Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
* : -- - ♦ Test Your Knowledge Cun yon answer seven of these ten Questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1., Can the President of the United States veto a decision of the Supremo Court? 3. Who promulgated the Gregorian caieudar? 3. In which group of Spanish islands is Minorca? 4. Who composed "The Unfinished Symphony?" 5. What Is jurisprudence? 6. What does pro tom. mean? 7. In which state is the Scioto Rivqi;? 8. Can Mexicans be naturalized in the United States? !>. What is a chiromantist? 10. For whom was the Diesel engine named? —o — COURTHOUSE New Case A putt 4<’ foreclose a mechanic’s lien Uss been filed by Carl Archer and Albert Roefbuck against Fredand Helen Amos. Summons were ordered returnable Setember 6. Receiver Asked Tie plaintiff renewed an applicaironUs the appointment of a receiwa OT'the suit brought by the Fedflfol Land Bank of Louisville, Homer E. and Cecile Ma.nSiutUi. Joseph R- McClure, Earl Just like your | ‘ mother -- so / beautiful, I and SO wise! I S A yi “ —SO WISE that I just know you’ll go to AL. D. SCHMITT’S for your USED CAR. I hear you can’t point to one dissatisfied owner of a AL. □. SCHMITT'S USED CAR! Isn't that guarantee enough?” D-2 Don’t Think YOUR FLOORS ;L” Are Not Noticed /oQjce Finished BlockX \iHardwood Floors J No mister how expensive your furniture and decorations, the floor determines the beaut>of your rooms. Today you can { have a more beautiful floor of warm, durable hardwood—laid in distinctive diagonal or square designs. This floor is completely finished at the plants and can be llfti, ready for use, in as little as i day’s tipie. ’’When It’s Laid, It’s Finished.” Call us for details. Cash; Coal & Supply J R. A. Stuckey
11l IM BL E THEATER SHOWING—“FAINT HEART AND A LADY FAIR” By SEGAR CAMP l(*A / DON'T AST NO P FEARS NO MAN.'X (VN ( GTflOl I Y I'LL WE A \ y m \ QUICK'?. HERE AV ( QUESTIONS-6ET -* BE ASK OR AM INAL. A /—W ’ L'K .. ) WORD UJITH TOUA I*2 1 COMES '/ER THINGS , BOT OLWE OU-OH, (<) x U_ '/OU BRUTE! 7 \: • A OUVEOU! xTOGETHER'.! J GORSH! . -> A/ —» — W MSAAr - S 'WAW %.'\ £*• n r -zjj<3fe' xCIMm ■>"> J »AAfyawL- ! q< •cAy ”~ z A ‘ -AsasJ-.' 1 ' Ife ‘ , 23J 1 ■ I J Copt I9J’; Kit*| FciUre* Sy ±x!*‘ J I ,„,wSk ZsJ t -<^—r-r
► McCoy, the Grata dealer* national mutual fire Insurance company, Recie L. Taylor, Leslie F. and Luciadia A. McClure. The defendants, Leslie F. McClure and Eva Reber filed an answer in abatement to the renewed application and moved that 3 the answer be heard at the next session of the circuit court to be held July 16. Judge Hanson F. Mills, of Jay county, te the special judge ta the suit A suit to foreclose a mechanic's lien has been filed by Earl Reber against Charles Fisher. Real Estate Transfers Hoadly Dellinger et ux to K. R. ’ Wbittredge et ux, 1% acres in Blue . Creek twp for |l. 1 Emma A. Eckrote to Pearl E. Booher, in-lot 206 In Geneva for sl. John L. Gross et ux to Town of Monroe, .07 on an acre in Monroe twp. for sl. i | Many Reunions Scheduled For . Summer Months t — ♦ Sunday, July 11 Cline ana Boivin Reunion, Washington Park, BlufftonHuffman annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, July 18 Annual Moose Picnic, Sun Set Park. Parent family reunion, Sun Set Park. Swagart and Nefferd reunion, Sun Set park. Steel and Washington annual reunion (rain or shine) Sun Set Park. Pleasant Mills alumni picnic, Sun Set park. Sunday, July 25 Borne annual reunion, Sun Set i Park. Meyer family reunion, Sun Set | Park. Cowan annual reunion, Suu Set Park. Sunday, August 1 Detttager reunion (rain or shine) Sun Set Park. Miller and Snyder annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Johnson annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, August 8 Annual Fuhrman reunion will be held at Hanna-Nuttman park, on Sunday, August 8. Reilig and Roehm reunion, Sun Set Park. Chattanooga Zion Lutheran church picnic, Sun Set Park. Sunday, August 15 McGill annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Smith family reunion (rain or shing) Sun Set Park. Hinkle anfrual reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, August 22 Hakes annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Kuntz family reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, August 29 Wesley S. Miller reunion, Sun Set Park. Parker reunion, (rain or shine) Sun Set Park. Sunday, September 5 Urick annual reunion, Sun Set Park. Labor Day, September 6 Annual Roebuck reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, September 12 Springer family reunion, Sun Set Park. o 500 Reported Dead In Volcanic Eruption San Francisco, July 8 — (UP) — The Pan Pacific press bureau announced today that It received a radio report from the Mattaon freighter Golden Bear that a cataclysmic eruption caused by the birth of a new volacno destroyed the town of Rabaul, New Britain, on May 18, killing an estimated 500 people. The Highest Cash Price Paid for: ' AH 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
