Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 20 July 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Horseplay at Plane Christening . > . .—: ;— Jerry Plane, orchestra leader, takes some good-natured bouncing, goodnaturedly, as American Airline hostesses find Jerry too heavy for them io carry and drop him on Newark Airport This all took place during the christening ceremonies of the airline’s new flagship.
Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these I ten questions’ Turn to page Four for the answers. t. What is monasticism? 2. Name the first code of the 1 French civil law. 3. How many times did Wil-1 liam Jennings Bryan run for presi j d«nit of the U. S? 4. What is a fife? 5. In Roman mythology, who j was the god of sleep? 6. Name the caipitai of Ceylon. 7. Who was George Sandys? 8. Name the fourth President ; of the U. S. 9. What is the title of the wife of an Earl? 10. In what country is the Mackenzie River?
” PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, JULY 23 - - - 10 A. M. HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP AND HOGS MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR—Managers Daehrman and Gorrell, auctioneers. - - -
Help! Police! I can't j open the front I door! -c,— ( j “ —AND I’VE got to get out. Suppose someone should buy “ that beautiful USED CAR I „ chose at AL. D. SCHMITTS. - Oh, please, please! Get me out “ before someone else snatches “ up that beauty!” - iiUSKii *
: THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“SALT OF THE EARTH” ■" By SEGAR “ y GET OUT \ y I ASUSAMJTGLD VAT) KSEAH, JUS' MAKE A VJUfrT APR VA rJvNFD On kDA.rr i-rail * 'AC UCDF ’ SUSAN, AH VER GONER TO GO TO SER ROOM!'. VERSELF AT HOME \ VJHIAI Ift GONER DO ftBOQT IT?! tKt ’ ) ? \STAN HERE-GO TO \DO AS I SEI-DON'T LIRE AS IF NOTHIN / r NOTHING MUCH- JOST RAUF MS QtAI ' f? F ) rh RO 2 M V V^^rTuB^E THAN iy y aaWlTal - t— A-Cl? 5 T- MB Jt.' ; -j ' ■ i 1 —s \ - wsaikdß ,«sK < vS? <’n J W l i ip,<y< i '* z ~ s '' k •
I COURTHOUSE — Marriage Licenses Raymond H. Shephard, 36, Mar-' 1 ion salesman to Rhea M. Burgess. | j 37. 1 NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. 3304 Notice is hereby given to the cred-I Itors . heirs and legatees of Judson I XV. Teeple, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at DeIt atur. Indiana, on the Sth day of September, 1537, 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 i make proof of heirship, and receive i their distributive shares. Ray Z. Teeple. Administrator I Decatur. Indiana. July 19, 1937. I Fred I-:. Zollnrs, Attorney July 20-27 o — Trade In a Good Town — Deoatu
LATE MODELS Enjoy your summer in a beautiful, thrilling Ford V-8. Your car is your down payment. Payments as you want them. See our stock before you buy. Used car finance rates as low as 8%. AL. D. SCHMITT MOTOR SALES USED CAR LOTS ON FIRST ST. f-r-'A’N- • M«,. -aSIVR
REPORT BEDFORD POSTAL ROBBERY Undetermined Amount Os Loot Taken At Bedford Postoftice Bedford, Ind , July 20 —<U.R> —Bur- , glar's broke Into the office between midnight and sour _
I" The Captive’Bridel 1 Zy BARRETT WILLOUGHBY _J U, — ,_J2aJMgw -•-- — . — Vinftllv
SYNOPSIS Denise Keith, lovely San FranI cisco socialite, is enroute to Tarnigan, Canada, • aboard Revelry Bourne's Stikine Maid to spend a hunting season at her late father's lodge, "River House.” There was I a proviso in Larry Keith’s will that his daughter must do this before selling the property. Eighteen years ago, when Denny was only sis, her selfish mother, Sylvia, had divorced Larry because he would not sell his hunters’ outfitting business on the Stikine River and live in San Francisco. Although Sylvia remarried, Larry never stopped loving her. Among the passengers aboard the Maid are Rio Carewe, wealthy divorcee; Derek Haskell, Larry’s college-bred, half-breed guide, of whom Rio is enamoured; Dr. Pool Van Cleve, a surgeon suffering from a nervous break- • down and very bitter towards all women; and Harp MacFarlane, i Larry’s trusted foreman. Just across the Canadian border, the boat anchors for the night and | everyone goes ashore to dance in the grove. Alone with Bourne on the bank, the romantic surroundings cast a spell over Denny and she kisses him, completely forgetting her fiance, Murray Hart. When