Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 141, Decatur, Adams County, 15 June 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

No Bachelor Degrees Here I / $9Mh * hk Jim $ Av xf 2VA - — ' A ®Bv W” \MMM| frwfcwM' iLim *WltH t . » -' They couldn’t very well get bachelor degrees, but they got law degrees any way from Columbus University at Washington, D. C. Shown in the clinches (left to right) are Mr. and Mrs. James Franklin, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kelt All ranked high in their classes.

* Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page , Four for the -ifiswers. ♦— ♦ 1. What anin ia.l produce® the smallest offspring at -birth in proportion to its sice? 2. Who was Richard Lovelace? 3. Can the President order the coinage of U. S. money? 4- Name the capital of the Madeira Island®. 5. What is a meteorite? 6. Is the U. S. a member of the League of Nations? 7. Name the place to which Jeeus withdrew with ids disciples on the eve of the Crucifixion. 8. What is the nickname for the state of South Caroiina? 9. When did the U. S. begin to keep immigration records? 10. Where fa the Golden Horn? REBEL TROOPS (CQXTIXUED FROM PAGE which almost encircle Bilbao from northwest to south along its east- ■ " ""—

| • Year wife ’ 1 u *shes to / r I to you, I I devzcstl \ “ —l' *■ “".A : K •■' V! : —r —- Oil ■ “THAt\KS-er-Miss Smith! She ’ wants me to pick out a USED "CAR at AL. D. SCHMITT’S. >.but I already have it. It's a ■•right ritzy model, too—and in “the very best of condition!” * ! L-, :

—————— JI 1 r PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, JUNE 18 - - 10 A. M. HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP AND HOGS MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR—Managers Doehrman and Gorrell, auctioneers. HMMHKMBMMHHV- MMMMrMWMaMMMMMBMHianwsMBanBaaaaaHMBMaaMMa

THIMBLI THEATER 7 NOW SHOWING—“READ IT AND WEEP” By SEGAR " I DON'T RECKON I'LL EVER I fsO FAR YA BEEN GETTIN’X WON'ER HOW BACK HOME fACOURSE'V’ OH, A \ ft WONDER WHAT h lAOE" .SEE YOU KIDS AGAIN — I PLENTY TO EAT_ LOT 5 A ft EVER THING IS BACK\ <?. . I KIN READ I LETTER \ HIM LEAVE SO > -\(GOOD-BYE 1 SUNSHINE-FRESH AIR ) 1 HOME —I WROTE < GLAD YE PITCHERS, FROM MV SUDDENLY ? ) SO LONG, V— —y-—AN' SLEEP— AN YER. I HE POPPA A LETTER < COME OVER- BUT THAS/ DA,RUNG / .CONSTABLE, / LOOKIN'BETTER- I \ EXPLANIN' THINGS-) / I CAN’T READ MUCH ABOUT SWEETY / • WELL-UJHY THANKS FOR lp\ z PERTY SOON YA'LL A. I HOPES HE, X I AN'I GOT A LETTER x ALL J _Jx DON'T YE READ J > BRINGIN X’-K BE HEALT'Y r~JHfcL J ? \ FROM ME SON- > VVZ 1T »T AN'SEE ?Jr (T US FOOD / \ M' ( 2X Pe ) / i —st-— 1 POPEYE /— r V v I b Ro w IST SSr/X Asn zt > x •» fE; Av J n kDa '?r Cz *Js Vx X iFV* V fl (L - Nt tih w«m mkt. ~«rv«i s fe 1 s <zi A4Kct| T 1 U/z fff " r*~fr >T C° pf *' n t freaturo Svnd.cM«, Inc~

ern side are reported safe in nat- | lonalist hands —Galdacano, with its famous powder factory; Berio, Bergona — according to advices which reached us here in the front lines. Many thousands of loyalist prisoners are on their way back through the nationalist lines. West of Bilbao, nationalist reconnaissance planes report roads crowded with fleeing soldiers and civilians, women struggling along with their crying children. Yesterday the basque resistance stiffened a bit, and the loyalist batteries occasionally dropped a shell a few hundred yards from us. Last night the riflemen became active, and there was lively firing iin the high hills northeast of the city. To our south, bombers swept down on the remaining basques in their trenches, the bombers’ machine guns blazing and the loyalists, crouching under the parapets

