Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 147, Decatur, Adams County, 22 June 1938 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
t Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions ? Turn to page Four for the answers. •— ♦ 1. Off the coast of which state are the Farallones Islands? 2. Name the most famous legendary English outlaw. 3. What type of canal Is the Panama Canal? 4. What is another name for the Mtlky Way? 5. Under which government department is the Coast and Geodetic Survey? 6. Who is Eduard Benes? 7. What is a mint? 8. What does pro tern, mean? 9. Who wrote The Pledge to the
PUBLIC SALE 7— ROOM HOME —7 As we are moving to Michigan we will sell at public auction without reserve, the following described real estate, on FRIDAY. June 24.1938 8:00 P. M. — On the Premises — 6:00 P. M. Location: 103 North 9th St., Decatur. Ind. Lot No. 208 in Joseph Crabbs western addition. Full size lot, 66x132. corner 9th * Madison streets. Good 2 story house. 7 rooms and bath. Garage. Good cistern. Beautiful lot with plenty of maple shade trees. Brick street, side walks. Ornamental street lights. One of the nicest locations in town. Property is in good repair. TERMS—I-2 cash, balance in 1 year. Immediate possession. Come and inspect the house any time. Wm. and Clarice Yake, owners Roy S. Johnson, auct. R— ■ in II —I ™ „ Public Auction (Note change of time) FRID AY, JU N E 2 4 at 7:30 o’clock 25 head of GUERNSEY COWS. 10 head of HOLSTEIN COWS. 15 head of JERSEY COWS. 20-head of GUERNSEY AND JERSEY HEIFERS. SfFhcad of FEEDING CATTLE. 10tfhead of Good Feeding Hogs. Some Good Sows and Pigs. All miscellaneous articles will be sold before 8 o’clock. If you want to turn your livestock into cash we can get you the high dollar. Try us and be convinced. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES Auctioneers —Doehrman & Gorrell. Public Sale the undersigned administrator in the estate of Austin P. Brown, deceased, will sell at public auction at the premises at 844 N. Tenth street, Decatur, Ind., SATURDAY, JUNE 25,1938 Commencing at 1:00 P. M. The following personal property: .Concrete mixer. H bag capacity;Stock Tank Form: Cistern molds; 10 House Jacks and plates: 3 Bottle Jacks; 31, H.P. Gas Engine & Tiuck, House Blocking; 76 cement blocks; 3 wheel barrows; lumber; one 18 ft. 7 in I beam; Ford Model A I’4 ton truck, dual wheels: 2 model T ton trucks- 1 good dump body; range cook stove; kitchen cabinet: 4 cistern lids' 2 pipe die outfits % to 1 inch; 2 good pipe cutters; pipe wrenches; cement tools; brace and bits: plumbing tools; 2 picks and drills; levels; 12 chicken feeders; 2 pitcher pumps; 2 solid rubber tires for 3’ 2 inch demountable rims, like new; lawn mower; good small ice box; two oO gal drums; leather davenport; 6 chairs; 3 beds and mattresses; table clock; radio; sewing machine; rockers; player piano; and many articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. ELMER W. BROWN, Administrator Roy S. Johnson—Auctioneer. Fruechte & bitterer, Attorneys.
