1, Wieconsin round whiter, mostly around Minnesota-North Dakota Red River Ohio's, $1.174 01.25; Idaho Russets, 0 combination grade, 81.350 9 1.40: Colorado McClures, few antes, $1.65. COTTON. COTTON. NEW FORK Cotton futures elose4 barely steady, 4 to 10 pointe higher.

0 9.92: March. 816.19: May, 610.27: July, $10.40: 810.61. -Steady: middling. 810.10. OUT OUR WAY By Williams SAY- I LEFT YOU 5-S-T-'AT GUY HAVE MY HEAD GEAR, I'M PLAYIN' AGINST SO YOU WOULDN'T BUMPS MY HEAD GIT HURT.

NOW WITH HIS SO I WHUTRE YOU DOIN' PUT A BIG STONE WITH IT, STUCK UP IN IT, TO LEARN ON YOUR HEAD HIM A LESSON. LIKE A PLUG HAT THE KNOWLEDGE NEW YORK STOCKS NEW -Closing stock quotations: Allied Chemical and Dyeing American Can 99 American and Foreign Power 10 American Power and Light American Smelting and Refining American Steel Fdrs. American Tel. and Tel. 120 American Water Works 18 Anaconda Copper Auburn Auto 45 Aviation Corporation Baldwin Locomotive 11 Baltimore and Ohio 24 Barnsdall Beech Nut P.

56 Bendix Aviation 14 Bethlehem Steel 34 Borg-Warner Canadian Pacific Caterpil Tractor 23 Chesapeake and Ohio Chesapeake Corporation 34 1 Chicago and N. W. Chrysler Motor City Stores 14 Com'l Solvents Com'with and Southern Congoleum-Na. 24 Con Gas 39 Con Oil 11 Con Text Continental Baking Continental Can Continental Motor Continental Oil Del Corn Products 69 Douglas Aircraft Du Pont 88 Electric Auto Light Electric Boat Electric Power and Light Fox Film General American Trans 304 General Asphalt 16 General Baking General Electric General Foods 35 General Motors 32 4 Gold Dust Graham- Paige Motor Grigsby-Grunow Hudson Motor Hupp Motor Illinois Central Inger Rand 62 International Harvester 41 International Nick Can 22 Tel. and Tel.

13 Kelvinator 12 Kresge, S. S. 12 Kroger Grocery Ligg and My Lorillard Mack Trucks 364 Marshall Field Montgomery Ward National Biscuit National Distill National Power and Light National Steel National Tea New York Central N. Y. C.

and St. 16 N. Investors Y. N. H.

and H. N. Y. Shipbidg. Noranda Mines 34 North American Aviation North American Northern Pacific Packard Motor Paramount Publix.

ett. Phillips Petrol Procter and Gam Purity Baking Remington Rand Red Motors Republic Steel 15 Sear Roebuck Socony- Vacuum Southern Pacific 20 Southern Ry. 23 Sperry Corporation Standard Brands Stewart Studebaker Corporation Timken- Roller Bearing United Aircraft United States Smelting and Refining United States Steel United States steel. pid. Vanadium Warner Pictures Warren Bros.

West Mary Western Union Tel. Westinghouse Airbrake Westinghouse and 39 4 Woolworth Wrigley, Yellow and C. Youngst. 8h. and Total stock sales Thursday 1.313.245 Week AgO 2.323.570 Year 1.005,840 TwO years AgO 1.855.755 Jan.

1 to date 617.048.726 Year 860 399.057.176 Two years 524.555.078 Dash indicates trading. FINANCIAL FOREIGN EXCHANGES. NEW YORK. exchanges heavy, demand: Great Britain. France, Italy, Belgium, 22.

Germany, Holland. 24.25e: Sweden. 24.95e: Denmark, 23.400; Spain. 13.01e: Portugal, 4.90€: Greece, Austria, 18.35€: Tokyo, in New York. 101.50€; New York in Montreal, 98.506.

