Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 166, Decatur, Adams County, 15 July 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

* Test Your Knowledge ( Can you answer seven ot these I ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ~ — "** 1. Which President was called ‘‘Bonaparte ot Politics?’ 2. Name the several parte of a flower. 3. What is a clinic? 4. Can honey In the comb bo man-

For Sale BEAUTIFUL SUB-URBAN HOME THE ALVA LAWSON property on West Monroe street Cozv 6 Room Cottage, one floor, in Best of Impair. Arcola heating system. New 2 car garage. Handysma I barn. Large Poultry house. Cement cellar. 80 Bbl. Cistern. Electric pump drawing Cool, Sparkling Water from deep well. Shade trees. Shrubbery, all kinds of fruit Trees. Nearly 1 acres of good, rich soil. No other such home near Decatur that is for sale. Don’t wait! Act now! We cannot find another for you. Decide now to own this Beautiful Home with all city conveniences. yet just outside corporation. Very low taxes. SEE OR CALL — Roy Johnson or Jim Andrews Phone 104 — Monroe Phone 87.

/weU! Well! So) l the Roxgilts I are in I town now! “THEY MUST have heard of the wonderful USED CAR VALUES AL. D. SCHMITT’S is offering. There’s a company that’s getting a name for the beautiful models they sell at bargain prices! Let’s look ’em over NOW!” 4

RURAL Light Bills DUE All rural electric line bills are due and payable this month on or before— JULY 20 at City Hall Avoid collecting charges by paying on time.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE PAUPER PRINCESS” By SEGAR YER DAD IS RICH AN' X PcOME ON—VJE'RE \ HIF THEN'S ANYTHING S | 7 OWNS A BIG ESTATE A GO'NER HAVE A TALK \ (JU I \ I HATES ITS K>R SOMEONE /A NEAR HERE AN’ HE PUT J WITH YER NICE POPPA J y» h \ T 0 ARGIE WITH ME WHEN ,> ’ftwjwrr \</ Yft UJONT GO, \ >: .<*>*■' how-iauxmt) Jiy WW ecr < •jl " .'-'Co \ ■*?/ iSC M v—ri ( 3P2jyX"N gS * fso THIS IS YER. N, L /£ts / X~A Agk> -"tjßK™ SaXa / FATHERS ESTATE- \ ZXjA ~ *ete/ /l ;JW) \ '\TwBL/?\ f dJw’C? zf'tsin TO DEATH IN the / (•B? /-h Ww '/ A UU k slums— i kin J wTfiHi * \s</ 7 o/ not SAVVY!! } i I ' I z \ A Wfcr*, i A ski 4 * —I .. s o Z I s ' \ ''Ur Hl -v •</< V 1 A "' * - 1 *—" M.m.mw.ftU. Jw L.w»i.m..»i 1 .m.M. m1 ...r1 f, j i-z..--- _ f |B|| [Coir J»U._ Kmcreatuta

. ufactured? 5. What and where Is Gruycro? 6. How is Hawaii pronounced? 7. Are passports required of American citizens to travel in Canada? ’ 8. Who was Karl Wilhelm OesturI ley? 9. What was the Biblical name of 1 lx>t'n wife? 10. What mountins lie In the Mississippi valley between the MisI sour! and lhe Arkansas rivers?

REAL VALUES Look at the Choice Used Cars we have offered for sale—each and every one an outstanding value. 1936 Ford Tudor Trunk — Last series. 1936 Ford Tudor —Blue finish. Low mileage. 1936 Ford Tudor—Grey finish. Very clean. 1936 Ford Tudor —Black finish. Heater and extras. 1935 Plymouth Deluxe Tudor Trunk. Deluxe accessory group. 1935 Plymouth Standard Tudor—Unharmed. 1935 Chevrolet Standard Tudor—A Sacrifice. 1936 Chevrolet Master Fordor, Trunk. Like New. If we haven't got what yo\ want we will get it for you. Cash—Terms —Trade At Our USED CAR LOT on First street. AL. D. SCHMITT MOTOR SALES USED CAR LOTS ON FIRST ST.

Improved Business Conditions Shown , Indlanaolls, ilnd., July 16 —(UP) — improved business conditions in I itFana were Indicated today with ■ announcement by secretary of etale August G. Mueller that receipts of his office for the year ending June 30 had Increased $64,332 over the ' previous year.

