Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1938 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

r Test Your i Can you answer seven of these tan questions: Turn to page Four for the answers. » ♦ 1. What is the uame for molten rock erupted by a volcano? 2. Name the father of Cleopatra. 3. Has the U. <B. Government ever issued a three dollar bill? 4. How many yards are in 1 rod? 5. Who won the 1937 Five Hundred Mile Memorial Day*race at Indiawpolis? 6. Where in the Gobi desert? 7. What is the name for rays discovered by Roentgen? 8. Name the president of the new Naval Board, appointed by the Secretary of the Navy. 9. Do children born to American citizens, temporarily residing abroad, have American citizenship? 10. In which state was President McKinley born? Tomato Festival At Elwood On July 12 District contest for the selection of a Tomato Queen to represent Decatur and Adams county at the annual Tomato Festival at Elwood, lad.. July 12, will be held at Marion July 6, it was learned here today. Central district contest will be held at Franklin, July 7, and for the southern district at Vincennes, July | Dr. S. M. Friedley ■ Veterinarian Phone 9434 Office and Res. 1133 N. 2nd st.

||l* I *l||||||||N | I||| ONCE MORE, we repeat, it’s always good pol-icy to insure your wedding gifts. A Wedding Presents Floater policy written through The Automobile Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., costs little yet insures wedding gifts at all times and in all places against practically all risks. The Suttles-Edwards Co., Agent Jack Leigh, I. Bernstein and A. D. Suttles, solicitors. Aetna Caaualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Oacatur, Ind. Phone 351

BARNEY GOOGLE NOW SHOWING-“INCOGNITO!” By BiUy Deßeck GRERT SCOTT. LOVA7AEUSSEN- ’ 7 LRW ME '.'AT 'MRS DOWNRIGHt" / IHRR " A W® l GET R HOLD ON HOURSELF- -W SE COULD 1 MKSSEL- \?°* S >-? "* T)a^ HOUR. FRCE \S RS RED / \ HERR ft FIN J ?\ X Z^~ ** J> ° Ol) '>'Doo\\ PS ft GOBBLER'S SNOUT- 7 \ ORRP -/Z / HOU KNOW WHRT V. \ when X felt SO ( ' Ft’ I BETTER J' / V THINK THRT MUSIC \ PUIM6 TREWBUSH ftN' Uf ; W e 3*J 4 HUSTLE HOU HOME- / ■'-'X—7 / WE HERRO WPS JUST I SWA-LISSEN- —\ Z> \—2a4 Hfici. /D> I the WIND SWISHING VOHPTTS Z*y ( S * 111 ■?■ < A ■ I ’THROUGH TH’ TREtS j "TUCXT 222 '7a£ jgg; * X 'fy"~ ' J y/TK k END SLOWIN'TH /W ‘ jl£ ‘"nT «« ' JW&& &&&&*' J / 6-7 t 77 W \ VERVES RROUND- 7 'X~" «UL<7Jto'' / L ) '■' -" -. "-- , ... -r. • Li-, '-~L ’ . .. .r. . 7T' . . . ~~ ' ■ THIMBLE THEATER WITCHFUL MUSIC FROM THE WOODS By SEGAR f THAT BILL MUST Bt~) SWEE PER, X. /."’ H fHE PUT WS CROWN ON \J •»,/ WS MAJESTY!}) J? ~Z PASSED BEFORE ji XWE GOT SUMPIN\ Z.> /T\Z THE CAT ?N'THEN RUN 11 ' R—<r?§Wef7 ~ q<v <& &e I I 1 (' 7-iif,| f Wyour COAL NOW = E f - SUMMER PRICES ARE LOWEST. OHmsmus HAT - GRAIN - COAL phone 19

