Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 23 August 1938 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
HUGE SEAPLANE STARTS FLIGHT 37-Ton French Seaplane Launched On Flight Across Atlantic Biscarosse, France, Auk. 23 — (U.R) _ The 37 ton seaplane, Lieutenant De Vaisseau Paris, France’s belated entry in the international ocean trials, took off today for a flight across the Atlantic to New York byway of the Azores. The Lieutenant De Vaisseau Paris, forced to abandon a similar attempt last week, will fly first to Lisbon, Portugal. It probably will remain there a day before resuming the flight, stopping to refuel at Horta, Azores, and then going on to Port Washington, N. Y„ New York City’s seaplane base. The big plane took oft last Thursday for Lisbon but had gone only a few miles when it was forced to return by a faulty propeller. It carried a crew of eight, commanded by pilot Henri Guillaumet, veteran of many Atlantic flights. The speed on the Lieutenant De Vaisseau Paris will be slightly above 100 miles per hour. Originally built three years ago, it flew the south Atlantic and sank In the harbor of Pensacola, Fla., during a wind storm. It was returned to France and rebuilt. The French are far behind other nations in thial trans-Atlantic flying looking toward establishing commercial lines. German pianes made eight crossings in 1936, 14 in 1937 and seven so far this year. —-—o — ♦ I Test Your Knowledge i Can you answer sevqn of these ten questions T Turn to page Four tor the answers. »— -• 1. Where is the group of islands called The Hebrides? 2. Who was the first Admiral of the U. S. Navy? 3. Which of the States leads in coal production? 4. Does the United States own the Panama Canal Zone? 5. Where is the Isle of Man? 6. How can the area of a circle be determined? 7. Name the President of Argentina. , , 8. What is a will called that is entirely in the handwriting of the testator? 9. Has the old Russian paper ruble any intrinsic value? 10. What does foot-pounds mean? COURT HOUSE Estate Cases Inventory number one was filed, examined and approved in the estate of Charles Miller. A petition to sell personal property was filed, submitted and sustained. The personal property was ordered sold at private sale without notice for cash at not less than the appraisement. Inventory number two was filed in the estate of O. Erwin Miller. A petition to sell personal property was filed, submitted and sustained. The personal property was ordered sold at private sale without notice at not less than the appraisement for cash. A petition and a schedule for the determination of inheritance tax was filed in the estate of Rosetta J. Pyle. The final report was filed in the estate of William Liby. Notice was ordered, returnable Sept. 16. o ■ 500 Sheets S'/jxll Yellow Second Sheets, 35c. Decatur Democrat Company. ts
BARNEY GOOGLE A CHAMPION FOR MULISHNESS, TOO By Billy Deßeck T®gg«lV?lSS" «®w b r v—x i - FATHER WAS A CARBION |gf H 9ROFF Nose ) HH W g. / HSSGOTAtOT H « |,| > I Zc MOM ) - Sf ' H\S GRANDFATHER. AT\ EER * /WRrvU. I L. °T !? ' U aAw I • VJAS A CHAMPION •«. KEePSAKE-/y 0 U SEE I \ WE <*>£> V BOY" / whv a thousand dollars / ' ««*•■/ x'' Rt4DU£ I - -M\ S<\\// WAS DIRT CHEAP "WS-JX 00 T4*> fZ?# 1 X _ - . isSbJL ML HP vtd '•■-■ < f>pr lt!8. Kinjj Beatvr*** Syndic*, In*.. VwM*frwrv*/*’’ 9 23 THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—CABOOSO PASSES THE RASPBERRIES By SEGAR K-9 v |@) A _JfeWOW A rHt ri< y r >K □ C A X—-PHONG Aya <-,< A ‘ □ JTX \ J£l(cnerthe now Zi>o a ‘^^\\PH°NE > $ » ' iitL (>• f* IQI r 'Sb lira IjbL zLjS ItSI
Bicycle Traffic Violators Rapped By Youthful Judge ♦ — — LaPorte, Ind., Aug 23 (U.R) “The state vs Raymond Wood," piped freckle-faced Freddie Dunham, 14-year-old prosecutor of Laporte's experimental "bicycle court." Judge Joseph Daley. 17. frowned at the 15-year old defendant. The first session of the special municipal court with which LaPorte hopes to mret the growing juvenile traffic problem was under way. “You are charged," said Prosecutor Dunham, "with riding a bicycle double while going swimming. Guilty or not guilty?" “Guilty," gulped Raymond “The purpose of this court," said Judge Daley sternly, “is not merely to inflict punishment, but to teach a lesson in the value of human life and to instill in every citizen the need of cooperation in observing the city ordinances which are designed to protect human beings. "I sentence yon to go see the March of Time movie 'The Man at the Wheel.’ You will report to the police station twice a week and tell them how you are observing traffic ordinances.” Mayor Alban Smith sat on the bench with Joseph, beaming as he observed the profound impression the court's words had on the boys and girls haled before him The court is Smith's idea. He conceived it in an effort to halt the mounting toll of death and injury to “bike” riders —700 were killed and 35.000 injured in collisions between bicycles and automobiles last year. Judge Daley warned the defendants that his court would tolerate “no fixing and no favors." “I ride a bike and I know all the city ordinances relating to bicycles,” Joseph said. “I've never had an accident.” “Me neither," chimed the prose-1 tutor. a diminutive but serious I eighth grader clad for his initial , court appearance in white duck trousers, grey sport jacket with plaid