HOUSEHOLD SALE Saturday, June 19 at 1 o’clock p. m. Mile East and one-quarter mile North of Vera Cruz. Oak dining room suite, walnut bedroom suite, new kitchen range, living room furniture, kitchen utensils and a full line of household goods, consisting of beds, dressers, i chairs, rockers, and miscellaneous articles. James C. Hoffman Highest Cash Price Paid for: All kinds of Scrap Iron. Copper. Brass, Aluminum. Rags. Newspapers, Magazines and Hides, Wool and Pelts. Decatur Iron & Metal Co. South Third St. at Haugk Coal Yard and Decatur Produce Co. Phone 660

of their trenches, replying with rifles. From a magnificent vantage point 1,500 feet above the valley, we looked down today into the southern suburbs of Bilbao, including the Firestone Tire factory and the dynamite factory of Don Camino*. We are advised that the basques intend to blow up the dynamite factory as the nationalists enter the city. Through field glasses I could see the red flag flying in this suburb but I was unable to see a single l human being or any movement in] the streets. In an hour of seank-i ing with the glasses I saw only two men and two motor cars. Much of the city, straddling the Nervion river, is hidden from us by a line of hills to our right front.

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CHAPTER XXIX All’s fair, Sally had said—tn love and war. Well, this would be war, then, all through the bright and lazy summer and in battle strategy, attack is better thap defense, and ft is just as well to keep the enemy within sight. She could expect to see a lot of Rose Ward during the next few months, thought Sally, driving up the hill to her big house. And after all, she decided, leaving the car in front of the door and going in to the cool, darkened foyer, couldn’t she do much more for Jonathan than Rose could .. .f The Sutton influence eould further him as Rose could not. The idle thought she had had some time ago of being the perfect wife for a rising young surgeon in some city of good deal more important than this one, came back, and to stay. Jonathan liked her. He was not committed to Rose. Very well. Rose should have her chance but she, Sally, would have h*rs. If she had an idea that the cards were stacked against the other girl, was that her fault? That summer was one of the gayest Rose Ward had ever kn-. wn. School was out, not only for pupils but for teachers as well. She had completed her third year of teaching and dared to breath a sigh of relief. Now, unless something serious occurred, her lob was secure. She wrote her uncle to that effect and Doctor Ballard, reading the letter in California some four days later grinned to himself. "The probation time is over, so to speak, and unless I slap Mr. Martin’s face or run amok in a classroom I suppose I'm safe. It’s been a rather curious year and I’m glad it’s behind me. The appearance of Larry Dexter in the Junior Glass has not been without its major and minor excitement. I’m sorry you were upset over the river, business and hope my wire reassured you. The enclosed clippings tell one version of the story. Jonathan was marvellous, handled the boat like a veteran and kept his head. By the way, I’m seeing a good deal of Sally Sutton. She's nice really, under the veneer. Jonathan and I were her guests at a country club dinner last night. It was fun. Only if I am to keep up with the Four Hundred I shall have to take time off and do a bit of sewing on my wardrobe.” Doctor Ballard sent her a check. He wrote, “Now, don’t scold me, you young whippersnapper. Never let it be said that the Ballards can’t hold their own. Not that you are one in name. And speaking of names, I see Jonathan’s cropping up frequently in your letters. Does this mean that poor Bill Lynd has been relegated to the limbo of forgotten men? Don't mind me, Rose, my dear, I suppose I’m homesick. Perhaps I’ll get back East one of these days if only for a visit. Not that they aren’t kind to the old crock out here. I have to take such good care of myself that sometimes I find the cottonwool getting in my scanty hair.” "Tell Jonathan to write me more often. I have occasional—and I must say very good reports of him from my old patients. How did he get along in the school work? His last letter on the subject was more or less of a tirade.” Reading, Rose smiled; shook her head over the substantial check, and sat down to figure with pencil and paper. The house needed some repairs. Would she be justified in letting them go until the autumn and squandering the money on things for herself? Her mother found her thus occupied and said definitely, "Nonsense, why shouldn’t you have some new clothes? You spend very little on yourself, my dear, and now that you are going out more frequently you certainly owe it to yourself to be well dressed. Nothing gives a girl more confidence.” Rose was amused at her mother’s attitude. Mrs. Ward had always listened to the arguments which raged about the house concerning the Sutton clan. She had seemed