Girls between the ages of 18 and j 32 inclusive, will be eligible to eni ter the Northern Indiana contest at ; Marlon. A queen and two attendants will be selected to enter the Elwood I contest. Girls from all counties north of the dividing lute east and west ' through Frankton may enter the I Marlon contest. o__ COURT HOUSE Ulysses Stauffer to Ida B. Haiues. inlot 175 in Berne tor sl. Mary Neuenschwander et al to j Katie Hirschy et al, one-half of I an acre in Berne. Edna M. Bedford, ex. to Roger | Bluhm. 80 acres In Monroe township for $6,800. Albert B. Miller et ux to Charles O. Hobrock et ux, parts of inlots ■ 224 and 225 in Decatur for sl. Marriage Licenses j Robert Huston, Tiffon, Ohio Legal Xotice of Public lUarhiK Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board ot Adams County, Indiana, will, at 9:VU A M. on the Hth day of July, 193 S at the County Commissioner s Room I in Auditor's office. Court House in tlic City of Decatur in said County, login investigation of the application of the following named person, j requesting the issue to the applicant, .it the location hereinafter set out, i 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: William H Freitag, 39053, titest- ■ aurantl, Preble — Beer Retailer. Said investigation will be open to i tlie public, and public participation ! is requested. Alcoholic. Beverage Commission of Indiana 1 By: John F. Noonan. Secretary Hugh A. Barnhart, Excise Administrator. - June 30 July 7

LOOK at These Bargains! 1930 Chev. Coach $59 1929 Chev. Sedans 49 1929 Chev. Roadster $39 Save at P. A. KUHN Chevrolet Co. Used Car Lot Monroe Street, West of Niblick & Co. S P RAGUE OFFERS KITCHENS of the HOUR We carry the Hoosier Kitchen Furniture featured by Peter Grant over WLW. Come in and let us show you these step and time saving kitchens with living room beauty. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 South Second St. Decatur, Ind. Phone 199

truck driver to Dorothy Weraof, | Decatur store clerk. o Street Anglere Lack Control Brookline, Mass. (UR) — Two tuxedo-garbed fishermen cast their; Hues on Beacon street about 21 o'clock in the morning. The lead

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CHAPTER XIV Ned let Koh-Ken sleep an hour past his time, then called his name. At once the old man was beside him. “Keep close watch tonight," Ned ordered. "Yes, lord. The dead walk tonight.” It was true. All the dark was thronged with ghosts, but what were their names, and where were the lost graves from which they rose, and what was the portent of their return, even old Koh-Ken of the dark blood did not understand, let alone thia white-skinned alien clasped merely for one life time in the arms of Asia. Ned went to his blanket and was soon asleep. It was the black ebbtide of the night, just before its turn, that he wakened with a leap of his eyelids and a strong surge of his heart. The moon had set There was a dim glimmer, hardly more than a pale mist, over the eastern hills that promised soon the rush and splendor of the tropic dawn. The fire had burned down to a few red sticks ready to fall to black coals. His old heart shocked more than he knew by Pu-Bow’s violence, Koh-Ken had fallen to sleep. Without one movement to show that he was awake, Ned looked and listened. In spite of the unbroken dark and the brooding silence, he knew now that he had not been summoned from sleep in vain. The camp was full of living things crawling in the dust One of them was only a few feet from his bed. It was no more than a haze in his eyes, a shadow vaguely less black than the night that shielded it, yet slowly, stealthily he saw it moving toward the rest-house. And now when he listened hard, he could hear it breathe. Ned sprang up with a yell of alarm. But before he could get to his feet, the shadow had leaped for him and was clutching at him with little hard hands. Ned snatched at it once, identified a small naked man, and cast it away. Then he darted for the rest-house. The events of the next few seconds would always be a tangle in Ned’s brain. Panic broke loose; fear ran in the dark. The silence exploded into savage shouts, yells of fear, gobblings and monkey-like chatterings. The camp was full of men who ran and dodged, collided and fell. Ned tripped over one man, another clutched at his legs only to be kicked away. Yet he gained the door of the mess-shack, collided with some one there, and blind to everything but the strong will of his heart, fought his way to Virginia’s room. Nokka was by the door, struggling with something that gobbled and ran. Virginia was caught in her mosquito-net like a moth in a web, but she broke through and their hands met in the darkness. “Where’s your flashlight?" “On the floor by my bed." Still holding her with one hand he groped for the light and presently clutched it. An instant later its yellow beam filled the room. But Griffin’s rifles were all in his own room. Ned moved to the door, Virginia behind him and protected by his body, the light flung in front. As it danced into the middle-room where Chambon slept, it burnished the naked sides of two men just in the act <f leaping out the main door, and its furthest beam caught the

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1938.