handkerchief in the breast pocket -and a liberal coating of freckles across his nose and cheeks He read the charges in a highpitched voice. Twenty-seven children faced the bar in the morning session with 20 more summoned for this after-1 noon. They were fined amounts | ranging from 15 cents to 50 cents • and their bicycles taken away for periods up to a week. Several were condemned to write essays. Nmwan Williams, a pudgy lad of 13. pled guilty to riding on the wrong side of the street and was ordered to report twice a week to the police station. Janice Hays, 13. with a long braid and snapping black eyes, hadn’t thought she was endangering life when she rode through a stop light. The bike she earned taking care of babies was ordered i impounded at the police station j “until Monday.” Barbara Larson, 11. had brand i new Shirley Temple curls and a fetching giggle but Judge Daley wasn’t moved. He rapped tor order and sentenced her to learn all the bicycle ordinances, report to police and stop giggling. She had been riding on the sidewalk. Mary Jane Hening, 16 and cocksure, thought she had the judge when she answered a charge of riding past a stop sign. She said she had no allowance of her own and anyway the bike belonged to her sister. “Well, you're in a fix indeed,” snapped Joseph. “You were rid ing a vehicle you do not own. If 1 took it away I'd be punishing your sister. If I fined you I’d penalize your parents. “You go write a 50-word essay —in ink —on why you shouldn't go | through stop signs. Read it to' the mayor next Tuesday and have it certified by him, then bring it
to me." With the aplomb of an experienced jurist—Joseph hopes to be u lawyer some day—Judge Daley rattled off the cases. “1 think,” said Mayor Smith, "that we may have the answer here." Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W, Wallace and sons will move to Decatur, 111., lii'.s week.
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CHAPTER XXIV Tod was almost always in town now and seemed to require practically no'sleep. He was always discovering new places to take Whitney to dance, a new entertainer whom he thought she would like. But they didn't spend all their time dancing. They joined a gymnasium and did a lot of bowling and swimming. They went for long walks, usually on Sunday mornings, coming back to the apartment to have a late breakfast with Helena who belonged to tho school that believed that Sunday mornings were created for the purpose of sleeping and nothing else. The second week in December, Jay gave up his job and flew his own plane to Chicago to see Ginny who was playing there. He went with the express purpose of persuading her to come back to New York. But he returned alone. A week later, he sailed with Whitney and Helena on a Christmas cruise to Nassau. At the last moment they persuaded Tod to sail with them. He left New York with three clean shirts, his toothbrush and the pleasant conviction that when he returned he would probably be minus an exceedingly good newspaper job. But at the last minute he had not been able to face Christmas in New York without Whitney. By this time it was becoming increasingly difficult for Tod to be with her and not let her see how things were with him. But somehow he succeeded. Mostly because he believed that were she to know it would distress her and make her unhappy and spoil something precious and important that they now had. So it was Jay and not Tod who made love to Whitney in Nassau. Who, to her- utter astonishment, asked her to marry him. He said: “You think I am crazy but it might be a good idea. We’re two fairly attractive, amusing people who are in love with someone else. We might make a great success of being married to each other.” Whitney said: “Your trip to Chicago turned out badly and you’re in just the brittle mood to try anything ... but marrying me wouldn’t make up for not having Ginny.” Jay smiled grimly. “I’m not Sure. Won’t you at least consider it, darling? You can’t go on forever alone . . . some day you’ll get unbearably lonely and when you do perhaps you’ll let me console you. Let’s hold the offer open, shall we?” Whitney said: “All right. But I doubt if I ever take you up on it...” Three days later they were home and Whitney found a letter waiting her from Hester Prentice. Olivia’s baby had died of pneumonia in Cleveland and Hester wished that Whitney would come to Boston . . . “if only for a few days. I am no longer very young and the months which pass so swiftly for you move much more slowly for me. And now that Adam is gone I feel more and more lonely and miss you increasingly.” Whitney left within a few hours without seeing either Jay or Tod. All the way to Boston she told herself that she had been unforgivably selfish and that whether she wanted to visit Boston or not she should have forced herself to do so, if for no other reason than Hester. But arriving there she was intensely relieved to find that Olivia and Scott were still in Cleveland. Hester was sad about the baby. She said: “It was a frail child but Dr. Wrenn saw no reason why Olivia shouldn’t take it home with her ... but it must have caught cold on the train. Compartments are not nurseries and it was such a tiny baby . . .” Whitney thought: “It was such a tiny babv to have such a big respon-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 23. 1938.