BARNEY GOOGLE SNUFFY CAN’T CALL FOR HELP By BiUy Deßeck CkTQP SLWTTtM’ YORE FURIRTION PIUME,P/ DON'T YE THINK \ / DON’T TPAX BRRItOS OUT IM TH' SOMEBODY'S BROKE (84 I I / LUKE Al \D JIT. NIIDDEE O' TA' NUSHT T,— TH' CHXCKEM COOB AtY' \ S / I LOW VZAE. - ■ OR VM GO NT ER. F 77 UVSSEbi. TWE S SNUCK OWE WBF \ y y'g ART PR KNOW CHASE ME OUT ON / 7 PfAW Y ■ A WASTIN'TA' POULTRY* 7 K PAV4 vz I ME OKA BVC KNOW TH' BACK PORCH'- xrpv- / c.nsAFUMc, t V » \ TWEbhPiENS \ TO «PrtS U S THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—“WHERE DID YOU GET THAT HAT?’’ By SEGAR z GaOT HIS tJOYAU\ Z AN' NOW I DOES k V/ OH .MV - \ fOH.THIS is\ Z YEP. S] [z Z ~RUN GET bAE At X ROBE ON.MISTER ) HEREBY PERNOUNCEpT - ? GORSH 1 . IT \ TERRIBLE! /CRAZV I! (HAMMER-NAILS, A I y ' FROGFUZZ ? OKAV- \ VA KING OF < DON’T FIT ) [' THE KING XTHE CROWN \PIECE OF STRING J HERE I COMES V/rTH) > JT \ MUCH' / ■ DOESNTFITJ DONT FIT STICK J HIS CROWNS ‘ . THE INTERNATIONAL burk-s ! z: 1 V U K -Al FTWATHR PHONE 19 A GOOD STANDARD BRAND LL L 1 U n
Flag of the U. S ? 10. What is jurisprudence? Preble Church Plans Annual Lawn Social The annual lawn social. of the St. Paul’s ladies aid of Preble will be held Sunday evening, June 26, on the school lawn just opposite the Lutheran church. A splendid free program has been arranged with the musical setting furnished by the Honolulu Conservatory of Music of Fort Wayne. These musicians are heard weekly over station WOWO. A variety of refreshments will be sold with strawberry shortcake as the specialty. Amusements will be provided for both young and old. The public is cordially invited.
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SYNOPSIS Ned Holden, son of a Yankee mother and an American miasion. ary, looks the typical American tourist on his first trip to the Orient. Yet he had been brought up in Asia. Officially an ethnologist, he is actually a secret service man. Back from a dangeroua expedition, Holden now plans a long holiday in Bangkok, Siam, among the Americans there. He meets Virginia Griffin, from St. Louis, Missouri; Daniel Griffin, noted Oriental art collector; and hia secretary and Virginia's fiance, Andri Chambon. Immediately attracted to Virginia, Holden is planning a eight-seeing jaunt with her when he learns of the theft of the famous Emerald Buddha from the royal temple. Revolution may result if the Buddha cannot be restored to its shrine before the Siamese winter festival six weeks hence. Holden, loathe to undertake the search since Virginia's father as a collector ia under suspicion, finally consents to do so. Next day he searches the hotel rooms of his new friends. Virginia returns unexpectedly and finds him there. Unable to give the true explanation of his presence, Holden allows the girl he already loves to believe him a common hotel thief. An hour later, Chambon angrily accuses Virginia of secretly meeting Holden. Surprised at her own strange reactions, Virginia says nothing of the recent encounter. Next day, the Griffin party prepares to leave for a motor trip through French Indo-China. They hire as interpreter a Laotian named T’Fan, recommended by the Governor, really Holden in a clever disguise CHAPTER VIII T’Fan salaamed and withdrew. A moment later LaGreze followed him into the office and closed and locked the door. Then with a smile lighting his strong Gallic face, he seized the brown man’s hand in a hearty grasp. “Magnifiq-ue," he exclaimed. "My friend, I cannot believe it even now. It is—what can I say?” “Thanks, old chap. I think it went over pretty well. But I had one bad moment when she said she thought she had seen me somewhere before.” And Ned Holden smiled too, in recollection. You are not Ned Holden, but truly T’Fan, a Laotian headman,” the French governor marveled. "What can it be that so changes your very face?” “Some brown stain, a pair of earrings, and a wig. The wig won’t come off—hope not, anyhow—and is a real human scalp with original hair such as only one man in the Orient can supply. My new high forehead and headcloth help out too.” • “But it Is the thoughts behind the forehead that change you most,” LaGreze said earnestly. “They are Laotian thoughts.” Ned knew it. It puzzled him always; troubled him too. When he stole into native garb and make-up, another personality seemed to steal into his body. Yes, he had been held too close in the arms of Asia. “But can you play the part through to the end?” LaGreze asked. “Hour after hour, day after day, without a moment’s rest between the acts? You will have an exacting audience—” Ned knew this, too. Chambon, for instance, was an expert on art. He would detect a flaw in Ned’s histrionics as quickly as a false symbol on a Sung vase. Griffin himself, Ned considered, was far from the simpleton he sometimes pretended to be; he came from Missouri and must be shown. And Virginia’s young blue eyes were the clearest of all. She had danced with him—hauled him t>ut of a closet at the point of a pistol —and his least little slip in word er
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1938.