sinker from one of their lines ! went through the plate-glass window of a nearby drug store Whereupon the fishermen in disgust climbed into an automobile and drove away. ■ o I Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

whites of a pair of eyes at the window. Ned sprang to the entrance and swept the camp with his light, but all it showed was his own men huddled in a group by the fire and some dim running figures that soon disappeared. In the meantime, Chambon was getting up from the floor, dazed but apparently unhurt Ned heard him scratch a match, light the oil lamp, and then snick a shell into the chamber of his rifle. And the shadows leaped and cavorted on the walls as Virginia seized the lamp and darted into the further room, where her father slept. Through the incredible silence that followed the raid, her voice rose in a frantic cry. "Fath tri Fathert Whtrt art yous" Before Ned could cross the room, the girl reappeared at the door, the light trembling in her hand. "Father—isn't—here," aha said in broken tones. “They’ve carried him og.” Until now Ned had been fighting in a daze. In the violence and terror of the night attack, grappling with invisible things that clutched and gobbled and ran, he was only another savage in the dark. It was his heart, not his head, that had driven him to Virginia's beside at all coats. But this news she cried from the doorway was a concrete thing, a hard fact to seize and face. All at once he was Ned Holden, on the job. “Stay here with Chambon,” he told Virginia. “Master,” —and he called Chambon so without conscious effort, to suddenly clear was his mind and sharp his thoughts—“guard her with your rifle.” Flashing his light before him, Ned entered Griffin’s room. There were his clothes over a chair—his rifle in a corner—here was the imprint of his head on his pillow. But the man himself had vanished without trace. Had he been knocked unconscious while he slept and carried off bodily? More likely he had yielded quietly to overwhelming numbers. And sensibly too; caught in the mosquito net was a wicked-looking iron knife with a carved teakwood grip and a row of uncut topaz where the blade joined the hilt A dean blade. This was good news. Kha chieftains carried such knives; added proof that the raiders were Kha savages from the hills. To spare Virginia, he put the weapon out of sight; then returned to her and her lover waiting in the next room. As he came through the door, he was arrested by their faces in the lamplight so vivid against the shadowy background. What a staunch little soldier was standing there, stark pale, but swallowing her sobs, her head up, her shoulders square. The expression on Chambon’s face he would never forget No bewilderment was there, hardly even curiosity, but a fateful 100 k... Yes, and a look of dignity, hardly missing grandeur. A great antagonist was this man Chambon, a strong soul. A Napoleon might look like that, after a faithful regiment had been annihilated to gain one little rise of ground. The night’s raid was no mystery to Chambon. This fact was plain in his fa-e. But wild horses would never drag the truth from him, at this stage of the affair. This too was certain as the now-breaking dawn. Virginia ran toward Ned with a

Kittens and Rat Flay Cambridge, O. (U.R) — Two small kittens in a tire shop hero certainly are not “rat killers.” The two kittens play daily with a rat, which seems to enjoy his strange playmates.