eruption, the report said, followed 38 hours of earth-quaree and a tidal waveRabaul Is on the northernmost tip of New Britain ta the British territory of New Guinea. It in due northeast of Lae, from where Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan took off last week on theli flight to Howland Island. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
"The Captive^Bride" | 1 Ay BARRETT WILLOUGHBY
SYNOPSIS Larry Keith had stipulated in his will that his daughter, Denise, a young San Francisco society girl, should visit his hunting lodge, “River House,” in Tarnigan, Canada, before disposing of the property. There he had lived alone for eighteen years because his wife, Sylvia, had refused to spend even one month a year in the north he loved. Larry, an outfitter for big game hunters, met the pampered Sylvia when she accompanied her father on a hunting expedition and, after a whirlwind courtship, married her. When he refused to give up his free river life, she divorced him and remarried. In accordance with her father’s wishes, Denise boards the Stikine Maid, owned by Captain Revelry Bourne, at Wrangell, Alaska. The natives speculated as to whether she had come among them with her mother s scorn or like her father, whose passing everyone mourned. Unconscious of all this, Denny watches the passengers come aboard. First came Dr. Pool Van Cleve, tall, dark, distinguished and morose looking. Then followed Rio Carew, wealthy divorcee, with Larry’s best college - bred, half-breed Indian guide, Derek Haskell; Harp MacFarlane and Boom McGee, cook on the Stikine Maid; and, lastly, two nurses. Shortly after, Revelry Bourne, the skipper, arrived. Denny preferred dark men like her fiance. Murray Hart, but, nevertheless, the blond river captain attracted her. The journey starts and as they sped along on the current, Denny’s eyes swept the beauty of the surrounding country and she wondered why her mother hated it so. Sylvia’s words came back to her: “The Stikine-it’s a witch river. Dangerous. Cruel. It puts a spell on you. It won your father from me.” Harp MacFarlarw, Larry’s foreman, tells Denny she may not want to get rid of River House once she sees it. As they walk down the deck, Rio’s sharp eyes take in every detail of the poised, smartly attired girl from the world to which she once aspired: envy and resentment flit across Rio’s face. Turning to Derek, to whom she had just been making advances, she assumes a bored expression and in a peremptory voice dismisses him with, “You may go Haskell.” Sensing the reason, Derek glares at her and stalks off. Harp’s conversation swings to Bourne and he praises the river captain’s skill on the treacherous Stikine, saying he is swift to see and lightning to act. CHAPTER V Denny laughed at his enthusiasm. “As the Captain’s press agent, you're priestess, Harp. You make me believe I’m going to meet on* of those big, he-men of the North that one reads about.” “Don’t get me wrong, Miss Denise. He's not one of these roughnecks. He’s like your dad in some ways. Sort of radiates class like that chap there—” Harp jabbed his thumb downward. Denny paused where they were, in front of the wheelhouse, to look at the lower forward deck where the tall, dark man in the gray flannels was standing at the jackstaff. He was gazing moodily at the bow wirve foaming from each side of the Mat-fl flat nose. Remembering his rudeness to her before the boat left Wrangsll, she said banteringly: “Lord Thundercloud —off for the jolly old outing.” “No,” corrected Harp seriously. “Sawbones from Philadelphia. Doctor Pool Van Cleve. He’s one of our hunters, Miss Denise. Came up here because his nerves went haywire—too many operations and no rest, I heard. But the old Stikine will straighten him out.” “Does it always straighten—” The question died on her lips, for at that moment the Maid rounded a bend of willows and there broke on Denny’s view something so near, so stupendous in its magnificence, that she caught her breath. From high up between two mountain peaks, a fall of ice poured down for a dozen miles, spreading like a fan as it approached the river bank. Denny, on the deck of the Maid, gazed wide-eyed at the marvel. She felt the pure breath of it cool on
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937.