Bourne responds she becomes frightened and pulls away. Revelry apologizes but warns: “In this country no girl dares do what you did tonight — unless” . . . Humiliated, Denny flees to her stateroom, vowing to avoid him, but the next day he appears to have entirely forgotten the incident. She decides to adopt the same attitude, but plans to retaliate for the offense when they reach Tarnigan. One method would be to sell River House to Jack Page, captain of the Taku Wind, and Bourne’s rival. Page has decided to disregard a gentlemen’s agreement between his late father and Bourne’s that the Pages would stay away from the Stikine as there was business mough for only one outfit. The Maid finally arrives at Tarnigan. When Harp calls to “Honey-jo," Larry’s buxom housekeeper, “See -this is what we brought—Larry’s own little kid come home to River House,” Denny wanted to cry “Not This is not my hornet” although something psychic seemed to be reaching out to claim her against her will. The following three weeks Page showers Denny with attention in an effort to obtain River House, while Bourne tends to business. Honey-jo disapproves and confides in her beau. Harp, that Page is going furtively with Willow, Derek’s half-sister. ’ CHAPTER XVI During the past three weeks Page’s river boat had made two trips to Wrangell to bring up lumber and building materials; but he had remained continuously in Tarnigan, closely attending Denny everywhere she went. He treated her with a pleasing blend of deference and admiration which gave no hint that any memory remained to him of that night scene in the grove. The Taku Wind was now moored a few hundred feet down-river from the Keith compound. On the bank above, Page’s workmen were erecting an ugly galvanized structure that was to be the nucleus of his , business the coming year. Though he concealed it fairly well, Denny felt his growing eagerness to get possession of the Keith holdings on the Stikine. With feminine perversity, tinged with a certain teasing humor, she delighted in being indefinite with him. Now, instead of truthfully saying that she was enjoying Tarnigan so fully because she knew ehe would soon be leaving it, she replied gaily, “I beI lieve I am going native. Perhaps when you come back next year, you’ll find me dreaming tn the sun ! like little Willow Haskell over there." With a tilt of her head, she indicated a slim Indian girl whose head kerchief made a scarlet blob cn the bank near Page’s river boat which they were passing. At the moment, her horse moved on ahead of her companion's and she missed the displeasure in Page's C lance that swept, then studiously 1 ignored the small, waiting figure seated on the graze
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Tl ESDAV 31 -
o'clock this morning and rifled mail sacks and packages of an undetermined amount of loot. Police and postal Inspectors eaid | It would take days and possibly I weeks to learn what was stolen I from the mail bags. Entrance was gained through the - north window, which had been Jim- ! mied open. Three mail sacks which I had arrived on a midnight train I were torn open and their contemn I strewn aNxit the postoffice floor. Every letter which was addressed ' to a bank, a security company or a
Denny’s eyes were on the Keith compound which lay just ahead. The sight of the great log warehouse under the cottonwoods and the activity inside the enclosure gave her a thrill of possession. Saddle and pack horses were being groomed for the use of the hunters—animals sleek and spirited from a summer’s freedom on meadows lush with blue-stem. From one side of the compound a flagged path mounted the slope to the high terrace where River House stood. Honey-jo was waving a tea towel from the kitchen window, her head pale gold in the sun. Denny answered with a gesture of her riding crop. She had already grown fond of the blunt, profane, warmhearted housekeeper, and she no longer resented being treated as the beloved daughter of Larry Keith—come home. She found that she actually did feel at home in this wilderness place so different from anything she had hitherto known. As her horse, Holiday, walked to the hitching rail alongside the open door of the warehouse, every Indian in the yard came to greet her and help