tone or mannerism might stir her memory and strip away his mask. At night he must sit with the bearers and, The car drivers. If he gestured, grunted, or snored like a white man, or if ho failed to sleep, eat, spit, and think like a native, those slanted sharp eyes would find him out. And he knew perfectly well what would happen tnen. He had never any doubts about it, from the first. But that was the glory of the game: to win greatly, or to play no more. “I’ll have a go at it, anyway," Ned said aloud. “Now, Excellency, the time is short and we must talk fast Any danger of a native servant at the keyhole?” “My secretary is on guard.” "Excellency, you are a man who knows men. Am I trailing the thieves of the Emerald Buddha, or three harmless tourists?” "It is incredible—it does not make sense—and yet—and yet—” “Yet I’m betting my stack—and I have only five weeks more to play. Did you find out anything of Chambon’s family history?” "Only that his father was a great swordsman, a good soldier, and something of a roui. So perhaps it was destiny that he should be found dead in the woods of his estate, dressed for a duel, with a saber in his hand.” “Where was his wound? Square in the heart?” "How did you know?” "I was told.” But Ned did not reveal that his informant was only an ink-marked cardboard in Chambon’s room. "What about his mother?” “No one knew her well. She stayed out of sight Yet sho was the daughter of a noble Corsican named Valinco, a name I have heard not long ago, but cannot think where.” This fitted in well enough, Ned thought He recalled a line from the letter in Chambon’s trunk: “I whose ancestors were great lords when his were chained serfs in a field.” The long-pedigreed Corsican nobles were traditionally contemptuous of the French aristocracy. “I think she was an invalid: at least her letter spoke of medicines,” Ned said. “The same letter mentioned Chow See Veet. Ever hear of him?” “It means ‘Lord of Life,’ the title of the old Laotian kings before the Siamese conquest. Why should that be in a letter of a Corsican woman?” “Don’t ask me. Maybe she belonged to one of those Oriental cults in France, and Chambon came honestly by his hobby. What do you think of Griffin and his daughter?” "Entirely charming.” And Ned’s own countrymen besides! “Yet they’re mixed up with the theft of the Emerald Buddha,” he muttered bitterly. "I wish some one else had the job of pinning it on them. I’m almost sorry I asked you to work me into their party as a spy.” “I did not do so for you alone, old friend. The Governor-General of all Indo-China made the same request. And his Siamese majesty did ask him.” Ned knew Kismet, so he only swore and went on with his work. LaGreze helped him list the outfit for the trip. The party had already two cars with drivers, and would need two more, one for supplies and one to carry home the curios and art objects they hoped to buy on the road. There were no hotels in Laos, only rest-houses in the shade of the jungle, so Ned was told to find them a bearer and a cook. “I’ve got the cook.” Ned said. "My old Koh-Ken, whose curried chicken would sweeten the disposition of a cobra. I’d think they’d'-eed at least two bearers. And what about an ayah for the girl?” But the ayah and one bearer were already provided. Chambon had hired the man, Pu-Bow by name, at
the hotel; on whose recommendation La Grcze did not know. In native fashion, Pu-Bow had brought his mother as a maid for Virginia Griffin. She was said to be a Frenchtrained Laotian woman from Vientien. “I'll look twice at that pair,” Ned told himself. But the opportunity did not arise until the outfit stood ready at the door of the Residence, and Pu-Bow and his mother put their war-bags on the baggage truck. Ned looked twice—and felt the hairs raise under his wig. Then and there the plot against the Emerald Buddha lost what little sense it seemed to have and went raving crazy. And Ned smiled under his paint to think that if this sort of thing continued he would go crazy too. Pu-Bow and his mother were not coolies, but Mandarins of the most ancient Laotian blood. No brass anklets or cotton sarongs could offset the delicacy and refinement of their features and the long pride of the centuries in their bearing. Yet one of them would hew wood and draw water, while the other carried Virginia's clothes to the river, to pound them clean with a stone. There was a surge in the back of Ned’s head—a mist and a slowlygrowing light—and suddenly he believed he knew this man's name. It was not Pu-Bow, but Chow Sua-Lai-Mak-Ba—literally, My Lord the Leopard—one of the last of the great Laotian barons and a particularly irritating thorn in the side of France. Still Ned made no sign. “You shall ride in this lorry, Pu-Bow, but walk on the steep hills at the driver’s word,” he said in