LIBERTY BONDS. NEW government 8100.5: fret fourth 8101.15: treasury 8105.34: treasury treasury $95.14. BLOOMINGTON GRAIN Based close of the market Friday, elevators were paying the of an cent freight rate to the following prices: -WHEATNo. 1 -CORNwhite No. yellow Ne.

white (10 Ne. yellow (16 -OATSNo white No. white CHICAGO STOCKS stock tone: Bendin Aviation Butler Bree. Chicago Corporation Chicago Com' with Greet Lakes Dredge Dash indicates no trading Swift Company Walgreen Stock Bende None. NEW YORK CURB NEW YORK stock tone: Aluminum Company of America Cities Service Electrie B.

Fare Can Gulf ted. mandard Out of Dash indicates trading BLOOMINGTON POULTRY AND EGGS. Quotations. (Country Prices.) under Leghorn Springs Cocks White Darks, Turke tome Turns, Ne. KEEP ST.

LOUIS PRODECE. Aged Doctor Admits Slaying Slaying NEA Wynekoop, 62, Friday confessed daughter in law, Mrs. Rheta the inquest in Chicago, and body in her basement office. the girl was slain by a burg. committed murder when discov- Leads Drive Leads Drive Marshalling her forces to meet the rapidly growing need for relief as winter approaches, Commander Evangeline Booth of the Salvation Army is shown here, leaving the white house.

HARRISBURG. UP -Penneyivania, home of some of the world's largest distilleries, threatened with another "whisky rebellion." But unlike the insurrection that sent 13,000 federal troops into the state 142 ago to quell an uprising years, tax of centa a galion imposed by congress, the present flareup is having the effect of closing whisky plants. Claiming that taxes being pushed through the legielature by the state's dry governor, Gifford Pinchot, will ruin them, the distillers are threatening to move to other states where the tax rate is more favorable 10 them. Whisky 'Rebellion' Takes Place Again Five Million Allotted WASHINGTON, D. C.

(P Public Works Administrator Ickes Friday announced the allotment of $5.082.200 for 38 nonfederal profseta in 28 states and Hawall. PANTAGRAPH PHONES- 4500 LeRoy Community Sale NOV. 25, 1933 AT LEROY, ILL. Starts 19 O'elock Noon 130 head livestock, butcher stock, feeding pigs, brood sows, 21 bead of ewes, 1 buck, geese and ducks. Call 49, R.

for information. Bring your family and spend the day in Leroy, Terms Cask 1. P. Miller, Auet. Leverne Cosby, Clerk.

Hitler's Look of Resentment Impresses Shaw thing George Bernard Shaw Hitler is the German chancellor's "expression of intense "That," the Irish dramatist told the Fabian society Thursday night, "is what every statesman ought to have." It was Shaw's annual oratorical "night out" and he appeared to make the most of it. He eulogized Joseph Stalin and Premier Mussolini along with Hitler. He referred to President Roosevelt, too, as a man "trying to get something done. "One thing about Hitler recommended him me from the very first," Shaw said. "That is his face.

"What is prominent in expression on that face? It is the expression of intense resentment--and that is the expression every statesman ought to have. "English statesmen never show resentment in surroundings which ought to make them mad with fury. Hitler is rearming and I dare say he will buy a gun or two from this country--from a few English firms who have that sort of broad international outlook. They would sell anybody. "Suppose," he suggested, "that we had been vanquished in the war and treated as the allied powers are treating Germany.

"Do you think would have restrained a tremendous national movement in England and would you not all have been Nazis?" In his only reference to the American president, Shaw said: "Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Roosevelt, De Valera and' all the others are trying to get something done by methods by which things can be done." Father and Son Hanged EDMONTON, and William McLean, father and son, were hanged Friday for the murder of Walter J. Parsille, Manville, farmer. The MeLeans were arrested in Knoxville, and returned to Canada following the murder. of pneumonia. Mrs.

Don Morrison of Pontiac, who has been ill for the last two months at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Zook, was removed to the St.

James hospital in Pontiac Tuesday morning. Mrs. Helen Barrie and Mrs. F. D.