little cry. “You haven’t—found him.” “Not yet, Heaven-Born." So spoke T’Fan. But Ned Holden longed to kiss the tear mist from her eyes. “Tell me the truth. I can stand it. Do you think he’s still alive?” "If they had meant to kill him, they would have stabbed him while he slept.” “Perhaps they were bandits, taking him for ransom. Doesn’t that seem likely?” Her hand went to her heart as she waited his answer. To her this would be the least terrible solution of the mystery. Kidnaping for gain she could understand; any other explanation would be too strange and sinister to contemplate. But she had asked for the truth, and Ned knew he must not deny her. “No, Heaven-Born. The Khas are not bandits. They have dons this through fear.” He saw her wide eyes sink and narrow. ■‘Tear—of what?” “I do r»»t know, yet They are a race of children, given to sudden panics over nothing. Perhaps Tuan could tell you.” “I, T’Fan?" Chambon demanded. “I have never seen a Kha before this trip. Now eall up your drivers, and we’ll start at once for Chiengkhuang to get help from the French. They’ll scour these hills with troops.” “And what will they find, lord?” Ned’s tone was so grave that Chambon stopped and stared. “What do you mean, T’Fan?” Virginia broke in. “The Khas are a wild, strange people. If we drive them to panic with soldiers searching their villages, we will never see Griffin Tuan again. But if let alone, they will keep him unharmed until their end is gained. We must wait till they make terms.” The light was clearing now, so Ned went out to look for tracks in the dust of the road. At least fifty Khas had taken part in the raid, and about eight of them had led Griffin bare-footed, probably at the point of a knife, across the road and into the thickets. There the trail was lost. As he searched, Pu-Bow watched with a wooden face. Here was another who knew more than he cared to tell. “It was you who talked to the Khas on the road,” Ned snapped. “Perhaps you can throw some light on last night’s shame.” “The shame was yours alone,” was the bold reply. “You are headman and protector of the camp. I have already told my masters the Khas’ words.” “Yes, I am headman.” Ned closed his fist and examined the skin over the knuckles. “Perhaps you found it so last night.” A Laotian baron, even though dressed as a coolie, does not care to be reminded of a blow in the face. His dark eyes caught fire and his hand dived under his jacket. But at Ned’s wicked little smile, the hand came out empty. “Have mercy, lord," he murmured, lowering his head. “For the faithful dog, good bones and a soft hand,” Ned quoted from the old Laotian philosophers. “For the jackal—poisoned meat, lest he steal the slippers from the door. It may be, Pu-Bow, that you will soon be called again to interpret between the white man and the Khas.” (To be continued.) Conyrttht b» Edison Mfirihall Distributed by Klee Fcsturm Syndicate ioe

SOaMDS

RATES One Time—Minimum charge of 26c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words, I'/«c per word Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words 2c per word for the tw" times. Three .Imea—Minimum charge of 50c for 20 words or lese. . Over 20 words 2'/ 2 c per word | for the three times. , Cards of Thanks 35c ' Obituaries and verses—. *I.OO 1 | Open rate-display advertising 35c per column Inch. FOR SALE FOR SALE — Spring ducks. SI.OO each, your choice. 1022 South 13 street. 151 St-x FOR SALE — Used Furniture, Stoves, Pianos, Rugs! 1 Studio Couch $1.50-; 3 Buffets $2.00 to SB.OO 2 large round tables $3.00 each. 2 Kitchen ranges $3.00 and $35.00. •Short Davenport $3.00. 2 Pianos A-l condition, cheap. 1 Oil Stove, cheap 4 Axminster rugs all A-l condition, cheap. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 So. Second St. 153 3t FOR SALE — Two-year-old colt, broke. L. F. Fuhrman, Decatur route one. 151-3tx FOR SALE — Good as new porch swing. Phone 383 at 343 Mercer Aveue. 151-3tx FOR SALE —2 new type Fordson tractors; 4 Fordson tractors; 8 Fordson tractors for parts; 1 John Deere tractor; 1 McCormick-Deer- > ing hay tedder; 1 used threshing machine; 1 used combine; 1 two-year-old mare colt. See the new Oliver tractors, combines and threshing machines on display. Craigville Garage, Craigville, Ind. 151-5 t FOR SALE — Innerspring mattress- i es. 60 Inner-Spring mattresses. selling from $12.50 to $39.50. Liber-j al trade-in allowance for your old: mattress. Sprague Furniture Co.* 152 So. Second St. 153 3t ■ •■■ : FOR SALE—MiIk fed spring chick ’ ens. Marion Stoutenbeiry, Bel- j inont farms. Phone 5432. 152-1 FOR SALE — Two acres, corner Thirteenth and Jackson Streets. A real buy. Roy Jolmtson, phene 104 or 1**22.152 a 3t FOR SALE — Pianos. New and us I ed pianos all selling at prices you I can afford to pay. Liberal allowance ! for your old piano. Sprague Furniture Co.. 152 So. Second St. 153 3t CLEAN-UP SPECIALS—Ice boxes, $1.75 each while they last; buy one rocking chair, $1.50, get one free; three 9x12 rugs, $2 each; sewing machine, $2.50; square dining table. $1.50; buffet, $2.50; sideboard, $1.75; dressing table, $1; many othey bargains. Decatur Upholster Shop, across from courthouse. 145 S. Second. FOR SALE OR TRADE for livestock—Au 8-ft. binder in working order. Phone Monroe M-3, J. H. Kahnert, Route 1, Monroe. 153-3 t FOR SALE — Milwaukee binder 6' cut, canvas and binder in A-l condition. J. J. Yost, 1 m. north. 1 in. west of Monroe. 152 b3t FOR SALE — Baby Chick Special this week, 500 White Rock. 500 Barred Rock, some started chicks. Decatur Hatchery. 153t3 — Trade In A Good Town — Decatur

