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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 12
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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 12

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

0 9 6 8 0 20 5 9 15c 99 9 0 $4.00 3.50 160 4.00 4 1.100 50 50 50 1.35: 50 1.00 0 9 1 01 1 0 0 8 1 4 a 8 0 1 5 5.00 3.50 5.00 5.50 3.10. few 50 and 1 Jly Con N. Du National Continental Steel Central and 9 H. en 3. 25 4 30 14 15 20 31 inge Ind.

Vent sour! 1. 11ke: 1 21e: 1 1 4 1 1. 1. 1 1 1. 1.

1. 1. 1. 1. 1 BLOOMINGTON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1933.

PHONE WANT ADS 4500 THE DAILY PANTAGRAPH, Markets, Financial and Business CHICAGO HOG PRICES MOUNT General Recovery Coincident With Slightly Improved Demand Highlight. (C.P) -A general recovery in hog prices coincident with a slightly improved demand and more moderate receipts highlighted trading At to Chicago prices 15c higher with the top $3.30 and bulk $2.85 3.30. markets sank into a rut Cattle Wednesday. Prices generally held here and there some with but receipts were small strength and demand Chicago WAS most steer classes but steady on higher on light heifstrong to 25c and mixed yearlings and steady ers on other killing classes. to strong The top was $7.25, markets again were irreguSheep steady to lower.

lar but generally continued to dictate prices Buyers were moderate. although supplies Chicago was not established, buystill disagreeing, ers and sellers few sales fully though A lambs were held steady. Best around $6.25. BLOOMINGTON LIVESTOCK (Wednesday's Quotations.) 250; top, $3.10: -Receipts, HOGS. 200 pounds, $3.00 3.10: 200 140 to 260 to 260 pounds, 300 pounds, $2.654 2.85.

sOws down. LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK estimated CHICAGO. ceipts Thursday: 5.000 CATTLE 24.000 HOGS 11.000 SHEEP ESTIMATED RECEIPTS. PEORIA LIVESTOCK. PEORIA (UP -Receipts, 2.500; higher: 140 to 230 pounds.

generally to 300 pounds, $2.759 $3.00 3.25: 230 packing sows. $2.15 9 2.50. 3.00: Price Range CATTLE- Receipts, 200. 4. Bulk of steers Steers, good to choice 4.15 Steers, fair to 200d 3.50 4.00 common to fair Steers, Heifers, fair to good Heifers, common to fair 2 45 choice 2.50 2 Cows.

good to 2.00 2.50 Cows, fair to good Cows. common to fair Canners and cutters Bulls, choice yearlings Bulls, heavy beef Rulls, choice bologna 2.50 1.15 and light 0 2.40 Bulls, common STOCKERS AND FEEDERS choice 1.00 Rteers, good to 4.00 Steers, fair to good 4.00 4.50 Heifers, cond to choice 3.00 1.00 Heifers, fair to good CALVES Receipts, Fancy selected vealers Good to choice vealers 1. Common to good vealers 3.00 Fair to best beavies INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK. INDIANAPOLIS HOGA 114: to hicher: 1.000: holdovers, beaver weights up most: 120 210 to 3.35 210 to 235 pounds, 83.150 81.25 3.15: 275 pounds, $3.05 275 3.25: 235 16 pounde Up. $2.95 9 3.05; packing mnetty, $2.00 4 2.50.

calves: CATTLE- Receipts, about steady: fed steers celpis, 400: few fed yearlings, $6.00 weighty fat cows mostly 12.00 2.50: cutters and cutter, $1.001 to $3.00: low 2.00: bulla mostly $3.00, steady, Receipte, tam be SHEEPgood to choice natives, 36.00 lower: down; ted throwouts. 6.35, fat ewes mostly $1.00 0 2.00. 56.10 9 FAST ST. LOUIS LIVESTOCK. KART 114.

Receipts, 140 to 160 1.35: 83.00 lightweight. choice, 83. pounds, diam 200 to 250 3.30; choice. $3.109 and choice, 12.15 350 pounde, to 500 pounde, 9 2.50: pics. 100 130 and 83.00 and choice, 82 25 0 3.00 pounde.