POLICY RACKET (CONTINUED FROM FAQ Hi ONE) (1932.) Q What did you say? A 1 explained to Hines that we needed an office to show the people of Harlem that, wo got the right okay. Q. What did Hines say? A He thought awhile and said "open it up and try it and see how it goes." So, Weinberg said headquarters
sibility. Perhaps it realized it and didn’t want to take it.” She wanted to write Olivia that she felt badly and that she was sorry for any unhappiness she had ever caused he®. She wanted to say: “But all that is over. Completely finished. For a long time I have not thought of Scott at all and I shall never think of him again in any way, except as belonging entirely to you .. But she didn’t She simply wrote that she was sorry about the baby and in a few days she went back to New York. Helena met her train. She said: “Jay sailed for Europe on the Re* yesterday. He asked me to give you this letter.” Whitney read it as a cab whirled them from Grand Central to Murray Hill. It was a brief letter ... a mere half page. It said in part: “Forgive me, darling, for asking you to marry me in Nassau and then walking out on you like thia less than a week later. But I guess you are right about us, Whit. I find on second thought that I don’t want to have to share a wife, even so charming a one as you would undoubtedly be, with some man I have never seen in Boston. I’m having my plane shipped to Rome and I’m going to do some stunt flying for the Italian government and with any luck there may be a war within a year or so. I hope your week-end in Boston was satisfactory and that eventually you will be able to work out some sort of solution to your problem just as I may to mine ... but lam dreadfully convinced, Whit, that you were right and that marrying you would not have been it..." Whitney finished the letter and folded it carefully. She said: “It is a strange thing, Helena, that a week-end in which I did not even see Scott may have been the means of preventing me from spending the rest of my life with Jay.” Helena said: “I suppose that for some time now I have hoped that things might work out that way for you ... but perhaps it’s better that they didn’t.” And then, almost before they knew it, it was another Manhattan springtime ... With Jay gone, Whitney found herself spending it almost entirely with Tod. And she was gay and relaxed and more like her old self than she had been for months. Watching her. Tod thought: “She is forgetting .Scott... in time she may forget him completely.” And by April he was thinking: “In time ... and if I am very patient and do not hurry her, she may even come to love me . . .” And then one day crossing Fifth Avenue at Fifty-ninth Street he ran into Olivia. She was glad to see him. She said: “I have something to tell you, Tod ... couldn t you take me somewhere and buy me a cup of tea?” He took her into the Plaza. He thought: “Something had happened to her .. something pretty terrific. She's prettier than I have ever seen her but she’s awfully brittle and much too thin.” He said: “I thought you had something to tell me . . .” She said: “I have. I’m divorcing Scott. I’m leaving for Reno tonight. When I come back I’m going to marry Spencer Scofield.” Tod stared at her. Olivia was divorcing Scott. When she came back she was going to marry Spencer Scofield. And Seott would be free. Scott would be free to marry Whitney. Suddenly he felt a little sick. He wanted to get up and walk out of the room. He wanted to say: “Excuse me, Olivia, but you have just crashed my world about my head and I am a little sick and I need to get out in tka air ..." He wanted
were opened at 351 Lenox Avenue in Harlem and word went out that “the fix is okay.” Bankers and others were Instructed to apply at 351 for bondsmen and counsel whenever there were arrebts. Q. Did you have a conversation witlt Hines concerning the police? A. Yes. at the club. Q. Who did you go with? A. With Ho (Weinberg's brother). Q, What was this conversation.