the Laotian tongue. “Mother, do you still guard your beauty from the sun? You are white as a Tuan.” “Do not mock me, T’Fan. Once there was beauty here”—and she touched her worn face—“to call forth song in the firelight even from a Laotian chief like you. I am pale now from the darkness of French kitchens. Would that I could walk again on the rice banks in the sun!” Just then the governor and his guests came into the courtyard. Virginia had changed to a tan ridingsuit that brought out the pale gold of her hair and disclosed the sweet lines of her young form; Griffin and Chambon wore light outdoor togs with business-like boots. “T’Fan, tell the drivers to head toward Chieng-khuang,” Chambon ordered Ned. “We want to drive slowly, see everything, and look for any curios or Laotian art worth taking home.” Ned now salaamed to LaGreze, and asked his consent to consult a military road map in his office. His tone was proper, but there were flashing heliographs under his brows. “I’ll have to find it for you, T’Fan,” the Governor played up. “You others will excuse me.” And a moment later the two friends were alone. “Do I look crazy?” Ned asked tensely. “No more than usual,” LaGreze answered, smiling. “Then Pu-Bow is not Pu-Bow, but Chow Sua-Lai-Mak-Ba.” "Mon Die id" “What does it mean, Excellency?” “Who can say? Trouble, of a certainty. I can arrest The Leopard if you think best—” "It wouldn’t spoil their game; only put them on guard. As it is, I'm one card up.” “Then we shall leave it in your hands. Thank the good God you are on the ground. Ned, my friend. France will not sleep soundly until the Buddha of Royal Siam is back in its temple.” "I don’t think I'll sleep at all.” (To be continued.) Comttht DJ Kdtano Marshall OtiUlbulad bj kln« btaturet Siodicata. loc
RATES One Time—Minimum charge of 25c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words, 1 !4o per word Two Times—Minimum charge , of 40c for 20 worda or lesa. I Over 20 worda 2c per word for I the tvr tlmea. Three Imos —Minimum charge of 50c for 20 worda or lesa. Over 20 worda 2'/ a c per word ; for the three tlmea. I Cards of Thanka ......... 35c I Obltuarler and versea. SI.OO I Open rate-dieplay advertising 35c per column Inch. • « FOR SALE FOR SALE — Farm lease blanks, three for sc. Decatur Daily Democrat, 106 No. Second St. 276-ts FOR SALE —Milk route. Inquire at Cloverleaf Creamery. 145t3x WANTED WANTED — 2 or 3 light housekeeping rooms on first floor. Box 509, care Democrat. 146-3tx WANTED —Part time collector for magazine accounts. Pay your rent with a few hours work each month. PERIODICAL PUBLISHERS’ SERVICE BUREAU. Inc., 204 Big Four Building. Indianapolis. Indiana. 145t3 eod xs WANTED —Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts ot title. French Quinn. 152-m-wf FOR SALE —Ice boxes; oil stoves; % bed; '/i bed; day bed, complete; 4x9 rug. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson St. It FOR SALE — 3 good milk cows. Dierkes Auto Parts, Nutt man Ave. Phone 322. 147-3tx FOR SALE—Special baby chicks. 500 Barred Rocks; 200 Wyandottes. Hatching Mondays and Thursdays all summer. Book order now. Decatur Hatchery, Phone 497. 147-3 t RECESS SOUGHT (CONTINUED FROM PAGH ONE) the party and settlement of an organization dispute in Madison county. Blanchard J. Horne, former Madison county chairman, is challenging the election of Ray V. Gibbs of Anderson to the post. The committee will hold a luncheon before going into session. o
Tri Kappa Rummage Sale, Bowers Bldg. Saturday, 11 a.m. 147-3 t O LEG IL NOTICE OF TI BLIC HEARING FORM NO. lUSI Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Adams County, Indiana, will, at 9:00 A. M. on the 14th day of July 1938 at the County Commissioner’s Room in Auditor’s Office, Court House in the C‘ty, of Decatur, in said County, begin investigation of the application of the following named person, requeuing the issue to the applicant, at the location hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Permit of the class hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of said applicant, and the propriety of issuing the Permit applied for to such applicant at the premises named: John Joseph, 38366. (City Confectionery), 102 S. 2nd St., Decatur, Ever Retailer. Said investigation will be open to the public ,and public participation is requested. Alcoholic Beverage commission of Indiana, By: John F. Noonan. Secretary Hugh A. Barnhart Excise. Administrator June 15-22 — o Decatur Riverside Community Sale every Friday. W ts JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth st. Phone 102. ONLY Three Days left to buy one of our 11 remaining Cedar Chests al discount. Ten arc Walnut. One Maple. These Caswell - Runyan chests with Yale locks, copper plated metal, dust strips and guarantee against moth damage are well worth the regular retail price. Phone 61