CATTLE Receipts, 2.000. calve: 1.000; steer market deals steady; vealers early steady beef ether classes slaughter steers, 88.75 nominal range 6.75: slauchter heifers, 82.75 6 25; 600 to 1.109 ter classes and 84.150 medium. 82.75 5.00: 1.100 to 1.500 5 85.00 84.00 choice, 550 25 choice. 85.00 mne and medium. 83.00 00 cutter cutter, low choice.

83 00 82.00 3.00 00 drum. 83.00 call and feeder steers, 0 83.75 5.00; 4.00. early SHEEP cond and 85 6. pounde ent medium. 83.00 150 85 25 81.

25 2 00; all pounde eul 15e 81.50. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. Receipts 15 to 220 pounds. 140 110 pende, 0 82.65 bulk pounde, 83.15 35 5 2 60, and 160 81.15 3.30: pounde, 83.200 a medium pounde pounds, 82.650 864 215 te 50 pigs. and choice, 100 to 130 65 3.10.

calves Re heifer ceipta, lines strong yearling steers steady steady. fairly licht pre 1.433 held 84 1 16 to 85.25 0 25. 1.25: 1.300 1.400 pounde, 0 common 1.800 83 25 9 4 choice, 550 to 150 pounde 854 medium. 88 4 3 cutter and cutter. butte yearlings cutter, medium.

50 0 8 00: medium. 83.500 cull and moS, 9 3. stocker and good 854 choire, 500 to 1.410 pounds, 84.000 9 5.50, common and medium. 82.75 4.00 SHEEP- 16.0001 seta liahed satre fully intereste talking 8004 choice 84. 50 9 6 hold RE jam 0 0 common and medium, WHEAT- May J1y Sep CORNMay Jly Sep OATS- May RYE May Jly May BARLEY- LARD- May BELLIES May CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE (By The Associated Close Close Year AgO.

Tuesday .563 Jly Jan Jan ..56 .49 .42 .30 .27 .29 .18 .25 .37 5.22 4.15 5.50 4.07 5.75 3.70 6.12 3.90 NEW YORK STOCKS NEW NEW YORK. -Closing stock quotatione Allied Chemical and Dyeing 61 American Can American and Foreign Power American Smelting and Refining American Steel Fdrs. American Tel. and Tel. American Tobacco American Tobacco 61 American Water Works 19 Anaconda Copper Auburn Auto 53 Aviation Corporation Baldwin Locomotive Baltimore and Ohio Bendix Aviation Bethlehem Steel Borg-Warner Canadian Pacific Caterpil Tractor Cerro De P.

Chesapeake and Ohio 16 Chesapeake Corporation And N. W. Chrysler Motor Gas 62 Con Text Continental Can Continental Ins. 17 Continental Motor Oil Del Corn Products and Hudson 56 Delaware Pont 40 Electric Auto Light 20 Electric Power and Light National Stores 53 First Foster Wheel 10 Fox Film General American Tank General Baking 16 General Electric General Foods dieneral Motors Gold Dust Motors Gnesby-Grunow Illinois Central Oil Blouston Hudson Motor Incer Rand International Harvester International Nick Can International Tel. and Tel.

Kelvinator Kennecott Copper 10 Kresge, Lice and My Loose- Wiles Biscuit 25 Lorillard 12 Marshall Field Missouri Pacitie Biscuit National Power and Light New York N. H. N. Y. Ont.

and W. Noranda Mines North American Aviation North American Northern Pacific 14 Packard Motor Paramount Publix Phillipa Petrol Purity Raking Remington Rand Republic steel Reynolds Tobacco Vacuum Rocony- South Cal E4 Southern Pacific standard Brando Timken Roller Hearing United Aircraft Leited Fruit United States steel Vanadium Warner Western Union Tel. Westin and White Yellow Total stock sale Tuesday Week Year Jan. date Year 14.063.107 Two years 19.482.898 Dash indicates so trading. CHICAGO CASH SALES CHICAGO.

4.15 WHEAT red, 501e; No. 2 hard, CORN No. 3 mixed, 24e: No. mixed, No. 3 yellow, 24 4: 25e: No.

4 yellow, 24c; No. 3 white, No. 4 white, -No. 2 yellow, 26 4 OATS -No. 2 white, No.