N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined • Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. IZEOUMOMMaMeni ENJOY YOUR PORCH and LAWN with Comfortable and Attractive FUR NIT UR E As A Special this week we offer a fine selection of Deck and Steamer CHAIRS 59c 10 $l-79 ALSO—Large assortment of Gliders and other furniture. Phone 61

FOR RENT FOR RENT —5 room modern upper duplex, North Second St. See Paul H. Graham Co. Phone 239. 151-3tx FOR RENT — House trailer for vacation trips. To rellaibio party. Phone 5655. Homer Templin, 103 North 13th St. 153-3 t-x FOR RENT — 50 acres of good blue grass pasture with plenty of water and shade, 1% miles east of Decatur. Willar Steele, Phone 5424. 153 a 3t-x FOR RENT — Eight room all modern house, motor plumbing, recently redecorted inside and out Phone 937. 152 5t FOR RENT—Terveer house corner Madison and Fifth streets. Furnace, toilet and bath, lights, garage. Phone 43 or 349. 150a6tx o MISCELLANEOUS CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead stock. Will pay for live horses. Day or night service. Phone collect. Harley Roop 870-A. 152-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 LOST AND FoFnD LOST — Small brown tooled leather zipper purse containing currency and some small change. Also driver license. Finder please return to this office and receive reward. 151 a3t-x

WANTED WANTED —We have an opening I for a roofing and siding salesI man in Decatur ami surrounding ! territory. Men with previous sales j experience preferred. Opportunity i for advancement is good. Fort I Wayne Builders Supply Co., Fort I Wayne, Ind. 151-3 t - WANTED —Loans on farms. East- . ern money. Low rates. Very 11b- ! eral terms. See me for abstracts ok title. French Quinn. 152-m-w f Third Robbery Gang Member Is Arrested Angola, Ind.. June 29. — (U.R) — | Police today held the third member of a gang charged with num- | erous robberies in northern Indiana and southern Michigan. Edwin Musser, 47, Branch county, Michigan, was arrested yesterday. Lyle Hutchins, Angola, and Jay Crow. Kinderhook, Mich., were arrested previousfy. Police said the trio had confessed. NOTH E FOB HII>S Notice is hereby given that the Hoard 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 Ci<y: The two (2) story’ brick building with outside dimensions of 71 feet by 52 feet located on Inlots.No. 243, 244 and 2i'» in Joseph Crabb’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 brick building with outside dimensions of 75 feet by 49 feet located no inlots No. 466, 467 amt 46S in Nuttinan’s Northwestern Addition to the town, now city, of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana, commonly known a* 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 base- | inent walls, footings and floor. 2 For the punrha.se and removal ol I the above described buildings to the I grade line. Said bids will l»e received until 17:30 P. M. on the 6th day of July. I 1fr.38, at the office of the Board of j School Trustees of the City of Defeatur, Indiana, at the Decatur High School Building. Each bidder must (deposit with said board when h»files his hid, a certified check in the sum of Fiftv Dollars (|50.00) as a I guarantee that he will acccrt »aid bid and carry out the said work. The I successful bidder will be required to jenter into a contract with said Board , of School Trustees fnr the razing ; and removal of said buildings from (the above described real estate, said ’buildings to be removed from said I real estate upon receiving notice I from said Board of School Trustees. The successful bidder will further be i r quired to give a bond with surety | in the amount of his bid to be api proved by the -said board, Insuring the faithful performance of said ■ work according to the contract. The Board of School Trustees iIo reby reserves the toilets, ben. black-hoards and all removable I equipment in said buildings. l/ai k-boards to be removed by toe 1 successful bidder and delivered to ! said board as directed. 1 Said liuildings shall be sold for not less than the full appraised value for cash on day of sale. I The Board of School Trustees ot | the otv of Decatur, Indiana, hereby reserves the right to reject any and all bids and re-advertise the By order of the Board of School | Trustees of the City ot De<atur, Indiana. .John la. DHomm. Attorney June 22-ZJ Decatur Riverside Com muni Sale Every Friday Nigh-

JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office «. Residence 430 No. Fifth st. Phone 102.