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 15,

Red bereted nationalist "requotes,” the fascist*, are mussed everywhere waiting for the order to advance. From the front line trenches here we can so* them on the brow of the hills outside Galdacano. As the men watted for the order to advance they lay sprawled inert, sound asleep In the hot sun, oblivious to the firing of the artillery batteries just behind them—like so many American soldiers 1 saw In the World war. For miles behind us the heavy I guns are being moved forward along the crowded roads while I prisoners go back toward Vitoria, I the genera lheadquarters In the north. The airplanes seem always active. Last evening I saw six different villages and hamlets lying on our side of the river, toward

to agree with the younger people’s e flat disapproval of Sutton and all ', his works. But now that Sally had i begun to run in and out of the cot- ', tage as an intimate, she took it in i her stride and seemed to think it a j just tribute to Rose’s power of mak- > ing friends. Mothers, reflected s Rose, even the most democratic, , were slightly snobbish when it came . to their children. r Frankly, she was enjoying her--1 self; there were danees at the Club , and parties at the house on the - Hill, and excursions to the Island, - picnics, swimming parties, and trips , on one or the other of the boats, t Sometimes Jonathan was with them, ’ but not always. On such occasions t it seemed to Rose that Sally ap--1 peared to console herself very well, s with Phil or a visiting out-of-town man or one of the usual crowd. t The one less happy result of this new friendship was that she saw > Jonathan less alone. When they , were together in the evenings or , Sundays, the general rule was that , Sally and her crowd were with them. To be sure, he dropped in now and then on his way home from his calls or late in the evening. But ’ for the most part they were surrounded by other young people. 1 Once he mentioned this to her. 1 They were dancing, at Sally’s, and he swept her through an open French window and stood with her : for a moment on the big verandah ’ high above the river. He said, leaning on the railing and looking across ' at the opposite shore, “Seems to me I see very little of 1 you nowadays.” “Jon ... I" She began counting the times they had met during the 1 last week—“not to mention my I early invasion of your garden the ’ other morning and the cup of coffee i Evelina gave me .. .” ! He smiled, remembering. They had drunk the coffee at the kitehen 1 table with Evelina hovering around them the picture of a restrained and dour Benevolence: he remembered morning sunlight on white walls; copper utensils, blue dishes, he remembered Rose’s curly hair and her sparkling face and the funny blue overall she had worn; he remembered the smell of doughnuts and the scent of strong coffee and the purr of Evelina’s grey cat, its round small head under Rose’s hand. There was a pot of geraniums on the windowsill and the blue and white clock had tieked like an amplified heartbeat. “Yes. Agreed. But we aren’t often alone. He drew closer to her, and put his arm about her waist. "Rose—” he began— Someone came out on the verandah, and with the opening of the French windows, the music of the radio eame to them, not faintly as it had before, but loudly, insistently. Sally eried, coming up, “Here, you two. This isn’t allowed. Phil’s doing his milk bottle trick, he wants a full audience. Come on, you can look at the moon some other time and the river won’t run away.” She put a possessive arm about each and led them back to the big room and the other guests. Jonathan could have turned her over his knee and spanked her and Rose could have smacked her cheerfully. What had he been going to say, she wondered and then thought, happily, "There’s plenty of time, he’ll say it—a dozen Sallys can’t stop him . . . when the time comes.” He hadn’t known himself what he was going to say. He’d known only that he missed her, that latterly she always seemed surrounded by a dozen unimportant people and that it was imperative that they be alone together for a little while, perhaps not even talking much but just standing close together, with their regard on the stars . . . and their awareness of each other. For certainly if he felt as close to her as he had a moment before, she must have felt something for him ... if only a dim reflection. Later, dancing with Sally, she inquired, her impertinent little face cloae to his, “Did I break up something inter-1 esting a little while ago?” "Did you?" he asked evasively. I