3 white, 17e. RYE- No. 1, BARLEY 25 1 85c. TIMOTHY SEED 0 2.50 per ewt. CLOVER SEED 8.50 per ewt.

BUTTER weak; creamery. specials 193 score), 921e; extras 192 score), 20e: extra Arsts to 91 scorer, frets score), 190 194e: seconds (86 to 87 score), 189 18 standards (90 score centralized carlota), 20c. EGGS 10,018, weak: extra frats, cars. local, 27e. fresh graded frats, cars.

27e; local, 26e; current receipts, 24 25e. POULTRY- Live, 31 trucks, easier: hens, 13c: leghorn hens, 9te: colored springs, 108; Rock springs, He: roosters, 74e; turkeys, 14e: ducks, geese, leghorn chickens, he; broilers, dressed turkeys, young tome and hens, 17e; young tome, heavy, 15e; old hens, 14e; old tome, 13e. POTATOES 62. on track, 170; total United States shipments, 403; Russets steady, demand moderate, ether stock dull demand slow, truck receipts liberal: sacked per Wisconsin round whites, 109 unclassified, 65e; Michigan Stunset Iturale, 700 Idaho Russets, mostly $1.250 1.30, LIBERTY BONDS. NEW YORK treasury Press.) Open High Low Wed.

Wed. wea. .51 .50 .52 .29 .29 .20 .18 .36 .39 .36 .38 .36 .291 4.10 4.17 4.10 3.90 3.90 3.87 STOCK PRICES FOLLOW WHEAT Reversal of Upward Grain Trend Late in Day Brings Corresponding Reaction. NEW of the upward trend in wheat late Wednesday brought a corresponding reaction in the stock market lafter continuation of Tuesday's vigorous rally for a time in early trading. Prices turned irregular near the close and volume decreased after fairly heavy turnover in the first part of the session.

Sales for the day were the largest of the year, however, topping 1,500,000 shares. GRAIN MARTS FALL SHARPLY: Early Reactions Bring Rally to Further, New Highs, Then Comes Drop. broke sharply on a Japanese.R war rumor after showing determined resistance in the face of heavy profit taking selling on the board of trade Wednesday. Every reaction brought a rally to further new highs for the day, earlier. Just before the close May touched highest in nearly month and a cent over the previous close, on short covering.

Offerwere light and there was persistent support. Northwest kets were weaker Wednesday. At the close wheat was to lower, corn was lie lower to 4e higher, oats to lower, rye Sc lower to higher and barley higher. Provisions were firmer. NEW YORK CURB NEW YORK.

-Closing stock Aluminum Company of America 82 Arkansas Gas Ridge Central Puttie Service Cities Service Deere and Co. the Forest Elect 1 An 20 Oil of Indians ST. LOUIS PRODUCE. LOUT 419- EGGA Lower: No. 22e; standarde, 24e; uncias.

Dash indicates BUTTER Lowert creamery extras, seconde. 16c. No. No. 2.

Northern twine, 1246. POULTRY heavy dium hehe springs, 81e; turkeys, 180; ducks, geese, Irving Fisher's Weekly Index Numbers Wholesale Commodity Petre Level. The following table shows movement each of prices of the chances the purchasing the dollar computed Pref. Irvine Fisher data based mainly on Dun'e A verSE for 1926 are Aken 100. Purchasing of the Index num.

tar here of vised 191 101 105 1 100 106. 101 101 9 116.1 March average MAY 140 July 143 August September October November 146 1933 January March April 161 Auruet September toter November First 1911 1919 Dee 1920 May (peak) January Third Fourth 161 1 November Decembers Firet wok Third Second December average 202008 Fire 81.4 190 8 Mrs. Kate Ryan Funeral Is Held The funeral for Mrs. Kate Ryan of McLean was held at the George R. Flynn funeral home and at St.

Patrick's church Wednesday morning. The Rev. Fr. J. McGinn, assistant pastor of St.

Patrick's church in Lincoln, celebrated requiem high mass and preached the funeral sermon. Pallbearers were John Lunney, Tom Conley, William Sage, Pat Sage, Pete Bode and Gus Paulsen. Burial was in St. Mary's cemetery, with Rev. Dr.