■-.irrnrr— —' —r- ' —- : I* nr H e | 1 WILLOUGHBY' ,J

SYNOPSIS According to the terms of her father’s will, Denise Keith, a young San Francisco socialite, must visit his hunting* lodge, River House, on the Stikine River, in Tarnigan, Canada, before disposing of it. Larry Keith, an outfitter for big game hunters, loved the place and had lived there alone for years because his selfish, pampered wife, Sylvia, refused to spend even one month a year there. When he would not give it up, she divorced him and remarried. Aboard Captain Revelry Bourne’s Stikine Maid enroute to Tarnigan, Denny meets a varied lot of individuals enroute to River House for the hunting season. Among them are Dr. Pool Van Cleve, who is suffering from a nervous breakdown; Rio Care w, wealthy divorcee; Derek Haskell, Larry’s half-breed guide, with whom Rio is enamoured, and Harp MacFarlane, I foreman of River House. Harp had | spoken about the treachery of the . I Stikine, praising Bourne’s skill as a navigator, saying he was swift to j see and lightning to act. Shortly after passing the Canadian border, the Maid ties up on the bank for the night. All on board go ashore to dance. From her stateroom door, Denny overhears Bourne talking with Jack Page, owner of the Taku Wind, anchored a short j distance away. Page had broken an agreement between his father and Bourne’s to stay away from the Stikine River as there was only business enough for one boat. Bourne offers to buy Page out or gamble for the rights on the river, but Page refuses. “It’s war then?” asks Bourne. “Business, that’s all,” Page replies. Denny was expecting some excitement, but Bourne placed his hand on Page’s : shoulder, saying, “Let her ride as 1 she looks. Come along and join our party.” Denny felt contempt for Bourne for submitting to Page and indignation against the latter. She went ashore so intent on the situation that she did not see Van i Cleve and collided with him. Without a word he gathers her in his arms, kisses her and stalks off. Denny is outraged but calms down i shortly. At the party, Page immei diately attaches himself to Denny and he too kisses her. She is furious. When Denny dances with Bourne she is keenly aware of his proximity. It was a disturbing I sensation. Later, on the bank, under the spell of the romantic setting, Denny draws Bourne to her j and kisses him. Then, when he reL j sponds, she repulses him. Bourne “ apologizes but warns: “In this country... no girl dares do what you did tonight—unless ...’’ Hu- : miliated, Denny flees to her stateI room, vowing to avoid Bourne thereafter. CHAPTER XII Denny was looking in the mirror, tmoothing back her tumbled hair, j when she noticed two envelopes cropped up on the shelf just beleath. They bore her name in unamiliar handwriting. Some one nust have placed them there while he was talking to Captain Bourne n the grove. Puzzled, she tore the irst one open and read the encloure. My dear Miss Keith: This is an apology for my atroj ciousconduct to-night. I came upon I you suddenly when I was filled . with bitterness—and took it out on you. There is no excuse for me, I I know, unless you are kind enough to lay it to the innate sadism which glib psychologists attribute to all surgeons 1 Believe me when I say there was nothing personal, or, as you may have surmised, nothing of an amorous nature in my action. It was just one of those damned, inexplicable impulses that come to all of us at I times. I have just learned, with rather mixed feelings, that you are to be my hostess when we reach River House. Pardon me, if you can. Respectfully, Pool Van Cleve The other note read: Dear Miss Keith: Will you forgive me for being I a presumptuous idiot to-night? 1 I heard after you left me that I you intend selling all your father’s holdings at Tarnigan. I am planning to operate a line of river

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Till RSDAY, .11 L\ L>,

I Mueller said fee and license colI lections expanded from $110,6i6 io |175,009 over th® previous fiscal year The secretary of state's office receipts include corporation fees, notaries, requisition warrants, trade marks, domestic and foreign reports court reports, detective licenses, fertilizer licenses and rail road police and car equipment. Trade In a Good Town — Decato®