to say: “Excuse me, Olivia, but I hate you at the moment more than I have ever lasted anyone ... you are very pretty sitting there in your smart new clothes with your mouth made up so nicely but I juould to do something terrible and violent to you •.He wanted to say: “You are married to Scott and you are damn well going to stay married to him because if you don’t I haven't a chance in the world of ever making Whitney love me and she has to love me .. .” Olivia was talking. She hadn’t noticed anything wrong with Tod. To her, he was just a pleasant-look-ing young man in a gray suit who was Scott’s cousin and who liked Whitney and was therefore interested in what she had to say. She said: “You probably think I’m craxy to marry Spence. Well, perhaps I am but I don’t think so. He isn’t very good-looking and I don’t lova him. But he’s crazy about me ... and I guess after being married two years to a man who is crazy about someone else, that’s what I want more than anything. This time,” she concluded evenly, “I’ll have the advantage.” Tod said: “I suppose so.” Then he said: “I’m snrry, Olivia ... sorry that things didn’t break better for you.” But he knew as he said it that he was not nearly so sorry for her as he was for himself. Because so short a time as an hour ago he had thought that there was a chance that things might break right for him . . . and now he knew beyond all doubt that they never would. All through the evening he had known that he must tell her and had not been able to bring himself to do it. To say in so many words: “I ran into Olivia today on Fifty-ninth Street and took her to tea at the Plaza. You will be interested to know that she is divorcing Scott.” They had had dinner together and gone on to the theater and dropped in later at Tony’s for a sandwich. Now they were back in Helena’s living room and Whitney was standing, tall and slim in a flowered silk frock, in front of an old gilt mirror. She lifted her hands and began running a comb through her fine dark hair. Watching it break into soft, disordered curls as the comb slid through it, he knew he had to tell her. Now. At once. Because if he waited, she would surely learn it from someone else. From Helena possibly. Or from Scott. . . He walked across the room and sat down on the red sofa. In the nearly two years that he had been in New York, he had become a good newspaperman. He had for some time now been given important assignments, page-one stories that rated him a by-line, and he had filled them competently, even brilliantly. He had also grown better looking. Features which had been amiable but unstartling had sharpened into definite attractiveness. The lean planes of his cheeks, the sensitive, firm-lipped mouth, the straight dark line of his brows gave his face decisiveness, a pleasant maturity. Yet where Whitney was concerned he was as little sure of himself as he had always been ... and as inarticulate. He looked at her now, thinking that he would willingly have given ten years of his life not to have to tell her what he was about to, and said: “Stop fussing with your hair and come here.” She turned her head and smiled at him and put the comb back in a dull gold purse. Then she came toward him, the silk of her dinner frock rustling softly as she moved, its tight little taffeta jacket.outlining the slenderness of her figure. (To be continued) Copyrltht. IB3T. by King r««ture> Syndicate, fne.