McGinn officiating. Among those from out of town were Mrs. George McDargh, Milwaukee; John, Mary and Josie Holden, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Guse Paulson and family, Atlanta; Mr.

and Mrs. Joe Maxwell, Waynesville, and Mrs. William Zoeller and sons, Henry, Albert and William; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Zoeller, Mrs.

Phineas Romans, Mr. and Mra. Leo Riley and daughter Julia, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Paulson, Mrs.

Thomas Conroy, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Noble, William, Patrick, Mike, Maggie and Ella Sage, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Bode, Fred Wright, Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Nelson, James O'Brine, Charles Welch and George Dye, McLean. Close wed. .201 .361 .29 4.30 4.15 3.75 3.87 Tax Committee Urges Schools' Reorganization (Continued From Page 1.) county, which involves several constitutional changes. In Cook county, to such extent as the general assembly may deem proper, a county-wide highway organization should control all highways in unincorporated areas and all arterial streets and boulevards in municipalities.

The local improvement act should be simplified. Favor Election Cuts. The number of elections should be reduced and the manner of conducting elections should be simplifled so that larger precincts could be created and managed at a reduced cost. Public buildings should be used as polling places to eliminate an enormous item of expense. A permanent system of registration should be adopted.

A state department should be authorized to establish a unified system of accounting for all local governments in the state, to audit their affairs and assist them in budgeting and perfecting the organization and procedures for fiscal control. Any township county should be authorized to adopt the non-township form of government upon petition of not less than 100 legal voters of the county' and subsequent approval by a majority of the voters at a general election. Park Consolidation Advocated. Legislation should be enacted to permit the establishment in Cook county of a metropolitan bureau of sanitation with jurisdiction throughout the county, to supplant the sanitary district of Chicago and other sanitary districts in the county. Legislation should be enacted to permit the establishment in Cook county of a metropolitan bureau of water supply with jurisdiction through the county.

Legislation should be enacted for the consolidation of the three large Chicago park districts and the for est preserve district of Cook county, permitting smaller park districts in county upon a vote of their citizens to join the merged park district. Legisiation should be enacted to permit the establishment in Cook county of a metropolitan police with jurisdiction throughout the county. 30 BILLS BEFORE ASSEMBLY. SPRINGFIELD, ILL. At PI Approximately 30 bills which are intended to effect wholesale retrenchments in government penditures were before the Illinois state general assembly Wednesday following their introduction in the house of representatives Tuendatine billa were offered by Representative James Burns Kankakee) and will rest on the speaker's table from which position Burns will seek to have them sent to a special committee on government economy when it has been named.

Under Burns' proposals salaries of the state auditor, treasurer, attorney general, secretary of state and superintendent of publie instruction would be a reduced from $10,000 a year to $8,500, Other salary reductions and abolishments of variote offices proposed by Burns as follows: Cuts salaries of superior court judges to reduces salary of lieutenant governor to abolishes offices of superintendent of printing, assistant directors of all departments and the aeronautica commission. Fixes Loan Rate. Provides for appointment instead of election of county assessor, Reduces fees and salaries of sher. iffa and masters in chancery. Makes county treasurer ex-officio township treasurer.

Abolishes state fair, the state department of conservation and merges it with agriculture. Abolishes city courts, county veterinarians, assistant supervisors and state boxing commission. Fixes rate of percent on small loans. House Measures Listed. Among other house measures introduced Tuesday were: By Black- To change methods of assessing farm landa so to reduce taxation.

By Davis--Permits sale of crushed limestone at prisons, By Edwards Repeals primary law for members of general bly. By Galvin--Cuts salaries of board members. By Handy Repeata state civil service act. By Handy- Appropriates, $262.000 for Eastern school building. My Holten -Cuts parole board to four members.

By Holten-Cuts commerce commission to Ave members and ishes assistanta, MORAN'S 320 N. Main 109 S. Center THURS. AND FRIDAY Halibut, 15c Catfish, Buffalo, Fresh Trout, lb. 21c Fresh Sunfish I lb 15c Ocean Catfish, 19c Fresh Oysters---Any Size Smoked Fish---All Kinds OUT OUR WAY By Williams I ONLY WANT A WHY, I SHOULD I DON'T CARE! LITTLE, MA.