boats on the Stikine next summer and it would help me materially to get hold of the Keith business. Please do not consider any other offer until I have a chance to talk the matter over with you. I shall remain in Tarnigan some weeks, and I look forward to seeing you there. Very truly yours, Jack Page She stood thoughtfully, the notes in her hand. The bold masculine scrawls seemed to mock the decision she had just made regarding Van Cleve and Page. But the third man— Revelry Bourne, after all, was the one who loomed largest in her scheme of things. . . . She would make him pay for his river complex. .. • But perhaps the score was nearly even. She had shattered his sphinxlike calm and for a timeless interval rendered him oblivious to everything else in the world—including his river. .. . She had not dreamed that men could be like that —frightening and repellent and fascinating, all at the same time. Yet, during that first moment in his arms, she had not been frightened. They had been as one in the fierce ecstasy of that contact. A sweet pang of memory ran through her, blurring everything for an instant. She shook herself. “ What in the world is the matter with me I” she thought, bewildered and impatient with herself. Hastily she whipped up her antagonism for Bourne and marshalled it to the foreground of her mind. She would retaliate for the insult! The method offered itself as she began tearing the notes kito pieces and dropping them in the wastebasket. Captain Page wanted to buy River House. Bourne had told him, “There’s room for only one outfit on the Stikine.” If she sold her father’s business to Page, she would be placing in his hands the winning card in the game these two rivermen were going to play. The thought brought her a consciousness of new power—not money power, but something sweeter and more intoxicating, with a hint of ruthlessness in it. The power over men known only to those women who live in the North where whitp women are few, • • • Dawn was breaking over the cottonwood grove that lay delicately gray-green and misted with dew. It was light enough to read water. The boat had already slipped away from the bank and was swinging out into the stream. Denny, still fully dressed, stepped from the closeness of her stateroom and walked along the deserted salon deck to the forward railing. She stood there drinking in the early freshness as the Maid moved up the channel. While she stood there It seemed as if the rising sun had banished every phantom of her own dark night. She felt herself absolved, regenerated, made as pure as the morning itself. “Hellol” came a pleased, surprised voice behind her. “You're the first passenger up this morning.” She swung about to see Revelry Bourne, freshly shaved and very blond looking in a thin white turtlenecked sweater and gray slacks. He did not wait for her reply but turned toward the shoreline, flung out his arms, and took a deep, long breath. “Just move back them thar mountings, Lawd!” he exclaimed, with boyish exuberance. “Move ’em back, I say, and give me room to spread ma wings! Gee, Miss Keith—" He swung back to face her again, his face radiant with health and youth. “Doesn’t it make you feel just like that? How about coming up to the pilothouse with me? I’m going to take the wheel for a while. I’ll have Boom send up some hot coffee and buttered toast” His casual friendliness, after last night, was incredible. Denny could scarcely believe he was the same man with whom she had known that shattering interval in the grove. He was as protean and disarming as his Stikine river. It seemed suddenly rather ridiculous to maintain a displeased aloofness when his natural attitude made the happening of last night of no moment. She answered him with a cheerful unconcern that matched his own. “All right. Captain. I’ll join you in the pilothouse in five minutes." 11 11 l

Be Original, Students Told Blue Ridge. N. <’■ (U.R) ~r - AD Belttel ot Guilford college, told students attending a religions com ference hero to "be radical He suggested they bo so "in th'’ «® ,,s ® of being fundamental, ‘ art ’ ln “ l “L, orlglll ai : for only rad leal can meet the demands ot the day. and uge." __ z -r