Its estuary, burning at once after 1 repeated bombings. Columns of smoke from some tires rose 1,000 1 feet. J The plaues operate in groups of < as many as six to nine. As the refugees who are going with the loyalists move westward, other thousands who have enter-1 ed the nationalist lines fight for space on the roads with the advancing artillery and reserves, walking beside oxcarts on which are piled their possessions and their children. Mattresses, chairs, cooking utensils are piled high. Often goats and calves trot aTong tied to the carts. In front marches a stoic sunburnt peasant with his ' w?fe. The wife sometimes carried a filled chfcken coop on her head. o Trade In * Good Town — Decatu’

i “I’m asking you. Poor dear, 1 you’re so terribly transparent. I i suppose you know that Bill Lynd is - contemplating everything from a i sensational suicide to a trip to Tibet, i You shouldn’t come into a strange ■ town and flutter the dovecotes, it I isn’t fair to the local young men,’ , she said, laughing. > He was not like Phil Dexter, nor for that matter like Bill. He hadn’t • any comeback, he wasn’t quick on > the trigger, as they were. He muti tered something which she didn’t , bother to catch. She complained, i “You might hold me a little closer, • I’m not poison ivy, you know.” , Mechanically and obediently, his i arm tightened about her. Rose, • talking to the Senator oyer by the , fireplace, saw them dancing by, api parently absorbed and very near together. The Senator regarded them i with raised eyebrows. He commented genially, “It’s nice to see ' Jonathan really enjoying himself. ' He’s too serious for his years . . . : his profession perhaps,” he added ■ vaguely, “although,” brightening, “I have known some young doctors!” He laughed and looked down at Rose. “Never mind them,” he added. “Anyway I’ve never seen Sally as contented to remain in Riverport before. I’m grateful to Kim, if he’s the immediate cause. I was getting tired of being dragged all over the map when I bad a perfectly good home, excellent golf, all the swimming and fishing I could want, right here.” Jonathan and Sally passed them again. Sally’s cheek was so close to his that the yellow tendrils of her flyaway hair brushed his face. Rose followed their progress and as they came up close to her Sally's left eye closed in a slow and wicked wink. Rose’s heart which had been ridiculously leaden, lightened at once. Sally was flaunting her “conquest”; Sally was amusing herself; Sally was telling her so It didn’t mean anything. < Summer went by very quickly. The last event was the party Sally , gave over Labor Day on the Island. , She had asked her guests down for a full week. Jonathan, when ap- ( proached shook his head. > “I couldn't possibly, my dear.” < “But you are entitled to a vacation. All the doctors in town take vacations, two weeks, a month,” she reminded him, frowning. "I can’t,” he told her definitely. “I have patients who need me and a possible minor operation.” Doctor Jameson was away on his annual trip to Europe. Several minor operations were coming Jonathan’s way. He and the older man were on much better terms than formerly. Jameson was under an obligation to Jonathan Kimber. It had galled him but he had tacitly , acknowledged it. It had been a little matter of mistaken diagnosis. ' Jameson had been called away on a case ort of town and his patient, having grown worse, Jonathan bad been called. He bad made the second diagnosis, and saved the woman from consequences which, ' while they might not have been serious, would have been uncomfortable at least. But he had managed to cover Jameson, very neatly. When Jameson returned and the .re- ■ port was made to him, he had flushed, stammered, and lost much of his refrigerated poise. Jonathan had passed the matter over, covering Jameson even when the two men were alone and there was no need for stately pretense. And Jameson had been grateful and had shown it; not that gratitude made him like the younger man any better personally; on the contrary, human nature being what it is. And Jonathan had been sud- ■ denly sorry for him. The mistake was one that anyone might make I . . . most medical men had made it in their day. But Jameson was old, he had always been so sure of himself, he was the big frog in the little ( puddle, people were used to accepting his pronouncements and feeling ’ that from them there could be no appeal. Perhaps he had grown a little careless, confident that the king could do no wrong. (To be continued) ’ Copyright by Filth Btldwln. I Distributed by King Fbeturm Syndicate, Inc I