her dismount. She felt a glow of pleasure, an odd content, and wished that Murray were here sharing with her this brief season during which she reigned as mistress of River House. But in the wake of her wish came doubt. Murray had always known sophisticated amusements; the excitement that came from rushing about with a jolly young crowd accustomed to buying their entertainment In this place, money was worthless for that purpose. He might find only boredom here where each individual provided his own amusements. Murray slipped from her thoughts as she turned to speak a word or two to each of the waiting Indians. She noticed that Page had handed his horse over without even a glance at the man who took it “I say, Denise, let’s go inside. I’d like to see how the outfits are shaping up.” Denny wondered if she only imagined the proprietary tone in Page’s voice. She looked at him critically. On a campstool beside her own outfit sat Rio Carew in a white silk shirt and jodhpurs. Her red curls were bound with a jade green scarf. She was watching Derek Haskell as he moved about, checking lists. As she watched, her thumb kept slowly circling the ball of her forefinger. While she had been waiting in Tarnigan for the season to open, Rio had furnished the village with much food for gossip. Her languid airs were ridiculed by the native girls. During the first week of her stay she had walked out each day dressed as for a promenade at a fashionable resort, her dog Brussels on a leash. But Brussels had each time broken from her and made an exuberant attack on the Indian sled dugs chained in summer idleness along the river bank. After the first encounter, his ears were in shreds, his nose a mass of wounds. She had sent him down on the next steamer to board with the marshal at Wrangell until she left the country. Denny had made a great effort to be agreeable to Rio, who occupied one of the small guest suites River House maintained for hunters, but the older woman’s mixture of affectation and suspicious reserve had kept her from feeling any real friendliness for Rio. After Denny and Page left the warehouse, they crossed the compound to the foot of the flagged path that ascended to River House. She paused there. “I’m going to leave you here, Jack,” she said. “I must finish my letters for the outgoing mail.” “To that lucky chap down in San Francisco, I suppose.” She nodded, _er mind going ahead to the arrival of the weekly mail tomorrow. Letters from home; from Murray. She wondered what he was doing and if he missed her. Denny ascended the path leading upward through the wild garden of juniper, briar roses, little clusters of birch. Had she looked back, she would have seen Page pause on his way to the Taku Wind, to speak to the Indian girl. Willow. The girl came to her feet and stood laughing up at him like an impudent child.
I hotel had been opened in the thlev- . es’quest for <aah. A shipment of checks for W I A I workers ateo had been opened and r| the checks tossed to one side. A , i quick survey revealed that none of i the WPA checks was stSen. . This was the first postoffice robbery in Bedford in seven years. The , t last time cracksmen blasted open . , the safe and fled with Its contents. ' i J -.hn Stoneburner of route 1. Mon-, | I roe attended to business in Decatur > today. __
, He gestured peremptorily, r many, i with a petulant shake of her small ■ body, she pigeon-toed off toward her ’ mother’s cabin on the bank of Tar--1 nigan Creek. Denny gained the top of the terrace where the flagged pergola jutted out from the side of River I House. A massive oak door, made in two sections, led directly into the living room. The upper half was open, letting in a flood of sunshine 1 as Denny went through. The huge room was full of the ' clean smell of river wind and trees. ; Now, as always, she was conscious of the atmosphere of content, pro- ’ tection, that abided there; conscious ’ also of a material sense of satisfac- ' tion that came from the mellowed harmony of wide spaces. ' Harp had told her that the room ' had not been changed since the first year of her parents’ marriage, when Larry Keith had redecorated it for ' Sylvia. In it were none of the ' mounted heads and grinning bear ’ rugs usual in living rooms of the 1 hunting