She went back to her stateroom to freshen up her costume, which gave evidence of her sleepless night She didn’t change, lest he suspect that she had not been to bed since he saw her last It was not until she was running the comb through her dark hair that it occurred to her she might h&ve been too easy with this Northerner. This, certainly, was no way to live up to her determination to avoid the man. .. . “Oh, well,” she decided, Hl go up there and show him that I can play this casual gamo of forgetfulness as well as he.” She looked in the mirror at her spirited face, meeting the longlashed green eyes that gazed back at her. “But understand, you’re not forgetting!” she admonished herself. “When you reach Tarnigan you are going to show Captain Revelry Bourne what it means to offend — the mistress of River House.” • • • Shortly after lunch the nurses came running to Denny’s stateroom with the news that the Maid was nearing the Big Canyon. “Come along,” invited Miss Hale. “We're going up to the wheel-house to watch the captain take her through." On the way they met Rio Carew and took her with them. When they reached the sun deek where groups of men stood about, Denny sensed that subtle tenseness which pervades a boat about to pass through dangerous waters. An anticipatory thrill ran through her. In the pilothouse Captain Bourne was leaning negligently in the open window, one hand on the wheel as he gazed ahead. Tongass sat on the wall seat opposite him. “Hello, girls!” Bourne greeted them cheerfully, waving them to the settee. “Make yourselves comfortable." Shan, who had been a pilot on the Stikine for forty years, was pacing back and forth behind the captain, pausing every few minutes to peer over Bourne’s shoulder. He was a short, sturdy, likable old savage. As the Maid went on, Denny became aware of the increasing roar and swiftness of the river. Shan, after one of his intent glances ahead, suddenly drew a beaded pouch from his shirt pocket, selected something from it, and with the air of one performing a rite, tossed it into the swirling stream. Miss Hale said in an undertone, “Shan has just made his offering of tobacco to the Stikine river-gods for a safe passage through—” She broke off excitedly. “There it is—the Big Canyon!” Ahead Denny saw a mountain of stone, apparently blocking the river. But as the Maid moved up toward it, the solid rock seemed to split and slowly slide apart, forming a gorge a hundred feet high and no wider than a city street Through it rushing at her, came the furious, constricted volume of the Stikine, combing to a center crest that swung from side to side, hitting the walls in explosions of spray. White water! Denny’s heartbeats quickened. Was it possible to take a boat up against that awful current? Her questioning gaze sought Bourne’s figure silhouetted against the front windows of the pilothouse. He was cool, quiet; but about him was the air of inner tenseness seen in a sprinter poised on the line awaiting the starter’s signal. With a deepening roar of propellers, the Maid struck the mouth of the Canyon and paused, staggering under the battering impact of the current Then, with a violent shudder, she forged slowly ahead again, a thing of life, straining, groaning, belching vapor from either side. But when the Maid was irrevocably into the wild glory of the Canyon, a strange thing happened. Magically, Denny’s fear vanished, leaving her more keenly alive than she had ever been in her life before. Alive and thrilling to the tremendous power, the unleashed splendor of thousands of tons of water leaping, hollowing, bending in polished velocity over boulders, and shaking the air with exultant bombilation. Miss Hale’s frantic clutch broke the spell. “What’s that?” she gasped, pointing up the narrow gorge. (To be continued) Copyrlthl by Barrett WUlouftibj Distributed by KUm reatutM S/ndimt*. Ina

Classified. Business

I - — ♦ + rates “ r “.“ "" for the three times. , 15’Xn.. T X“ > — ' ! for sale 1 FOR SALE -Hardy and .tropical water lillies. All colors. River . side Nursery, Berne. ** , FOR SALE—or will trade for live stock - One building lot. t»® t blocks from G. E. and sewer in). Priced $l6O. Phon® t 3 or 967. — FOR SALE-160 acre Voglewede farm in Washington township. L SBS an acre. Phon® -° 9 - 1 FOR SALE-3 new Or® Fordson tractors. 10 old type fFordsoim tractors, 4 10 20 McCorinick-Deer-Ing. 2 Samson tractors, 2 John Deere tractors, 1 32-in. threshing machine in good shape, $l5O. See t the new Oliver combine and tractor on display. Craigville Garage. 161-5 t FOR SALE—Good 22x36 International thresher. A-l condition., Reeds Feed & Supply Co. Phone, 233. Decatur. Ind. 161 3tx FOR SALE —Far northern Michigan cherries. Delivery July 20, weather permitting. Last load of season. Lloyd Bryan. 428 Mercer. Phone 803. 164-3tx| FOR SALE— 18x38 frame building. located at Green Waters. I all 248. 165 ~ 3t ■ FOR SALE — 1929 Hudson four-: door sedan with large trunk. A--1 condition. Three new tow-wheel trailers. Porter Tire Co., Phone 1289, 341 Winchester St. 160-3 t FOR SALE Bungalow type house, 6 rooms and bath, full size basement, good garage; lot 66x132; modern street, sewer and sidewalk improvements. You can buy this home for only $1,900. Try to duplicate this bargain in Decatur. Roy Johnson and Jim Andrews, Trust Co., Bldg., Phone 104. 166-1 FOR SALE —Home grown calbbage, two sets of plows at the Decatur Riverside Sale, Friday. 166-altx FOR SALE —Guernsey and Jersey cow- Fresh soon. Ervin Diehl, Route 1, Monroe. One mile east, two miles south Monroe. 166-g2tx FOR SALE—BO acre Louis Schadt farm, 2 miles south of Middlebury. Modern conveniences. Sell reasonable. Inquire at farm. - 166-6tx o Mackerel Darken Channel Weymouth, Eng. — (U.R) — The greatest shoal of mackerel ever seen off the Dorset coast here turned a square mile of the English Channel into a dark tumbling mass of fish. Fishermen launched every available boat. When they got to sea, net after net broke under the weight of the fish. The beaches were strewn with mackerel. o NOTH E TO the OFFICERS, DEPOSITORS, CREDITORS, and all other interested in the matter ot the liquidation ot tlie Peoples Loan and Trust Company, Decatur. Indiana: You and each ot you are hereby notified that pursuant to an order made and entered vs record in the Adams Circuit Court, of Adams County State of Indiana, in the cause there pending entitled “In the Matter of the Liquidation ot the Peoples Loan and Trust Company" and numbered 11721 upon the doket ot said Court, the Department of Financial Institutions, of the State ot Indiana in the matter of the liquidation of the Peoples Loan and Trust Company has filed in said cause its eighth account In partial settlement m the liquidation of said bank setting forth ail receipts and disbursements credits and charges to date of such account. You are further notified that the fifteenth day of September, 1!>37 lias been fixed and set as the day and date when the Court will hear and determine any objections in writing which may be filed against said account and will pass upon said accounts. Dated at Decatur. Indiana, this 14th day of July, 1937. Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana. Ly I lark J. Lutz, Special Representative in the matter ot the liquidation of the Peoples Loan and 3 rust Company. Nathan C. -Nelson, Attorney July 15.22-2'