Moore of Chicago are guests of Miss Emma DuBcis. Mrs. C. Hougham and her daughter Lucille, with the official board members of the Christian church and their families, planned a surprise for Rev. Mr.

Hougham Tuesday night to celebrate his birthday anniversary. Twenty guests presented their pastor with a nice gift, Rev. Mr. Hougham has been pastor of the Fairbury Chris tian church the last three years, living near Arrowsmith. where he also has charge.

This year he became resident pastor here. Rev. Mr. Hougham and his wife and their daughter Lucille have taken an apartment at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

J. S. Dix on West Elm street. Mrs. Don C.

Merit is spending few days in Chicago with her daughter, Mrs. Ruth Haythorne. Mon. Haythorne is to leave soon for New York city to join her husband, who is stationed there in tion with Aims taken on a recent Persepolis expedition of the oriental institute of the University of Chicago. The art and literature department of the Fairbury Woman's club met in the Dominy Memorial library Tuesday afternoon.

Mrs. Lillian Schmidt was chairman. Mrs. I. L.

Harris and Mrs. B. Marshal Gordon played piano duet. The topica, "Portrait Painters, were Landscape discuseed Painters, Sculptors," by Mrs. G.

C. Lewis, Mrs. T. D. Karnes and Mrs.

J. H. Langstaff. Miss Rachel Armstrong told of "The Development of American Art." Laura Belle Pittman. Corr.

FAIRBURY Robert Henning is seriously 111 GOLD IN SLAG. A GOLDEN, More than $250,000 worth of gold is buried in the sing heaps that mark the site where Golden' four smelters belched forth their clouds of coal smoke and sulphur fumes 1 in No attempta have been made to retrieve the gold, however, as metallurgista estimate it would million dollare. Slag melted rock drained from the smelter furnace as refuse after valuable metal have been removed. IN THE AUCTION RING LIPPER BRING CaUSe ZIPPER I gradients and Yet. PER.

With ZIPPER BLOOMINGTON MILLING CO. 001 N. Merrie Phone TOWNSHIP UNIT IS HELD BEST Springfield Attorney Talks Before McLean County Officials. (85y I'be Associated Close Close WHEAT- Year ago. Thursday.

Dec .84 May Jiy .86 CORN-Dec .43 May Jly .82 OATS-Dec stay .364 J1y RYEDec May .65 Jly .32 .66 BARLEYDec .40 May .46 Jly LARDDec 4.47 Jan 3.95 5.20 May 4.10 5.62 BELLIES Dee 4.00 Jan 3.95 5.50 RALLY SENDS GRAINS AHEAD Wheat Futures Up 1 1-8 to 5-8 Cents Higher; Corn Gains. CHICAGO (U.P) Grains finally worked into an oversold condition and rally followed Friday on the he board of trade, sending prices higher. the close wheat futures were to higher, corn was to higher and oats were up to CASH GRAIN NEWS PEORIA GRAIN. PEORIA. 1c to 20 lower: No.

2 yellow, 43e: yellow, 390: No. yellow, 374, yellow, No. mixed, sample Nuel grade. 0 OATS- -Unchanged: No. 2 white.

330 33 ST. LOUIS CASH GRAIN. ST. -Cash: WHEAT-No. 2 red.

861 56 CORN No. 2 yellow, No. 3 yellow, 42 9 OATS -No. 3 white. ST.

LOUIS FUTURES. ST. futures closed higher on the merchants exchange Friday, December wheat opened 1e lower an closed higher. Stay opened Ne er and closed higher. Cash red 2e lower.

Receipta 9 cars. Cash corn was unchanged. Receipts, 23 cars. Cash cats was He lower. Receipts, car Receipts, including 2.200 direct, market active: 10e to 15e higher: top.

84.00: bulk. 150 to 250 pounds. $3.900 4.00: 280 pound weights. $3.65: 130 to 140 pounds. $3.60 lighter pigs bulk sows.