ipmfips 1
♦ “ RATU One Time—Minimum charge of 26c for 20 worde or lese. Over 20 words, I'/«c per word Two Tlmeo—Mlnlmum charge of 40c for 20 worde or lese. Over 20 worde 2c per word for the twa times. Three »lmes— Minimum charge of 500 for 20 worde or leee. Over 20 words 2|4c per word for the three times. Cards of Thanks Obituaries and verses »1.00 Open rate-display advertising 35c per'celumn inch. <— 111 -I # FOR SALE FOR SALE—Baby carriages, stoves, breakfast sets, chests of drawers. Furniture bought aud sold. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson St. 198-g3tx FOR SALE—33 acres, well tiled, good fences, crop included, miles east Geneva. Fred Hale, Geneva. Ind. 19 s 43x FOR SALE — Tomatoes 50c per bushel. We deliver. Phone 453. 198 a3tx FOR SALE—Two year old buck. George Ehrmann. I? mile west and % mile south of Peterson | school house. altx FOR SALE — Repossessed Furniture * Rugs: 2 Mohair Living Room Suites; 2 9x12 Axminster Rugs; 1 Winthrop book case; 1 • 8 piece Dining Room Suite; 1 Bed Room Suite. Almost like new. No reasonable Cash offer will be refused. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 South Second st.. Res. phone 535. Business phone 199. 198t2 : FOR SALE — Oue Holstein male j calf. 3 days old. Martin Kirchj ner, Route 2, Decatur. 199 g Itx I FOR SALE 400 used opera seats; will sell as a whole or in lots o' tens. Sprague Furniture Co, 152 S. 2nd St. 199-ltx II Sil ,1— — i FOR SALE -Used Furniture. Was taken in on new. I—B piece Oak Dining Room Suite good condition J 15.00. 2 Leather Davenports 98c each. 1 Buffett $1.75. 1 Couch $1.75. 1 Bed Springs 25c to 50c. Mattresses 150 c. SI.OO, $2.00, *5,00 G. 11. Sprague | Furniture Store 152 South Second I Street, Decatur, Indiana. 199-2 t Former Well-Known
Newspaperman Dies 1 .—_ Culver, Ind. Aug. 23—(UP) Blythe ; 1 Hendricks, 58, brother nf state senator Thomas Hendricks and secretary of the Indianapolis safety board, died at the home of his mother today after a long illness. I He formerly was a well-known 'lndi ianapolis newspaperman, and had I been a staff correspondent ot the United Press. A. I complained we were getting too many arrests in the sixth (Harlem) police division. Q. Was that the division Hines had said he thought he could handle? A. Yes. Q. You had most of your ‘stores’ in that division? A- Yes. Q. Outside the division were there any other sqnads who dealt with policy? A. There were the borough inspectors squads of 30 some odd men and the chief inspector's squad. Q. What did Hines say when you complained? A. He wanted to know if there was any particular cop, and I said 1 didn't want any cop broke —there were just too many arrests. Q. What did Hines say? A. He said he'd try to do something about litQ. Was there any effect of the talk? A. After a while our arrests dropped. Q. About how many arrests did you have earlier in 1932? A. Approximately 20 a day. Q. What were they after you opened 351? A. They dropped to i about 15 a day. Q. And after the talk with Hines? A. They dropped to four, five or six a day. o » « TODAY'S COMMON ERROR Irrevocable is pronounced ir-rev'-o-ka-b!; not ir-rs-voke'-a-bl. |« ■ —_4
1 SELL I 9x12 Axminst- <*9 C<W er Rugs Kitchen 1 ft *9 E Cabinets *®*/3 i ■mi -■- ■ - w ™ t _ w . , w „i Living Room 4® Est Suites SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 South Second St. Decatur. Ind. Phone 199
WANTED | WANTED — WELL DRILLING - special Harvest prices; any size, anywhere, any depth. Buffenbarger, 627 N. Seventh st., phone 989. LADY MANAGER —We are opening an exclusive women's department in Decatur and will train local woman for this position which requires no selling pressure. Dthies consist of supeivision of department and providing customers with instructive information and explanations. Must have pleasing voice, intelligence and tact. Age over 25. Write Box 530, Decatur Daily Democrat. Itx WANTED—To do practical nursing and confinement cases. Rural phone 870-H. 197-3tx WANTED —Experienced (arm hand. Box FJS. % Democrat. 199-3tx o MISCELLANEOUS CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead stock. Will pay tor live horses. Day or night service. Phone collect. Harley Roop 870-A. 152-tt NOTICE—Parlor suites recovered. We re-cover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Decatur Upholsters, Phone 420. 145 South Second St. 186-30 t o— FOR RENT FOR RENT — 5 room modern apartmeut. Downstairs. Hardwood floors. Newly redecorated. Call 79. 199 g 3t o i Card of Thanks We wish to sincerely thank all our friends and neighbors and all those who so kindly assisted us during our recent bereavement. Mrs. Herman F. Ehinger and Sons. , o- * Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months t > 0 — Sunday, August 28 Tindall reunion Van Wert fair .' grounds Van Werl Ohio. . ; Bel! Reunion, Hanna - Nuttman [; Park. . Yost reunion, Hanna-Nuttman park. 19th Davison Reunion, State Park