— WANTED “ ST KI> -Oatß to combine. Stef- „ Bros Decatur route, Craig | fen Bros., i6i-6tx ville phone. — | ... .M-ru-l) — Work of any kln J*WANTED 164-31 Phone 5590. WANTED—T* 0 “>® n to lielp ul ? AN virril Macy. I’hone 569-C Dehay. Virgil Maty. i66-3tx catur. — u anted: - Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machinery. Underwear, curU }* ns ’ 1 j‘ l ny Will pay 4c per lb. Daily Democrat Co. MISCELLANEOUS -Furniture reMired, upholstered or reliniahed | at the Decatur Upholstering Shop, j H 5 S. Second St. Phone 420. A so used furniture. IMt3 ° NOTICt My residence and office te now located at 430 N. sth St. Dr. C. V- Connell lOst.l Markets At A Glance stocks higher. Bonds irregular and quiet; U. ; government issues higher.

" Curb stocks irregular and quiet. Chicago stocks irrcular. 1 Cotton futures weak; off more than $1.25 a balei Grains -Irreular; wheat off I*4 cents a bushel. Chicago lovestock: hogs and; sheep weak, cattle steady. Rubber futures steady. Silver unchanged in New Vork at 44 3-4 cents a fine ounce. I Q— Freak Accident Fatal Cleveland.- (U.R) -Stephen An- ! dro, 13. playing marbles near the; street in front of his home, stuck one leg out over the curb just as ■an automobile came by. A wheel, passed over his leg. "making of it a lever that hurled his body against | i the car. He died a few minutes I later. Smothered Armadillo Served College Station, Tex.-(U.R)- Judge ! R. E. Minton of Lufkin holds suiotb- ,! cred armadillo—with special sauce i —above pork ribs and backbone. , I The judge —aided by his Negro 1 cook. Pres — introduced the noc- , | turnal, armor-plated mammal to . 1 two field men of the Texas Coop- , j erative Wildfire Service, as a pal- ■ j ate teaser. II o : Bare Legs Irk Studio I London (U.R) — The Women’s ’ | League of Health and Beauty has ’' apologized to the British Broad- ‘ casting Corporation for the apt ’ pearanee of four Canadian girls lin the restaurant at Alexandria 11 Palace television studios with i bare legs. The girls, after a telec I vision performance, went into the ■ restaurant clad in shorts, blouse I and blazer. When asked to put lon coats they left. Trade In a Good Town—Decatur. -I o Ml Til I: FOR bids for 5 , M HOOI, Hl 8 IIHH EKS I Noti e Is hereby given that on the I twentieth of July 1937 at 8 p. m. the y: trustee ami advisory board of Washl. ingtmi township will eonsioer bids for six school bus drivers on Routes “ 1.2, 3, I, 5 and 6. Bidg must be filed 'with the trustee any time before 6 o’clock P. M. of above date. Specifications for drivers and disI criptions of routes are on file al ; trustee office. The trustee and ad- | visory Hoard will reserve the right 5 to reject any or all blds. JOHN M. DOAN, Trustee f. Washington Township July s.jr, y N. A. BIXLER r I <’ OPTOMETRIST ® Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. f Telephone 135. } HOURS 8:30 to 1130 12:30 to 5:00 t'

M—■>— ——— I - k Complete Line of y <1 Studio s i Couches !'/ uY ai ,’ a,)le w *th the “Bed- " Hite leatures. Easy to b operate . . made ready on a moment’s notice. BISSEL SWEEPERS Hi-lo hall bearing, self cleaning . . easiest running sweeper on the market. zwm Phone 61