Classified, Business Cards, Notices I

* RATES On* Time—Minimum charge of I 25c for 20 word* or lew. Over 20 word*, IJ4c per word Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 word* or loss. Over 20 word* 2c per word for th* two tlma*Three Time®—Minimum charge of 50c for 20 word* or less. Over 20 word* 2'/aC per word for the three time*. I Card* of Thank* 35c | Obituaries and ver*es.— FOR SALE FOR SALE — Singer sewing machine* and vacuum cleaners, new and used. Terms as low as $3 peri month. Repairs for all makes. Hemstitching while you wait. Complete selection Nuns boilproof em-j broidery floss. Stamped goods. Marc-Saul Shop, 303 W. Monroe. Phone 737. 139-12tx' FOR SALE—Soy Beans. Dunfield germination 96. $1.75 per bushel. John H. Barger. Craigville, Ind., Craigville prone, 139 3t-x FOR SALE- Manchu soy beans. $1.60 a bushel. S. Birch, three miles south Monroe, 3H miles east. k3t-x. SPECIAL SALE Tues, and WedPetunias, snap dragons, zeuias, pimentos, mangoes, cauliflower, egg plants, 5c dot. 1127 W. Monroe. 140-2tx FOR SALE—Gooseberries. 35c per gallon. Picking Wednesday and Thursday. Floyd Stoneburner, R. No. 2. 140-2 t FOR SALE — Dunfield soy beans, $1.75 bu. O. F. Hildebrand, Decatur R. R. 2, Craigville phone. 140-3txl FOR SALE—Used ice boxes and a good used Frigidaire. Decatur Hatchery, phone 497. Authorized Kelvinator dealer. 140-4 t FOR SALE — Sweet Potatoes, tomato, cabbage, celery, mangoe and flower plants. William Strahrn, 339 North Ninth St. 140-2 t FINE 160 ACRES In good condition. Fertile and well drained. Two-story, sevenroom, modern house and barn with slate roof. Other outbuildings. Fine record of production. Must sell for cash. Write K. H. Knowlton, Freeport, Illinois. 136 — FOR SALE — Used furniture and pianos. One buffet in A-l condition, sls; one buffet and china closet combination, $3; one davenport, A-l condition, $2; two pianos in A-l condition, reasonable; one kitchen range, good condition, $25; i one living room suite, like new, no reasonable offer will be refused. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. I Second St., Phone 199. 141-3 t FOR SALE —6 white pigs, 8 weeks old. George Schieferstein, Mon-j mouth. 141-3 t o notice or rix»i. <etti.kmevr or k<t i i e no, 3221* Notice is hereby given to the cred- i Hors, heirs and legatees of Rosa Itich, deceased, to appear in the Ad- I ams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. I Indiana, on the 6th day of September 1937, and show cause, if any, why) the Final Settlement Accounts with ’ the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are, notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their I distributive shares. Peter F. Moser and Edward F. Moser, Administrators Decatur, Indiana, June 12, 1937. C. L. Walters, Attorney June 15-22 • — - 1 O Trade In a Good Town — Decatur N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined • Glasses Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 145. HOURS 8:30 to 11:80 12:30 to 5:00 WEEK END SPECIAL TIRE SALE 600x16 Tire and Tube $11.25 30x5, 8-ply Truck $14.95 Largest assortment of tires in Decatur. PORTER TIRE CO. 341 Winchester Phone 1289