Two Are Killed In Plane Crash Goehen, Ind., July B—(UP8 —(UP) —Clifford McDonald. 27, Milford Junction and John L. Phoebus. 19, Elkhart, were killed last night when an airplane in which they were riding crashed near Waterford, two miles south of hereMcDonald, who was piloting the craft, had borrowed the plane from
her face as the boat, dwarfed to the dimensions of a waterbug, forged up alongside the iridescent height So this was a glacieralive, sparkling, with trees and flowers growing at its very feet! After a while Harp placed a deck chair for her and left It was not until he had gone below that Denny realized he had answered none of the questions she had asked him about her father and River House. The Maid was moving up along a stand of white-boled birch that came to the river’s edge. A pagan, laughing grove, this, that brought to mind half-forgotten readings about river-gods and dryads. It spoke of Italy rather than
AL fry,/ H i I - -Oft : Denny watched with interest as the husky, Tongass, exchanged enthusiastic greetings with his master, Captain Bourne.
Alaska, she thought. And then, when her mood had lightened, there came suddenly into view a ruined log cabin. Broken, desolate, the dwelling crouched in the mocking light of the glade, dirt roof sunken and weed-grown; doorless entrance agape, revealing the bare boards of a bunk inside. About the place brooded the infinite pathos of man’s failure to cope with the wilderness. One of the men said, “A white man and his wife—cheechakoes—starved to death there in the winter of ’l7. Poor devils! When I broke in the door, I found them lying side by side in the bunk you can see.” The significance of this remark reached Denny slowly, sending a chill down her spine. She sat upright, her eyes, with a startled look of appraisal, sweeping the valley ahead. It lay sunny, verdant, teeming with fish and game and wild fruit, a land of plenty made for the delight and sustenance of man and beast. Could it so change, when ice-locked in winter, that human beings starved to death? Then, in a devastating flash of clarity, she seemed to get the answer, not through her mind but through some instinct: The Stikine was a protean county—a land of breath-taking loveliness; a land of knife-sharp cruelty. She sensed its other side when it lay white, sterile, in the grip of sub-arctic blizzards, starving those it had lured by its summer bounty—unless they were strong enough to master it. She cringed at the thought of being caught here in the clutch of winter. “But I shall not be here when winter comes.” She nearly spoke the words aloud in her intensity of feeling. “I shall be safe in my own warm South.” Yet, all at once she shivered in
Marion Mullins, Goshen, and taken off on the flight from a farm north of Goshen. Witnesses said the ship was flying low when it suddenly went Into a spin and plunged to the ground. Ontario Boosts Payroll Toronto, Out.— (U.R) Ontario s 6,000 civil servants will be given wage Increases ranging from 5 to 10 per cent this year — the first they have received in many years.