MARKETM DAILY REPORT OF Lor, B AND FOREIGN MARkM Brady's Market for Decatur Craigville. Hoagland and Closed at 12 Noon i ■— mSHm Corrected July 15, ■ No commission and nil Veals received every 100 to 120 lbs. B 120 to 140 lbs. | 140 to DIO lbs 160 to 180 lbs H 180 to 250 lbs. M 250 to 000 lbs. H 300 to 350 lbs H 350 lbs., and up fl Roughs W Stags fl 1 Veab-rs . B I Spring lambs m Spring buck lambs fl Yearling lambs H CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE I I July Sept, [fl ■ Wheat sl2l'- jM Corn, New. 1.27'x 1.121* 'S Corn, Old ... 1.24% ■ Oats 4a l , 8 .37 ufl INDIANAPOLIS LIVLSTOcfI

ra Indianapolis, Ind . July ■ —Livestock: Hog receipts. L'.ihiil; 286; market steady ic ). T bulk. 160-180 lbs. sl2 10; lbs.. $12.45; 20ii-21n 11,5.. 210-225 lbs.. sl2 1... 22.-,r.5 $12.35; 235 250 lbs.. $121;,. " lbs., $11.90; 260 27a lbs. 275-285 lbs.. sll bo. lbs. $ll.5«; |i,s 325 350 lbs . $11; 1 $10.75; 155-lbo ]|, s . lbs.. $11.75; Ho 150 lbs. 130110 lbs.. $112.’.. $11; 110-120 lbs . $lO 75: lbs., $10.50; pack oil. sows '»n^fl^i' 25c higher; bulk. $0 .’.o Isl Cattle, receipts. 600; steers steady m In iters and r ows ' two loads good ami , -u. ■ ing steers. sll sll >. he'l-r t^fl" J $13.75; beef cows. 23 s>. 27. ‘ ter grades. $3.505.‘.; \ to weak. bulk c0,..' $9.50. M Sheep, receipts. 7"" bulk unsold early; tnosi ; . sales around 3m lowslaughter ewes st- ady at down. CLEVELAND PRODUCE fl ( Cleveland. Ohio. July 15. —Produce: Butter, market firm: - cm. standards, 35c. Eggs, market unsii'h’d; grade, 22c; extra firsts. 2"r; i rent receipts, 19c. |H : Live jniultry. mark,' r.:m: heavy. 21c; medium. IT: !■ heavy. 17c; leghorn light, isl broilers, fancy rock. T . T-. up. 22c; small, coll. 12c; horn, under I'u lbs . 17'; l,2 lbs., and up. 19c; old i colored, 12c; leghorn. 1"' : I ens, thin and No. 2. H'e; I young. 6 lbs., and up. 16c: 1 Potatoes. U. S. No. 1. $2.60 bbl; $1.50 $1.65 Ohio new cobblers. $1.60. H EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCkH I East Buffalo. N. Y July : (U.R) Livestock: fl Hogs, 200; steady, lti'i-23' 1 | trucked ins, sl2.s<i; $12.65; good and choice. lbs., railrun quoted. Cattle, 250; grass ste, i and bM ■ er trade at standstill. i bulls unchanged; lo" m'br cutter cows. $1.25-$5.5u; i-: M I bulls, $6.25-$6.50. fl Calves, 200; vealers ratlnr 1 steady to weak. $10.56 down. Sheep. 300; holdovers. MJ : spring lambs draggy. s'■ .oly J I cent decline: good ami choice. IJ I eluding sprinkling of bucks. it-J medium and mixed grades. J $9.50. fl FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCKS Fort Wayne, Ind.. July , —Livestock: ■ Hogs, steady to 25c higher. - J 225 lbs., $12.10; 180-200 lbs - i 225-250 lbs.. $11.90; 160-lS ft Jfl i $11.90; 250-275 lbs.. sll i lbs., $11.45; 300-350 lbs.. 150-160 lbs., $11.25; ' $11; 130-140 lbs.. $lO-75; 1 lbs., $10.50; 100-120 lbs.. $1"- 5 - I Roughs, $9.75; stags. $> 50. Calves, $9; lambs, $9-' 5 - LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected July 15No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better JiNo. 2 Wheat, etc Oats Soya Beans. No. 2 Yellow ■ New No. 4 Yellow Corn “ j Rye ' CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beans. No. 2 Yellow Watches Once Small , Watches originally were sff clock* and were worn hung the girdle because they were large lor the pocket.