East of Bluffton. Tester Reunion, Sun Set Park Hakes Reunion, Legion Memorial Park. Parker reunion. Sun Set park. Davie annual reunion, Sun Set park. Sunday, Sept. 4 Roop annual reunion, Sun Set park. Schnepp and Manley reunion, Sun Set park. Annual Urick reunion, Sun Set park. L. E. Marr reunion, Sun Set park. Monday, Sept. 5 Slusser - Gause Family Reunion, I Willshire, Ohio Park. Straub Annual Reunion, Sun Set Park. Anderson Reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, Sept. 11 Wesley reunion, Sun Set park. Barker annual reunion, rain or sbine, Sun Set park. Miller and Snyder annual reunion, Suu Set park. . NOTICE OF SAI.K OF KF. VI ESI’ATE Bl lIIHIMM'Ht Toll The undersigned administrator ot' tlie estate of Jacob Wagner deceased do hereby give notice that by virtue of an order of the Allen Superior Court No. 2 of Allen County. Indiana., he will at the hour of 10:00 A. M. on the 29th day of August lUBS, on the courthouse steps in tiie City of Decatur, Indiana, and from day to day thereafter until solo, offer for sale at private sale all the interest ot sc id decedent in and to the following described real estate: Inlot No. Seven Hundred and Sixty five (765), and also commencing at the Northeast corner of Inlot No.Feven hundred and Sixty-si:: (7661 thence West on the North lino of said Inlot No. 766. to the Northwest corner of said lot, thence South on the « cat line of said lot six feet, thence East parallel with the North line ot said lot to the East line of said lot. which point is on the-West line ot Eleventh Street in said City, of Decatur thence North six feet to the place of beginning. All said real estate begtning in Noah and busan Glass's Sub division of outlets --'a and 296, in Joseph Crabbs Third Western Addition to the Town (now C.ty) of Decatur, Adams County Indiana. , . . Said sale will be made subject to the approval of said court, tor not less than full appraisal value of said ileal Estate. Terms of sale: Cash. Adolph Wagner, Administrator I John W. Long. Atty. Aug -a Robert Cole made a business I rip I tri Fort Wayne and Angola this morning.
JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth st. Phone 102. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined • Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p, m. Telephone 135.
daily and foreign Brady, Market to/ n er^B ? Closed at 12 No commissi,,,! allll Veals received F Io lbs 120 to m„ lbs M Io ’’ v Io Is.) . . 180 to 23,1 |h s 230 1,, 250 lbs lo to io ' 1 ,'k lambs Y,?ai lines FORT WAYNE L .'tJK $' 25. IM, ~. ||,_ |BB to •>. .: - 12" n>s Rouths . a i v ,. s INDIANAPOLIS n,s. 'll, ' top s!<• s<‘. iRH sho,'P st.'.olv 1 Al lambs EhV EAST BUFFALO Y . <u.R)' m small lots irm k ,1 m c 6 - 25 - bH
OB to ( - in. iliums ' " o--" 1. £ • ■I. ks plum - " others l.'m-ll." 1 '. HB CHICAGO GRAIN Sept. Dec. Wheat H BH Oats . HB LOCAL GRAIN BURK ELEVATOR |M Prices to paid So. 1 Wheat, eo ll>s- 'T No. 2 Wheat. M New No. BB ■ Yellow Corn New No. 2 Soy B-ans CENTRAL SOYA COM I New No. 2 Soy Beans M markets at a glaH 1 —’ — l|i|i Stocks higher and modetO five. S ’ Bonds higher and IB Curb stocks higher- B Chicago stocks higher. M Call money 1 per tent. ■ Foreign exchange "■ adi-M ' “W j corn firm. ,B Chicago livestock: g ' cattle steady; sheep weak. ■ Silver unchanged in W : at 42 M cents a fineouncfcß ; SOVIET LEAD] i- (CONTINUED FR° m F _Jj| thought of opening Us t Spain and did not even r ■ 1 nationalist note as unfa V did the British. I r One big reason wasJ * ance given in the nat.on«W , unteer” reply. " ia ' , s — idi '” er : ,< '?7 g a gS It is the threat tha . Italy might obtain spe<• sions in Spain or 1 ' itones that had chiefly French leaders. Also there seemed no 9 anxiety in Paris here . cabinet crisis, while het, J - showed concern. r | any open dissension J leaders was eala a en the position of the na,iCilß ' „f the possibility Reports of the P , European air P acl ’ b a