the sunshine. The low ripple of the river had sounded, for a moment, like knowing, malicious laughter. The husky, Tongass, drew her thoughts away from herself. • He was standing at the door of his master's cabin. An instant later the door opened, revealing the white-clad figure of Captain Revelry Bourne. He stood regarding his dog with an exaggerated look of deferential inquiry. “Whose magnificent snowhound might you be?” he asked politely. “A-h-h-h!” with a quick grin of recognition. “A thousand pardonsl It’s my own pal, Tongass 1” The husky was lifting his forefeet off the deck and setting them down
again in a series of enraptured bows. Bourne held out his arms. The husky, in a transport of affection, sprang upon him, wagging his tail and trying to reach his master’s face with his tongue. The captain wrestled with him a moment, gave him a mighty hug, and, after leL ting him gently down to follow, sauntered forward to the small deck jutting out in front of the pilothouse. Denny had watched with amusement the scene with the dog. She was not proof against its appeal, despite the fact that Harp’s eulogizing of Bourne had prejudiced her slightly against him. “Swift to see and lightning to act,” she recalled, eyeing the man critically. Certainly, nothing in his present attitude indicated speed. On the contrary, though the breeze tossed his dark gold hair and ballooned the back of his white shirt, there was a singular impression of stillness about him. Yet he held her gaze with a sense of something half remembered. Her thoughts went seeking into the past and after a moment she had it —a tawny cougar she had once seen in a zoo. Revelry Bourne’s stillness had that quality of slumbering swiftness which lies in tha relaxed body of a mountain cat. Suddenly Denny was startled by a shout, “Tongass 1” from Bourne. Tongass and Brussels, with but a few feet between them, were facing each other, ears flattened, lips skinned back, pink tongues darting in and out. The two began a menacing, stiff-legged approach to each other, rumbling growls rising to rasping snarls that seesawed quicker and shorter as the distance lessened between them. (To be continued) Copyright by Barrett Willoughby. DUtrlbuted by King Features Syndicate, Ine.
Classified, Business Cards, Notices J
' f” rates | One Time-Minimum charge 25c for 20 words or less, v 20 words. I!4c P er word charfle , ’ two Times-Minimum charge ‘ 40c for 20 words or ie»»- i 'I over 20 words 2c per word 0 ■ charge . of 50c for 20 words or lewOver 20 words 2’/jC ser w for the three times. | Cards of Thanks — • I Obituaries and verses.— * • for sale FOR SALE—Two chests of drawers; one gasoline pressure stove; | two-piece living room suite; twe three-burner oil stoves. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson. 15l ’ t s FOR SALE —Hardy and tropical water lillies. All colors. River side Nursery, Berne. 10ll _ FOR SALE—Fordson power takeoff two-row riding cultivator. Burroughs adding machine. E. R. Implement Company, Willshire. 160-3 tx FOR SALE—One 512-H F-12 Farmall cultivator. McCormick Deering Store, Decatur. n FOR SALE — Nice brindle bull, ready for service. Paul G. Habegger, Monroe route 1, Berne phone 4621. 160:!t FOR SALE—Used furniture. One 8-pc. dining room suite, walnut finish, good condition; one Hoosier oak kitchen cakinet, A-l condition; one dresser, good condition; one kitchen range, fair condition; one Packard organ in piano case. No reasonable offer will be refused. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 159-3 t FOR SALE -Ford, Model “A,” 4door sedan, good tires, A-l condition, $65. Inquire 229 Grant St. 159-2tx FOR SALE—Whippet coach. Reasonable for cash. Ed Toney. 311 S. 12th st.lsßt3x FOR SALE — Good used kitchen cabinet; washers, gas or electric, and sweepers. Decatur Hatchery, store phone 497, house 9194. 158t3 FOR SALE—Used springs and mattresses. Your choice, one dollar each. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 159-3 t FOR SALE-One Simmons porch glider, floor sample. Very reasonable. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 159-3 t FOR SALE — Four wheel rubber tired wagon. Bed 12-ft. long, 4z inches wide and one ft. sideboards with a new stock rack. Oscar i Lengerich, route 4, phone 878-K. 159-3tx O WANTED Wanted: — Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machin;ry. Underwear, curtains, silks Will pay 4c per lb. Daily | Democrat Co. 1 BOYS WANTED —Ages 12 to 15 —to , do pleasant, educational work as- , ternoons and Saturdays. Good pay. Apply by letter to J. T. care Democrat. ltx Tramps Too Demanding Kitchener, Ont.— (U.R) — Tramps ' are becoming a little too demanding around here for the peace of mind of housewives. One woman reported a transient became Indignant when she refused his rei quest to spend the night in her I house. Another asked if he could take a bath.