12.90 0 3.10. CATTLE- 800: calves: Receipta 100: market opening generally steady and moderately active except weal. lower: 85.75: otter sales, mixed yearlings and heifer, $3.50 5.00 82.25 2.15: low cutters. 81.00 91.50; bulla largely $2.00 0 2.60: seminal alsuchter steer, $2.150 slaughter 82.50 5 6.00. opened better wooled lambe 87.00 0 cuts, $3.50 4.50: fat 82.00 0 2.75.

2.25: feeding lambs. 50 to 15 pounds. 5004 and choice. $9.30 3 6.10. EAST ST.

LOUIS LIVESTOCK. EAST ST. LOUIE, ILL HOGS SPRINGFIELD LIVESTOCK. SPRINGFIELD. ILL 1.100: market steady to be bicher: 83.30 3.60; heavies, 0 3.65: packers.

13.00 3.25. CATTLE steady: vesiers steady, $5.25. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. INDIANAPOLIAmostly higher: steady to 10e 225 pounds. 82.85 3 2.90: 235 83.75 3.80: to 335 83.65 8 3.10: 140 to pounds.

3.15: 180 to 149 pounce. 83.30 0 3.005 packing CATTLE calves: 15: low cutters 454 cutters. 81.00 1.15: few eboice She Bieber others steady. 16.00, lambs steady bulk email let beid, 87.39; 86.60, down. Breaking at last, Dr.

Alice Lindsay to investigators the slaying of her Wynekoop, 23. She is pictured here at giving the account of how she found the At that time she voiced the belief that lar, probably a drug addict, who ered. (Story on Page 1.) Dr. Wynekoop Breaks; Confesses Slaying (Continued from Page 1.) to widespread acquaintauceship with other women. In her formal confession to police.

Dr. Wynekoop placed the time of the slaying at between 1:30 p. m. and 2 p. m.

This conflicted with the story of a neighbor that she had seen Rheta at 3 p. m. "Rheta WAS going to gO down town to buy some music," Dr. Wynekoop explained. "Before she went down town she went to the basement to weigh herself.

I followed her there. While she WaS weighing herself she complained of these pains. Eased Her Pain. "I said 'Rheta, I think I can do something to east these pains for Rheta said that was fine and told her to undress and get on the operating table." "I told her I would give her chloroform to ease the pain and the girl was, agreeable. I had no thought killing her.

Then I saw she would not come out of the the statement, the physician asked and received permission of police to tell her story to her family, one of the most prominent medically in the city, in her own words. Insurance Policy Beneficiary, The confession made no mention of the fact that Dr. Wynekoop had been named benefciary of Rheta in double indemnity life Insurance policy for $5,000 which had been lasued only a few days before. Nor that two members of the Wynekoop household were named beneficiaries of a second accident policy of $1,000 issued about the same time. However, police had disclosed that Dr.

Wynekoop was in financial straits and had been for some time since the death of her hus. band, who was a well known physician himself. Boy and Girl Scouts to Perform at Game Boy and Girl Scouts will be guesta Saturday at the Illinois Wes leyan university football game Wilder feld, and will give a patriotic program between halves. Those to attend will meet at Memorial gymnasium at 1:30 p. m.

A nAg raising ceremony will be held at the half period. The Tillnois Soldiers and Sailors Children's School band will play "To the Colora" as the flag is raised. The band will play other selections also. Menard Red Cross Goal $400 Fantagraph Central thinels Service. PETERSBURG.

Mrs. E. Mitchell of Petersburg, who is In charge of the annual Red Cross roll call for Menard county, has announced the following persona in charge through out the county: Tallula, Miss Stattie Hudson: ford, Collie Lounsberry: Greenview, Joe Sprouse; Rock Creek. Rev. G.

A. Wilson; Indian Point. Walter Meteer, and Athens, Are. Thomas Kenyon. The quota for Menard county has been set 8400, BAGS HUGE BEAR.

WHITEFISH. MONT. (INS) One of the largest black bears ever bagged in this region was recently brought into Whiteish on pack horses by Andrew Jones. The ani mai weighed nearly 500 pounds and measured 15 inches across the head from ear to ear. Jones shot it white hunting deer.