BE THERE RIGHT IM NOT GOING TO ILL BE LATE! NOW, TO OPEN BE OVER A DISH I PROMISED TO TH' LODGE AND PAN AT ALL HOURS. MEET ELLEN AT I CANT GO THAT'S FOR DISHES! SEVEN, AN LIKE THIS. BEAU BRUMMELS OH MA- JUST SHOULD THINK TO A LITTLE! PUT ON A PAN OF WATER FOR YOURSELVES. JRWILLIAMS 6 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON.

REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.

I- .29 8102. 73. 8101 1 medium, 2. First M. E.

Church Men Will Organize Men of the First Methodist Episcopal church will form a permaorganization, they decided Tuesday night at a fish dinner in the church dining room, attended by 125 men. The Rev. Raye Ragan, pastor of the church, was authorized to appoint a committee to consider de tails of the organization work and present a report, at the group's next meeting. 16, when the annual father and son banquet will take place. ter of ceremonies dinner.

Rev. Mr. Ragan as mai served. The program included music the Apollo club quartet of Illinois Wesleyan university: a humorous reading by Dr. Hubert Hodgens, Wesleyan speech department head; and talks by the Rev.

C. B. Grubb, First Christian pastor, and Danforth, First Methodist church school superintendent, and Nate Crabtree, All arrangements for the dinner were made by men of the church. W. H.

Gronemeier was in charge of the kitchen: Rolla Jones, of the dining room: Noble Paxton, tickets; Nate Crabtree, program. Church of God Will Hold Special Program Thursday A special program will be given at the Church of God. Roosevelt avenue and Scott street, at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, The program will consist Hawalian guitar trios, violin solos and duets, a piano solo, vocal solos and duets, a vocal solo with guitar accompaniment, and a play entitled "Happy Ann." the cast of which includes colored characters.

The program is the culmination of a contest sponsored by the Missionary eociety in which usual interest has been manifest. A large crowd is expected. CASH GRAIN NEWS PEORIA GRAIN. PEORIA. RIP Cash corn 14e Mi er: No.

3 yellow. No. 4 yellow, 21 No. mixed. OATS Unchanged: No.

2 white, 154 ST. LOCIS CASH GRAIN. RT. Cash: WHEAT CORN No. 2 No.

OATS white. ST. LOUIS FUTURES. RT. LOUTS Wheat futures ele hicher and corn futures unchanged the merchants eschance Wednesday May wheat opened lower to cinsed higher.

July spened higher and closed unchang Cash higher. Receipts May corn closed unchanged. Cash to te higher. Receipts 46 Cash eat: was unchanged to lye higher. Receipts cars.

CHICAGO STOCKS CHICAGO Closing stock Aviation Warner Central and West Chicago Corporation Chicago N. W. Chicago Yellow Cab Cities Service Com with Edison Nieetrie Household Great Lake Dredge Marshall Field National see. and Co. United Gyreum Total stock sales, Total bot.4 sales.

82.000. BLOOMINGTON GRAIN Based the elose elevators were paying the basis of an 1446 treight rate to Chicago the following prices, WHEATNe. 34 No. shite yellow Ne shite No. yellow .14 white No.

shite .11 FINANCIAL NEW YORK. -Foreign demand: Great Britain, 3.50 5-1604 Hele 23.18 Hot. en Norway, Denmark, 17.42 amitzertan1. 19.24 Portugal Greece, 52 Tokyo, Montreal, BLOOMINGTON POULTRY, EGGS. Quotatione.) ever under Lechers liesa springs, ever Springs, under MINER 0Nd Lechom White White Docke.

under Catered Ducks, Ducks, -4. 75 Neighbors Join in Husking Bee at C. H. Houser Farm Seventy-five friends and neighbors, including 62 men and 13 women, lent aid Tuesday to Mrs. Daisy Houser, widow of the late Charles H.

Houser, in shucking 50 acres of corn at the Houser farm a mile and a half northwest of Hudson. Mrs. Houser is the mother of Mrs. H. C.