' • Dr. Eugene Fields Dentist Nitrous-Oxid-Gas Anesthesia X-Ray 127 N. 3rd st. Phone 56 ——— . , - N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined • Glasses Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. HOURS 8:30 to 1130 12:30 to 5:00
" MISCELLANEOUS,, P , a h ‘ re tt.ca P tur UpholMer‘»K Shop. | , |H ed furniture. , _— FOR RENT TTvn RENT Two steeping rooms toil ,A.r v Fourth. in modern bom • • 160 . 3tx Phone *B3. von RENT —Light housekeeping Ground floor, private I entrance. Also Sylvan lake private ■ i akl . front cottage. ln l uire l6o “ t West Monroe. ' for RENT - Four furnished J r— etriefly Private. Phone
I 1034. -notice My residence and office te now located at 430 N. sth St. ■ Dr. C. V- Connell IQotx LOST AND FOUND . eOVND In Fort Wayne, large ■ • black police dog. License No. I ■ 24, Decatur. Owner may have ' same by paying for this ad. Call ; Harold Daniels, this office. Jt l ■ FOUND —Carrier pigeon. Owner > ' j may have same b’y paying tor | ’ this ad. Mrs. Fred Walther. 931 : ’ N. sth St. 160 ‘ 3t I ■' o—- ‘ Life Ingeniously Saved J Norbuck, Alta.-(UR) -Trapped ’, by a forest fire, Delos Linton saved ' his life by taking refuge in a creek | ■ here. Linton stood in the cold water tor five hours, holding his mackinaw over his head to shield himself from the intense heat, while the fire raged around him ' 1 and destroyed the whole town. o Bulb Causes Coal Fire Tiffin, O. — (U.R) — Electric light • bulbs caused a fire in the coal bunker of the Daughters of America National Home for the Aged. ’ 1 Employes unearthed this fact at-1 ’ ter hauling out 180 tons of coal ' | stored in the bunker and finding " 1 the bulbs buried underneath. Sleighs Used All Year ; i Montreal.— (U.R) — Sleighs travel •; over one narrow street here every ’; day of the year. The sleighs are ; used to “ exercise horses from a , i nearby stable. In winter they are heavily loaded, but in summer the [ ' | horses drag them along the pave-: ■ ment empty. . o votk e mu inns i on s< 11001. hi s mm EKS • Nnti<’e is hereby (riven that on the twentieth of July 1»37 at 8 p. m. the trustee and advisory board of Wash- ; ington township will consider bids 1 for six school bus drivers on Routes i 1,2, 3,4, 5 and 6. Bids must be filed ' with the trustee any time before 6 I o'clock P. M. of above date. , I Specifications for drivers and dlsI crlptions of routes are on file at | i trustee office. The trustee and adj visory Board will reserve the right: ’ I to reject any or all bids. I JOHN M. DOAN. Trustee , | Washington Township. July 8-15 o ; NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE XO. 1731 , Notice is hereby given to the credI itors, heirs and legatees of Davis • Dailey, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at D< - ’ I catur, Indiana, on the 7th day of ■j September 1937, and show cause, if ; I any, why the Final Settlement AcI counts with the estate of said decedent should not he approved; and | said heirs are notified to then and ; there make proof of heirship .and reI ceive their distributive shares, j Esaias W. Dailey, Executor f Decatur, Indiana June 30, 1937 I James T. Merryman, Attorney ‘ July 1-8
Notice! I will be out of my office from , July 11 to 25 inclusive. DR. R. E. DANIELS DON’T DREAD WASH DAY — iVoss Washers —will do the work speedily and with but little ■ effort. The many features found only in Voss makes Laundering on hot days a pleasure. Clearance of STEAMER. CHAIRS Comfortable, well con- ; structed chairs, now sell- ' ing at 79c ” d ZWICK’S