FOR RENT FOR RENT—S room modern apartment. Outside entrance. Mrs. John Myers, 228 North 4th. Gas and oil stove for sale, 145-3 t FOR RENT — 5 room all modern bouse. Furnace and hardwood floors. Dyonis Schmitt. Phone 49. FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping rooms. Private entrance. First floor. Garage. Phone 511. 310 No. Third St. 146-3 t MISCELLANEOUS CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead stock. Will pay for live horses. Day or night service. Phone collect. Harley Roop 870 A. 111-ts NOTICE — Parlor Suits recovered. We recover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Also good used ice boxes. Decatur Upholsters, Phone 420. 145 South Second St, 125-30 t Board and Room Board and room at 315 N. First St. 146t3x , —O' NOTICE — Bargain Chick Sale. Closing out for the season. Friday and Saturday the remainder of our chicks must be sold. Pinedale Hatchery. Phone 432. 147-2 t o 4-H Calf Club Tour Is Started Tuesday The Adams county annual 4-H club tour started Tuesday morning, at the Noah Rich farm, where the club calves were inspected and feeding and summer care was discussed. The next stop was at the Ruben Steurk farm, where Leßoy Schwartz demonstrated fitting a calf for the show. Noon found the tour at the Lehman Park at Berne, where a basket lunch was served and was topped off with Ice cream furnished by the Price and Rich ideal Dairy of Decatur. After lunch the tour moved to the Otto B. Lehman farm, where Chris Inniger and Sanford Frazee conducted a judging contest on a class of Ayshire cows. The last stop for the day was at the William Burke farm where Juanita Lehman demonstrated showing a calf in the ring. Chris Inniger annoucned that the next training school tor the judging team will be held at the Reuben Schwartz farm Friday evening, July 1.
tppolnlnient of AdminiMlrntor Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Frank :O. Kleinhenz late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. (Arthur B. Kleinhenz. Administrator. Xathnn C. Nelson, Attorney June 8, 1938 June 8-15-22 NOTICE FOR I Notice is hereby given that the ' Board of School Trustees of the City of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana, will receive sealed bids for the purchase and removal of the following described school buildings belonging ! to said School City: The two (2) story brick building with outside dimensions of 71 feet by 52 feet located on Inlets No. 243, 244 and 245 in Joseph Crab*b’s Western Addition of the town, now city, of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana, commonly’ known as the West Ward School .Building; also, the two (2) story I brick building with outside dimen- • sions of 75 feet by 49 feet located •on inlots No. 166, 467 and 468inNuttman’s Northwestern Addition to the town, now city, of Decatur, Adams ■ County, Indiana, commonly known I the North Ward School Building. ’ Bids for the same will be received as follows: 1. For the purchase and removal of the above described buildings including the removal of the basement walls, footings and floor. 2. For the purchase and removal of the above described buildings to the | grade line. Said bids will be received until | 7:30 P. M. on the 6th day of July, 1938, at the office of the Board of ] S< hool Trustee# of the City of pe- | catur, Indiana, at the Decatur High tS.-hooi Building. Each bidder must h'eposit with said board when he files his bid, a certified cheek in the ' sum of Fifty’ Dollars 1150.09) as a i guarantee that he will accept «aid ! bid and carry out the said work. The I successful bidder will be required to enter into a contract with said Board of School Trustees for the razing and removal of said buildings from the above described real estate, said buildings to be removed from said r«2al estate upon receiving notice from said Board of School Trustees, rhe successful bidder will further be required to give a bond with surety in the amount of his bid to be approved by the said board, insuring the faithful performance of said work according to the contract. The Board of School Trustees hereby reserves the toilets, 'bell, black-boards and all removable equipment in said building*’. Said Mack-boards tn be removed by the sivi-essful bidder and delivered to s.iid board as directed. Said buildings shall be sold for not less than the full appraised lor cash on day of sale. The Board of School Trustees of the City of Decatur, Indiana, hereby reserves the right to reject any and all bids and re-advertise the same. . „ . , By order of the Board of School Trustees of the City of Decatur. Indiana. .lohH L. DeVoss, Attorney June 22-2! N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyex Examined • Glassex Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.