country; those trophies had 1 been placed in the card room, where the hunters gathered to smoke and talk over their kills. Here the walls wera paneled in satin-smooth yellow cedar which time had turned to old ivory. The plain, silky-napped rugs, very thick and the pale-brown color of pine needles bleached by weather, had been especially woven for Keith; so had the hangings at the doors and the low, wide windows, and the upholstery on the deep soft chairs. These were old ivory with a design in greens, browns, and rusty apricot, depicting a fur brigade of canoes sweeping down a river. Bookcases lined the lower half of the walls, and there were brass candlesticks and the glow of copper bowls holding branches of wild crabapple. Two couches faced each other before the huge fireplace raised two feet from the floor. The mantle had a carved design in maple leaves, and a motto, “Fortitude in Distress.” An old piano of Circassian walnut added to the beauty of the room. There were only three pictures in the room. One, an enlargement of a snapshot showing Denny at the age of five, a pup in her arms and one pantie leg hanging down. Another was a full-leagth portrait in oils—the first Larry Keith of the Beaver Club. The third, a picture of a slim girl in ruffled white organdie, held the place of honor over the fireplace. Sylvia, laughing out from under the wide, drooping brim of a hat wreathed in pink roses. Sylvia, gloriously blonde, frailly feminine, frankly frivolous above that sturdy pioneer motto, “Fortitude in Distress.” The incongruity of that juxtaposition had struck Denny the first time she saw it She had laughed and planned to write Murray about it. He would appreciate the humor of it as she did. Then Harp had told her about long, lonely winter evenings, when Larry Keith used to lie on one of the couches, listening to radio music from San Francisco, while he looked up at Sylvia’s picture. The foreman explained, “Os course, he never told me what he was thinking about; but I could guess. When there’s no light in this room, the flames from the fireplace sort of flicker on your mother’s face and make her seem alive and laughing.” Denny did not mention the picture to Murray. Harp told her, “Your father looked like his nibs over there—” he jerked his thumb toward a portrait of the first Larry Keith on the , wall. “Same dent in his chin. ’Tis | a sign of a man who’s soft with women, so they say." Denny recalled those words now, i as she stopped to rearrange a bowl I of flowers under the nortrait of I 1 Keith of the Hudson’s Bay. “A dent ■ in his chin,” she said to herself, 1 looking up at him. “A man who’s 1 soft with women.” And for no reason she remembered Revelry • Bourne’s chin. Yet he certainly was I not soft with women. His mouth ’ was firm above the dent in his chin ! and—a shiver of remembrance ran ‘ through her—had a velve. ’ warmth. . . , , (To be continued) Copyrlfht by Barrett Willoughby. Diitrlbuted by King natural RyndteaM. In*
Classified, Business Cards, Notices j I
I — One Time-Minimum charge o’ I e . Two Times-Minimum charge , J 40c for 20 words or '•••• Over 20 words 2c per word for j Three*°Ti'mes— • ’Jve^wor 2 ;. S‘ f e°r r -rd 1 for the three times. , I Cards of Thanks ko | Obituaries and verses—— v ■ FOR SALE . FOR SALE -Hardy and tropical water lilllea. All colors. Riverside Nursery, Berne. FOR SALE-160 acre Voglewede farm in Washington township, >SS an acre. Phone 209. 161-ts : FOR SALE - Mattresses and Springs. 50 tlnnerspring mattress- . es $12.50 to >39-50; 50 Sets of coil j bed springe. Be sure to see the Beauty rest mattrese and the Goldenreet spring B-4-U-buy. Liberal trade-in-allowance for used eprinff or mattress. SPRAGUE FURM-; TURE CO., 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 169 FOR SALE — Oak dining room suite, 3 burner oil stove, 4 burner gasoline pressure stove. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson St. 16N-tf FOR SALE—BO acre Louis Schadt farm. 2 miles south of Middlebury. Modern conveniences. Sell reasonable. Inquire at farm. 166-6tx FOR SALE—Household goods. 921 Winchester street. 169 k3»x FOR SALE—Used Furniture, Pia-, nos, and Stoves. One 8-pc. dining room suite, fair condition, cheap. One refrigerator, 50-lb. icer, cheap. , Two pianos in good condition, make us an offer! One kitchen range, $lO. takes it. Liberal allowance for your old furniture cn new. We re- , pair all kinds of furniture. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO., 152 S. Second St,, Phone 199. 169 3t- , FOR SALE—Cow with one day old calf. Been tested for T. B. and Bang’s disease. John Stoneburner, route 1, Monroe . 170-3tx FOR SALE —Yellow transparent apples. J. H. Hahnert. route 1, Monroe phone, M-3. 170-3 t FOR SALE—I 929 Model A Ford sedan, good condition. Will sell cheap. Nu-Art Sign Co., between 6-7 evenings. 170-3tx o Federation Os Clubs Backs Safety Campaign Bethany Park, Ind . July 20 —(U.R) —The Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs today was solidly be-, hind the state's campaign for safety education. More than 150 women from : throughout Indiana attended the : group’s sixth annual federation day here yesterday and indorsed Indiana’s safety program which was described by Mise Julia Landers, coordinator in the state safety bureau. A resolution passed by the group I stated that education of drivers and ' pedestrians will reduce the number : of traffic accidents and that citizi ens should co-operate wholehearted ! ly in the work. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatui 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 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
WANTED WANTED— -Man for porter work Good steady position. onco, Rice Hotel- ( Wanted: - Nice dean rags suitable for cleaning machin,rv. Underwear, curU }' nß ’.j‘ Will pay 4c per lb. Daily Democrat Co. MISCELLANEOUS I miscellaneous - naired upholstered or refinished at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. uae d furniture 167 3 Fresh Potato Chips and assorted nuts daily at The Green Kettle | MISCELLANEOUS - Garniture repaired, upholstered or reflnished at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. 145 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 136t30 NOTICE My residence and office le now located at 430 N. sth SL Dr. C. V- Connell lOSt.f for rent FOR RENT—6 room Modern flat.; Inquire Citizens Telephone Co. - FOR RENT—Sylvan Lake desirable seven r.'om lake front cottage, , Lights and boat. M. Meibers. 1127, West Monroe Street 170 g2tA —o— Negro Youths Held, Put Ties On Track New Castle, Ind.. July 20— (U.R)— Carson Woodson, 12, and his broth- ■ er, Sam, 14, Indianapolis negro youths, were held in Henry o.unty jail today after confessing to police they had placed a railroad tie across the Pennsylvania railroad tracks. The youths said they placed the tie across the tracks near Dunreith last Saturday for "revenge” after | being forced from an Indianapolis bound freight train. Ralroadofficials said the tie was in such a position that a tragedy would have been unavoidable if the next westbound passenger and mail train had not been late. The crew of an east-bound freight train notic- i ed the obstruction and stopped to I clear the track. Shelter Sought At Prison Bergana, Italo (U.R) — Knocking furiously in the night at the front door of what he took to be a hotel there, Alfredo Crippa finally obtained a night's l-dging. In the morning he found that he haa been a guest : in the local prison. AOTICE I TO THE OFFICERS. DEPOSITORS, CREDITORS, and all other interest- : ed In the matter of the liquidation of the Old Adams County Bank, Decatur, Indiana. You and each of you are hereby .| notified that pursuant to an order made and entered of record in the Adams Circuit Court, of Adams , | County State of Indiana, in the cause ■ there pending entitled “In the Matter of the Liquidation of the Old Adl ams County Bank” and numbered • I 14720 upon the docket of said Court, i the Department of Financial InstL • tutions. of the State of Indiana in . the matter of the liquidation of the i Old Adams County Bank has filed in I said cause its eighth account in par- : tiai settlement in the liquidation of r | said bank setting forth all recepits ' and disbursements credits and . : charges to date of such account. You are further notified that said Department of Financial Institutions has also filed a Eupplemental Report showing Stockholders’ Liability Accounting the same being supplemental to the Eighth Current Report of the Department of Financial Institutions, of the State of Indiana in the matter of the liquidation of said bank, said Supplemental Report setting forth gll receipts and disbursements credits, and charges to date of such account. You are further notified that the eighth day of • September, 1937 has been fixed and set as the day and date when the I Court will hear and determine any objections in writing which may be filed against said account or either of them and will pass upon said accounts. Dated at Decatur, Indiana, this 12th day of July, 1937. Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana. By <'’lark J. Lutz. Special RepreIsentative in the matter of the liquiI dation of the Old Adams County ; Bank. Henry B. Heller, Attorney SPECIAL ■ SALE SAMSON CARD TABLES \ our choice of many stunning styles — 1937’s newest and smartest designs. I $2-98 ZWICK’S Phone 61 r
MARKET RM DAILY REPORT OF Lo J ANO FOREIGN MArM Brady's Market for De citur .Hl CraiyvHle. Hoa ß land 3n ,j w W Closed at 12 n ooik >k H ' — Corrected j tt ] y 2(| No contmlsNlon and no Veala received c >- ery ion to 120 lb» H^ 4 120 to 130 lbs. 140 to 160 Ihn. 160 to 180 lbs. 180 to 250 lbs. 250 to 300 lbs 300 to 350 lbs. 350 lbw. and tip Roughs StagH Vealera Spring lanilm ■■ Spring buck lambs H Yearling lambs ■■ H ■ CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSeH Ju| y Sept. |H. Wheal f1 21 $1 :;1 . Corn, New 1.23 j „ 6 i, Corn. Old 1.21 ' Oats 36R, H INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTqcH Indianapolis. Ind. j U |y l —Livestock: ■■ Hog receipts. 3,nno ; 61: weights abov. || K er; other w< ights . top 112.80 on ehm< bulk sows, flu sll. top. 160-250 Jbs.. sl2 21. lbs.. $11.60-$12.5“; :;.u. $11.10111.85; 140-ID. ; :)s $12.70; lim-HO lbs. Cattle. 900; calves, sue fairly active; kil”:— , evenly strong to i . up most; 960 Ib. y.-arlin-sls.lo; other fed i >’. sls; grassers am! shmsll; mixed yearling heifers. $12.45; < hoi,-.. H ers, $11; low < utti -s a;..| eows. $3.75-15; grass f.-,| $5 25 $6.50 . top vealers steady, top. gH Sheep. 600; lambs 25e highi r; bulk good $9-$9.50; few $9.75 medium grad' s. $7 " - , ewes steady at 5u <|ow n KB FORT WAYNE LIVESTOcH Fwt Wayne. Ind , July —Livestock: ■ Hogs l"c lower to 5 225 lbs. $12.60; 1' -2" n lbs •225-250 lbs. $12.40; 1«, ■SO; 250-275 lbs $12.15 sll 90; 300.35" »>< snijS lbs $12.05; 140-15" lbs $1165® 140 IGs. $11.3"; 12" 13" lbs llfl j 100-120 Ibß. SIO.BO. ■ Roughs $lO 00; stage $5.75. H Calves $9.00; iambe $9 K CLEVELAND PRODUCE ■ Cleveland, Ohio. July 2v— Jroduce: H Butter: market firm; extra i standard 35c. Eggs, market steady. extra g 22c. extra firsts 20e. current cepits 19c. Live poutry: market stei hens, heavy 21e, nimliarn .’"e . born heavy 16c; Leghmn ■ Broilens: fancy rocks 4 and up small 21c, colored 3 and up 1 email cokxred 19c. Leghorn u • 1% 17c leghorn W ami up He; 1 rooters: colored 12c, leghorn - chickens: thin and No.: I l '. ; D ! young 6 and up 16c; young i i 13c; old 10c- ’ Potatoes: U. S. No. 1 irgimal , -2.65 bbl.; $ 150-1.60 100 lb. s 1 Ohio new cobblers $1.50-1.66: ! t'arnia, long whites, $2.50-2.60 ’ lb. bag. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOf East Buffalo. N. Y.. July 1 i (U.R)— Livestock: f Hogs, 200; steady with t day's advance; good and ct o 170-230 lbs., quoted sl:’> $131": - ilar weights trucked ins sold 11 I $12.85. bi Cattle, 100; unchanged; common steers and heifers, $ -'low cutter and cutter rows. I 1 $5.50; medium bulls around » s' Calves. 200: vealers ad steady, $10.50 down. Sheep, none; spring 1* -•steady; good and choice sol ’ $10.50; few 45-47-lb. throwouts, 18. ■ LOCAL GRAIN MARKET | BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected July 20. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better I No. 2 Wheat, etc Oats Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow (New No. 4 Yellow Coin Rye ■' CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow Markets At A Gianc* ' Stocks higher; rails strong Bonds higher; U. S govern issues. Irregularly higher Curb stocks Irregularly 1 and quiet. h Chicago stocks, irregularly er tn quiet trading. Foreign exchange, higher Cotton futures off $1 8 ba e ' i Rubber futures, higher Chicago livestock, hog? ’ sheep, weak, and cattle sttl : Silver unchanged in N' e " at 44%c a fine ounce.