MARKET REPOBISI DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL H and FOREIGN MARKETS ■ Brady’s Market for Decatur, Ber ne B Craigvllle, Hoagland and Willshir.’ B Closed at 12 Noon. Mi Corrected July 8. No commission and no yardage El Veals received every day ■ lUO to 120 lbs M 120 to 140 lbs jo-, K 140 to 160 lbs K 160 to 180 lbs 122e 180 to 250 lbs ■ 250 to 300 lbs 300 to 350 lbs 350 lbs., und up Roughs if;,-,! Stags .... Eg Waters d,. m| H| Spring lambs i(, ;5 M Spring buck lambs K| Clipped lambs Eg Yearling lambs Eg
CLEVELAND PRODUCE B Cleveland, Ohio, July 8 Produce; Butter, firm; extras, 31C. ; s tan. H dards. 34*4c. H Eggs, firm; extras, 22tec; eslra ■ firsts. current reeeiptj, H 20c. H Live poultry, firm; hens, heavy. ■ 21e: ducks, young. 5 lbs., and up. M 16c; young, small. 13c; old. 10c. H Potatoes, 100-lb. bags. U. S No. H 1. California long white. $2.25 1 2.35 H 100-lb. sack; some $2 50; North B Carolina, $1.50; Virginia. $2 65 H [ bbl.; Oklahoma reds. $1 85 per ion H lbs.; new Ohio cobblers, $1.50- H $1.55. B FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK ■ Fort Wayne, Ind., July 8. HJJJ ■ Livestock: ■ Hogs. 15c lower; 225-250 llw.. B $12.65: 250-275 lbs.. $12.55; 200-20 B lbs.. $12.45; 180-200 lbs.. $12.49; ■ 275-300 lbs.. $12.40; 300-350 lbs, ■ $12.15; 160-180 lbs.. $12.35; 150-169 ■ lbs. sl2; 140-150 lbs.. $11.75; 130- ■ 140 lbs.. $11.25; 120-130 lbs. $11; ■ | 100-120 fbs., $10.75. I Roughs. $10.25; stags. $9.25. I Calves. $10.50; lambs, sll. I CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE I July Sept. Dec. ■ Wheat . $1.24H $1.25-\ ■ Corn. New . 1.28>4 115% ■ Corn. 01d... 1.2344 ■ Oats 43% .39% .4»% ■ EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK I East Buffalo, N. Y., July 8.-(UB I ' —Livestock: I Hogs. 300; steady; good and ■ i choice 170-230 lbs., quoted $13.25; trucked ins sold $12.75-$18; few $13.10. "’Cattle, 150; steady; Canadian yearlings. sl4; fat grass steers, I $11.60; plain grass steers and heifers, slow; cows and bulls firm; | low cutter and cutter cows. $4 50$6; medium bulls, $6.50; sparingly upward to $7. Calves, 100;; vealers unchanged sll down. Sheep, 300; lambs strong: good and choice Kentucky lambs i» eluding around 50 per cent bucks, $12.25: ewe and wether selections eligible to $12.75; fat ewes. $5. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis, Ind., July 8. —(U.R)— Livestock: Hog receipts, 4,500; holdovers, 70; 160-300 lbs., 15c lower; 3W lbs., up, 25c lower; weights under 160 lbs., steady; ,160-180 lbs, $12.70; 180-200 lbs.. $12.75; 200-210 ; lbs., $12.80; 210-225 lbs.. $12.85; 225-235 lbs.. $12.80; 235-250 lbs-. $12.75; 250-260 lbs.. $12.70; 260-275 lbs., $12.65; 275-300 lbs.. $12.60; 300-325 lbs., $12.15; 325-350 lbs, sl2; 350-400 lbs., $11.90; 155-1 W lbs., $12.15; 150-155 lbs., sl2 25; 140-150 lbs., sl2; 130-140 lbs, . $11.55: 120-130 lbs., $11.50; 110426 ' lbs., $11.25; 100-110 lbs., SH: sows weak to 25c lower, bulk, $10.25-$11.50. Cattle, 1,000; calves. 600; all killing classes fully steady: two loads choice 1,000-lb. yearling steers, $14.75; two loads around , 950 lbs.. $14.50; few heifers downward from $12.50; beef cows mostly $5.75-$6.50; cutter grades. $3 50$5.50; vealers steady, good w choice, $lO-$10.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected July 8. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better slls No. 2 Wheat, etc - * l4 Oats Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1 New No. 4 Yellow Corn 1 - 6 ’ j Rye "5c CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1 — o — Markets At A Glance Stocks, irregular and dull Bonds, higher; U. S. gov-iu-ment issues higher. Curb stocks, irregularly hi?b cr and quiet Chicago stocks, higher and quietForeign exchange, easier. Cotton, futures strong; up iuorc than $1 a bale. Grains, futures higher at ( cago;’ corn up 1 to 2%c a bushel ! Chicago livestock, bogs strou?' cattle irregular and sheep steady Rubber, futures easy. Silver, in New' York unchanged . at 44%c a fide ounck