WANTED Wanted: — Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machine fry. Underwear, curtains, silks ( Will pay 4c per lb. Daily Democrat Co. WANTED TO RENT Five or sixroom modern house. Adults.: Phone l“:’.l. llo; t | WANTED —Two waitresses, neat, reliable and willing to work. 18 ! or over. Experience unnecessary. If you don't want steady employ1 moot don’t apply. Box HES, care . Democrat. 141-stx ; LIGHT & HEAVY HAULING, also ■' have dump truck. Phone 1135, 1 Elmer Bailer. 141-3tx • .1 WANTED — Single farm hand. ; I Phone 873-E. 141-3tj MISCELLANEOUS l j MISCELLANEOUS — Furniture re-I , | paired, upholstered or refinished ! . at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. ; 145 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also* ■ used furniture. 136t30 , ■ FREE! Beautiful modern Table 1 i Lamp, with a Coronado Baby ' , Grand Console Radio at $24.95 or 1 8-tube A.C. console, $36.95. Gamble Store Agency, Hugo Claussen, own-■t-r. it . FREE! If excess acid causes you : Stomach L'lceis, Gas Pains, In- . digestion, Heartburn, GET free ■ sample doctor's prescription, I Udga, at Hollhouse Drug Co. o FOR RENT FOR RENT—One room furnished apartment uptown. Suitable for 1 one girl. Also garage. 127 North , Third St. 140-3 t I —o LOST AND FOUND ' i LOST —By carrier boy $9 in $1 bills . 1 north part of town. Reward. ■ Phone 488. 140-36 ~ — .. 0 NOTICE My residence and office fa now ' ’ located at 430 N. atb St. Dr. C. V- Connell lOStf Congress Today 1 Senate: Begins consideration of relief billCommittee*: Finance considers extension of “nufaance” taxes, 10 a. m.* Joint senate-house labor committee continues hearing on wagfl and hour bill, 10 a. m. . I House: .; Considers war department non- .' military appropriations bill and con- ! ference report on civilian censer- 1 j ration corps exttension. Committees: i Joint house-senate tax committee plans taX evasion inquiry 10 a. m. Feed Vitality for Greater Fiufits Starting Mash $2.95 Growing Mash $2.75 18', Egg Mash $2.65 26 , Poultry Balancer $2.85 Decatur Hatchery Phone 497 Decatur ■HHBEEMWI MHBHMSaHBOnHE B Tli i I PZO-Tmsde by SLEEPER ' An unusual mattress value with patented SLEEPER construction, inner roll » edges, pre-buik border, beautiful allover seamless damask tick. Box spring to match at the same price as the mattress. ZWICK’S Phone 61

Cl0S! 12 No M ' *— ’ | t-d June jNo eonunlssion a: ?j t 0 v.,d everj ’JW ' 1,1 I" !■> iso to " to . . — ai ling lambs HaS CHICAGO CRAIN ■t .... CLEVELAND ■io — Produce ' ~*Mjß IL ' ••L’ - o 1 c ;'2.bu s;;.bi bin. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCKS E.!--: ILifi. in. N, Y . ; une -1 1 . t - plain »• Oli.'s 111.:■ ?■:. Um - medium. rag! Sleep, leieipis, now; FORT WAYNE l . ES'Ocflt .. . J..ue —Livestock: Hogs. 1.,w..-. Sil; jin.;;,; Io . 51"-'": lbs., lillii 11" lb*, 13<»-140 lbs.. $9.60; lii’.i-l-'o lbs.. Sl'.m. HI Roughs. 50; stags, ii.s. ■ Calves, $.<.25; lambs, SU. INDIANAPOLIS Indianapolis, Ind- June i —Livestock: 15s; market 10e lower; sfodv; ,75’1''.?; lbs., sil 15; l'"-L’W lbs., UH sll. pc ■ lbs., .<11.2"- b’s" Lii'i lbs., 175 lbs,.<■: 275-300 lbs-300-325 ibe. . $10.65; 1"" lbslbs.. $10,115; 150-155 lbs„ W 140-150 lbs.. $1",15; $9.1)0; 120-1:1" lbs.. lbs., s!'.-l": 111 i '’ s " Can., calve*. steels siiimg I" -'sc era 25c higher; other Steady to str. iia; bull' sl2; top. $13.50; bulk>™ si.i,s<-’ii 7„. i"!'. io UTS, $1 $5.5 vealors to choice. $> Sheep. l.oo“, lambs. good to choice lambs, 110.5'1-712; slaught«« steady at $3 down. local grain market ■ BURK ELEVATOR C • K Corrected June !»• K NO. 1 Win a'. 60 lbs. or betters™ ; No. 2 Wheat, etc. ' Soya Beans, No- 2 1 JS New No. 1 Yellow ( - orn - > M Rye K CENTRAL SOYA CO- I 1 Soya Beans. X'i. Markets At A I Stocks irregularly b'» g ' quiet, (T.onds irregular, 8 ■ ' bonds tower. hjiWO Chicago st<".- - Ilie » Foreign exchange | ) franc firm. . ntsa p. ■ coiionf l i r ";’iatc l >iwß« ;, ‘o Grail* highei at ■ up 2 3-8 tO -o S ceJ J j4ogs Chicago | i Cattle steady, sheep ■ Rubber futuree n yoft M S “ Ve a MhiaW* 001 * I ‘ changed at 44 K