MARKET M Brady’s Market for Dre., I Ho, Blanda Ciowd it 12 Cor reeled June I No no I V eals received every S 100 to 120 11) 8 ' B 1120 to 150 lbs. ■ 1150 to 225 lbs. ■ 225 to 250 lb ß . ■ ; 250 to 275 lbs...' B 1275 to 300 lbs ■ 300 to 350 lb ß ■ 350 lbs., and up.”. fl Roughs . fl Stags ] Vealers fl Spring lambs ... "■ Spring buck tamb6 1 Yearlings ... I INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTN Indianapolis. Ind.. June ■”B —Livestock: ] Hog receipts,. 4,000; boll 236; market mostly 25 c ] bulk 160 250 lbs,. $5.75-s9»® 300 lbs., $8.40-$8.80; 3M-«] SB-$8.45; 100-160 lbs.. {yjj] ing sows, 15-25< higher at fl $7-SB. B Cattle, receipts, 1.100; fl 600; cutter, plain and iiiediuß cows, slow and weak; mark] erwise fully steady on all c] few loads good medium ] steers. $9.85-$80.25; others ] $9.25-$9.50; few heifers $] good beef cows, $6,50; te] vealers steady to 50c lowe] $8.50. B Sheep, receipts. 1.000; I lambs strong to 50c higher] good and choice ewe aud ] grades. $8.50-$9; slaughter] steady at $2.75 down. I EAST BUFFALO LIVES?] East Buffalo. June L'MllJj] stock: I Hogs: 500; 10c lower: fe] anti choice 160-220 lbs. $9.5«] bids stopping $9.40; Similarw] trucked ins $9.25. I Cattle: 75; steady; plains] dium cows $5.25-16.25; cutter] $3.85-5; lightweight bulls sj] Calves: 50; Vealers until] good and choice $9.50; pla] medium $6.50-8.50. | Sheep: 400; spring lambs I steady; good to choice fat hue] eluded $9.25-9.50; throwouts] fat ewes $3.50-4. I CLEVELAND PRODUCER Cleveland, June 29 — (U.b] duce: I Butter: unsettled Extra 31;I dards 29% in jobbing lots. ■ unsettled. Extra grade clet] extra firsts 19%; current re® 18%-dd. I 19; ducks fancy 6 lbs. and] Live poultry; weak. Hens® average run 12; Muscova and® Potatoes: Ohio $1.65-1.75■ 100 lbs.; Maine $1.75-2.00; Alii washed reds $2.40-2.50 per 111 hag; Virginia and North Ca® whites $1.75; California whit® 00-2.25 per bag of 100 lbs.; Vi® whites $2.85-2.90 bbl.; North Ci na $2.60. I CHICAGO G..AIN CLOSE! July Sept. 1 Wheat -7»% I Corn -57 >s • 1 ‘ FORT WAYNE LIVESTOC Hogs- 25 cents higher; 1» ms. ,89.15; 200-220 lbs. 180 lbs. $9.05; 220-240 1M l r r S s $S $S5;^> W « $8 55- 325-350 tbs. $8,451 n>s. $8.90; 120-140 lbs. SB.» 19(1 lbs. $8.40. itoughJ $7.00; slags s6* . calves $8.50; Lambs SB.OO, ed lambs $6.00. LOCAL grain market BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected June -? Prices to be paid to®*”’ No . 1 Wheat, SO lb»- or» etW j No. 2 Wheat, etc New No. 2 Oats w Yellow Corn New No. 2 Soy Beans ..-■■■■- Rye CENTRAL SOYA CO. New No. 2 Soy Beans a GLANCE A Stocks: strong and aJ' Bonds: l*iK l,er Cul .b stocks: Chicago stocks. Call money: 0110 p u-ntiyed Foreign excbauS iu relation to doiw • Cotton: Grains: wheats » sll ' 0 “ 8,< Chicago stocks. tie strong. bheep ‘ t ‘ one-lw |[ ce “ Rubber; up about pound. yoi-fc: Silver bar in *'