Adelman, 6 Ridgewood Terrace. Mr. Houser died 1 Dec. 12. The men worked in the field from m.

to 3 p. m. and the women prepared the dinner Tuesday. Men who helped are Oscar Hinshaw, Carrol Shiner, Robert Brown, Cecil Thomas, Bert Humphries, Ed Humphries, Fred Humphries, Fred Arnold, Joe Arnold, Robert Jim Keller, Merle Lohr, William Thomas, Guy Hinshaw, Gotch Shiner, Lyle Swope, Emery Stephens, Donald Hogan, Ray McClure, Fred Houser, Clinton Staser, Cecil Starkey, George Turner, Pete Abrams, Bernard Ambrose, William Rediger, Allen King, William Miller, Frank Prahm, Arthur Daugherty, Lee Keith, Aura Johnston, J. 8.

Sow. ders, Ernest Thomas, Lawrence Klump. Robert Scott, Ralph McKinney, Henry Groves, Stanley Syste, Lloyd Abrams, Floyd Little, Jay Gaddis, Warren Henderson, Ted Hospelhorn, Ralph Burtis, Howard MeKinney, Alpha Thompson, Roy Durth, Cecil Gaddis, Donald Whitwood, Jay Stephens, Al Calam, Guy Swope, Alpha Stephens, Ray Satterfleld, Frank Satterfleld, Charles Masineupp, Hally Stephens, Herman Karlock. Francis Brown and Elza Ramsey, Women who prepared the dinner prom Humphrie, Mesdames Ella Ella Patton, Mabel Ethel Shiner, Ellen Hinshaw, Frank Satterfleld, Frank Minshaw, Jay Stephens and her daughter and Cora Hoffman. Edna Thomas, Fred Houser, Carrie King and Miss Beulah Thomas.

Delmar Darrah, director of work of Bloomington Consistory and Scottish Rite deputy for 111- nois, and Eldo M. Moore, officini photographer of the grand commandery, Knights Templar, were in Clinton Tuesday evening attend. ing the annual inspection of Clinton commandery 66, Knights Templar. Charles T. Tooth, grand sword bearer, was in charge of the inspection.

Knights from all parts of Central filinois were in attendance, The annual inspection of DeMolay commandery of Bloomington scheduled for Feb. 15, Charles Nichols in commander. George W. Pumphrey, secretary, said that the program for the local inspection will be announced soon. Attend Commandery Inspection in Clinton Congress has revised the tariff 22 times, Community Sale McLean, Illinois Friday, January 13, 1933.

of The don't enter el4. bark mare chunks Guernsey, Jersey fresh, spring cattie, butcher bulla calves. choice butcher and 190 twding extra buck. tractor Ideal manure tandem 1904 includes Mount estate, for Mount cupboarde hen uteneile, articles being solid walnut household equipment set here specified, pure bred vallete. bring antirie GEORGE Auctiepers.

ARTHUR ADAIR. KENNETH SMITH. Force Invoked by Disorders in 4 Nations (Continued From Page 1.) munist. It was the third anniversary of his slaying. Socialists, Communists Clash.

In Germany, another clash oCcurred between National Socialists and Communists in Berlin Tuesday. Many were injured and police were met with volley of gunfire before the fight WAR broken up. The anniversary of what the Nationalista call the "shameful" Versailles treaty was observed, in German cities and by German populations in Danzig, Poland and other places. In the Irish Free State, where more than 30 persons were injured in political fights Sunday, Gen, Owen 0'Duffy, chief of civil guards, said he would call the the, army if other efforts to maintain peace failed. Private Service Held for Late Tracy Green A private funeral WAS held Wednesday morning for Tracy Green, automobile dealer.

The service was held at the Sumner Goodfellow funeral home at 10:30 a. m. Officiating were the Rev. Chester B. Grubb, pastor of First Chrietia: church, and the Rev.

Raye Ragan, pastor of First Methodist. Pallbearers were T. H. Morrow, Arthur Hershel, E. R.

Whiting, Chal Taylor, Wayne Hetsler and Clarence Pleines, Entombment was in Park Hill mausoleum, Crabtree Will Address Y. M. Commercial Club Nate Crabtree, business manager of Illinois Wesleyan university, will speak at a meeting of the Youne Men's Commercial elub of the Y. M. C.