The feathers of birds are, perhaps, more an armor than le commonly realized; shot are often deflected by the feathered coats of gamebirda. ST. LOUTS. LOANS $20 to $300 On New and Used Cars Also Furniture, Livestork, Ete. Repay Weekly Monthly Time te Farmers NATIONAL LOAN CO.

N. Center These Offices in Peaties (Continued From Page 3) erty for road construction. Bill No. 559, had it passed, would have abolished the office of highway commissioners and town clerk in November, 1934. Had these measures become a law, the township would have been compelled to look to the county, and the county, in turn, to state, in the building and location of roads.

The fight made on these measures by the state association of highway commissioners and town clerks, was outlined by the speaker who represented the state association. During the campaign for and against the measures, Mr. Giffin said, a prominent Chicago banker. told members of the legislature that there is thirty billion dollars worth of personal property in cago that has never been assessed. Mr.

Giffin said this illustrates his contention that the metropolitan areas are reaching out and trying to crush the township units in order to help spend taxes raised in the townships. Pleads for Retention. The speaker ended his discussion with a plea for the retention of the township unit, and warned his hearers that the movement to abolish the smaller governmental tricts may be continued itely. Mr. Giffin was introduced by Frank Moberly of Shirley, president of the county and state Association, 86 was also John Graybrook of Ottawa, assistant district engineer, who outlined requirements in placing township and county unemployed on CWA work relief.

re Frank Gillespie, Bloomington, representative in congrese, and Maurice Kalahar, Bloomington, representative in the general assembly, spoke briefly. Homer Caton, Stanford, chairman of the county board; E. C. Mahan, Money Creek, chairman of the county state aid road committee: Claude Stanger, Cooksville, chairman of the county road and bridge committee, P. J.

Keller, county superintendent of highways, and Mrs. Celia McBarnes, who with her husband, the late John McBarnes, donated the funds for the building of the Barnes Memorial hall, were introduced to the audience. Mra. Barnes was the guest of James Tearney, highway commissioner of Dawson township. Music was furnished by the Covell Community orchestra.

Edwin Cook and his quartet and Georgia's Gypsy Troubadore. 03.75. George Tribbett Dies at Compton George O. Tribbett, 32. of 509 East Washington street, died Thursday night at Compton.

Ill. Mr. Tribbett was born Aug. 31, 1901. at Latham, and married Louise Stathern at Pekin.

Survive ing are his mother, Mrs. Christian Tribbett of Mt. Pulaski: two sons, Orville and Roy; two sisters, Mrs. Oscar Scroggin of Glendale, Calif, and Mrs. Harold Hargrave of Mt.

Pulaski: and two brothers, Robert of Pontiac and John of Compton. The funeral will be held at the Mt. Pulaski Christian church at 2 p. m. Sunday.

Burial will be in Mt. Pulaski cemetery. Meredith Rites Saturday The funeral of William Meredith, 1215 South Koch street, died at St. Joseph's hospital Thursday morning, will be held at John A. Beck company chapel at 2 p.

m. Saturday with Capt. Charles Over. stake of the Salvation charge. Burial will be in Bloomington cemetery, Public Sale Being Overstocked Will Sell At My Residence miles northwest of Car.

lock, and 2 miles east of gerville on route 9, beginning at 11 O'clock Sharp TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1933 CATTLE-25 head of cattle. A cross of Jersey and Swiss, 13 head of fresh milk cows. Test and weight of milk will he given day of ale. 12 head of heifers ranging in age from six months to 18 months. AIL Are T.

R. tested. ROGE-25 head of Duroc Jersey boats weighing about 100 Ibe. SHEEP-35 bead of bred ewes. CHICKENS- -Wyandotte cockerels, TERMS--CASH SAM ZIMMERMAN, Owner Cola.

La F. Carina, J. B. Zobriet Auctioneers Hene STAR BRAND EGG BALANCER QUARANTEED OVER 355 PROTEIN CONTAINS I MEAL, MEAT COD LIVER OIL, DRIED Ration 200 Makes Conelder STAR RE.

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