MARKET REPfift OF FOREIGN Brady s Market for Cr Cri'gville. Hoagland an ■ ■ n No commission mul 110 Veals Io to to to , '<> Io 350 lbs., and up HHm Roughs i>ii< k Yearlings ' CHICAGO GRAIN ’ July wl th Corn v EAST BUFFALO • East Buffalo, N. Y . (U.Ri —Livestock: Hogs, 2oo; 15c lower; choice 160-230 lbs., avXuS)!:. around tl ly $9.35. Cattle, 150; lower; covered grass steers and heifers vi $6.50; plain and medium $5.25-$6.25; cutter grades, lightweight bull-. -■ ■■ Calves. 100; vealers tMa* - good and choii medium, $6-SB. HBH'' Sheep. 900; spring lambs Medium to choice imludiirz 75 per cent bucks. ewe and wether selections toward. $10.50: most around $8.50; fat ewes, FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK* Fort Wayne. Ind.. June —Livestock: Hogs, 5c higher; $9.05; 220-240 lbs.. $8.95: lbs., $8.95; 1601 SO lbs. 260 lbs.. $8.75; 260 IK. 280-300 lbs.. $8.45; 325-350 lbs., $8.35; lbs.. $8.55: 120 140 IL-. $s 120 lbs.. $8.05. |M| Roughs. $7.25: $6. Calves. $8.50; lambs. $9; el >ped| lambs. $6. INDIANAPOLIS LIV E Hog receipts, lbs.. steady to Im ! RK above 240 ib- M|)! It so 15c lower, mostly '■-•■:' Mj choice 1.2'»" lbs.. ' good 1,262 Ib. steers. $9.50: heifers, $0.50; other fed ss■s9.2s; vealers. steady. Sheep. 700; spring iambs. to 50c lower: bulk good and lambs. 5M9.5": slaughter steady at $3 down. HBK CLEVELAND PRODUCE RH Ci. v. 'a.. Produce: Batter, unsettled, extras. standards. 29> 2 e. , Eggs, unsettled; extra 21c; extra firsts. 19’ceipts, 18%-19c. Live poultry, weak: 11 ■' 20c; ducks, fancy. 5 15c; average run. I :; ' and small, 12c. _ Potatoes. Maine. dins, $2.25: Alabama '' $2.40-$2.50 bag of 1"" ,i)S : and North Carolina ml. m a _ $1.90; California per bag I<"' lbs.: V/mma. wh'-«| $3-$3.25 per bbl.; North al ' $2.60 per bbl. LOCAL GRAIN MARKE7 M BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected June Prices to be paid tomorrow. M No. 1 Wheat. 60 lbs. or beuer $ No. 2 Wheat, etc New No. 2 Oats • Yellow Corn. b '' " New No. 2 Soy Bom.. Rye H CENTRAL SOYA CO. H New No. 2 Soy Bean- __ markets at a GLANCE Stocks; strong in active tradu ■ Bonds: higher and mode'H - W tive. U. S. government tssti‘-> W Curb stocks: higher. Chicago stooks: higher., g Call money: one l ” r '' HI - |t!j ß Foreign exchange: firm tion to dollar. , Cotton: off about a ■«. » Grains: wheat easy. co ‘ t . at H Chicago stocks: hogs s M tie strong, sheep weak- « Rubber; up almost one ha M a pound vafL Silver bar in New-iork M ed at 42% cents a fine oua