A. Wednesday night at the A program of entertainment will be presented also, Dinner will be served at 6:30 p. m. Returns From Peoria The Rev, Forrest La Fraser of the Firat Baptist church. Bloomington, has returned from Peoria where he attended a Baptist minIster's retreat Monday and Tuesday.

The Rev. Fred R. Johnson of Nor. mal, and the Rev, 1. E.

Ellison, pastor of the Normal Baptist church, also attended the meeting. Engelbrecht Funeral Conducted The funeral of Fred Engelbred 1005 South East street, was held at the Trinity Lutheran church Tuesday afternoon, the Rev, W. 14 Hohenstein officiating. Mrs. Otto Gerth and Miss Ann Gerth sang.

Pallbearers were William bread, Fred Schultz, Herman ling. Christ Rakow, Charles Rakow and Louis Wellmerling. Burial was in Bloomington cemetery, Among those from out of the city were: Mr. and Mrs. Willian Colberg and daughter of Alvin.

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Highberg, Fred man. Mra, Lena Kagles, Mrs. Theodore Vonberg, Herbert Kagles, Lawrence Kagles, Mrs.

Mildred Shunway, all of Danville; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thomas and family of Brokaw, and Mrs. Ida Engelbrecht, Edwin Engelbrecht and Mrs. Wir.

den, all of Chicago. Mrs. Harry Deffenbaugh's Public Surplus Sale Having decided to farm on smaller scale, 1 will sell at my residence, known as the Otho Deffenhauch place, miles southwest of Leroy on oil and gravel roads leading to farm, on Tuesday, Jan. 17 Commencing at 10:30 0 Clack 6-HEAD OF HORSES-6 Extra good dapple gray mare, weight about 1 Grey 15 old. weight about 1.600.

Black gelding. cond horse, 14 old. weight about 1.500. Blind extra worker, weight about 1,500. extrA good yearling horse colt.

HIack mare pony, extra centie for children. 33-HEAD OF CATTLE-35 (T. R. Tested.) Consisting of Shorthorn, Jersey an4 Guernsey, some heavy springers, some give ing milk: coming year old steers: shout 15 bead spring red bull, coming year old. -HEAD OF HOGS-2 head feeding hogs, weight about 129 to 150 pounds: 1 Poland China male hoe.

years old: 6 Poland China brood sows: head of Poland China butchering hogs, weicht about 300 pounds. 3-HEAD OF SHEEP. Two coming 2 pear old 1 spring buck. FARM MACHINERY One double deck 1 iron shel wagon. 1 cane sulky plow.

1 fret cutaway dine surface cultivator, feed grinder. seta work hare and other articies too numerous mention, TERMA OF Routhern red. Gulf Terr Lunch on Grounds MRS. HARRY DEFFENBAUGH, OWNER Haute Leroy, Moore, Auct. Letoy State Hank, Clerk.

AUCTION SALE ILLINOIS LIVESTOCK COMMISSION CO. South End Clayton Bloomington, Ill, Will Sell All Kinds of Livestock and Farmers' Equipment, Thursday, Jan. 12 Lunch Served in Building by R. E. Collins, Col.

D. L. Brown, Auct, TIME--FOR THREE THINGS Time for Morton's Sugar Cured Smoked Balt. Laying Hens to have Fee Mash. Time--for Pigs to have Swift's Tankage.

Place- to Gee. Agle Sons, 207-209 8. Center St, Phone 350. SALE of SIXTY HEAD of HORSES Will Be Sold at the Regular Sale of the Illinois Livestock Commission Co. Nouth End of Clayton Bloomington, 111.

Thursday, Jan. 12 These horses are consigned by Keen Bros, of Wellington, Kansas, are well broke and ages from 4 to Koine well mated farm teams, If you are in need of work horses don't fail to attend this sale, D. I. 1 BROWN, Auct. OUR BUSINESS is to LOAN MONEY OUR AIM is to give our customers better service, better terms, and more satisfactory dealings than can be obtained elsewhere.

Repayment terms to suit each individual's income. NATIONAL LOAN COMPANY 101 N. Center Phone 900 10a3 119 85. 454.

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