Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 202, Decatur, Adams County, 26 August 1938 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

PERHAPS IT ISN’T RUINED Have you spilled chocolate, coffee or tea on the tablecloth? U there candle-wax on the dolliot? Did you ait on a piece of chewinggum? Have you dropped egg on your tie? la there a tar stain on your white aboea? Ind th- waiter spill the aoup on your evening gown? Did the mustard misbehave? la there aalad dressing on your white pants? Did the fruit Juice spill over? Did your white gloves pick up grease from the car door? Did somebody draw a diagram in pen cil on your best tablecloth? Did you break a bottle of iodine and spoil a new guest towel? Don't despair: the 24-page booklet "STAINS AND SPOTS REMOVAL' will tell you what to do. Better have u copy of this valuable little booklet handy to consult when an accident .happens. Send the coupon below (enclosing a dime) for your copy: CLIP COUPON HERE . Frederick M. Kerby, Dept. B-115, Dally Democrat's Service Bureau. 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Enclosed is a dime for my copy of the 24 page booklet "Stains and Spots," which send to; NAME — STREET and No. -- CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.

»— • | | Test Your Knowledge |; , Can you answer seven of these 1 1 ten questions? Turn to page | Four tor tue answers. > 1 1 ♦ , 1. In which European country is the Isere River? 2. What is faro? 3. Which state in the U. S. is named after the brother of Charles II? 4. With what sport is the name l ‘ ol Kay Stammers associated? 5. On what river is the city of , Memphis Tenn.? 6. How often is a population cen-] sus of the U. 8. taken? 7. Name the mythological creature ■ half man and half horse. 8. In which city is Madison Square Garden? 9. In which state is Mammoth

Dewey Witness Accuses Hinej I J

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' • ■ ' —"■ —I I life I I George Weinberg, left, escorted from court After testifying that James J. Hines, Tammany district chieftain, “broke” six police officers who persisted in raiding Harlem policy games, George Weinberg, left, 37-year-old former Dutch Schulta mobster, is escorted from supreme court in New York by a detective, i Weinberg earlier testified that Hines had accepted SSOO a week or more to protect the slain gangster’s huge policy racket.

BARNEY GOOGLE “MUSIC HATH CHARMS ■” By Billy Deßeck tenM itw <'•#*' 3IS 1 --Z., rXX-k x>XC - > J®- - c -g b t „ y ,. Sy „4, ~ . THIMRLE THEATER SHOWING—“WTH HIS TONGUE IN HIS CHEEK” By SEGAR 'f MY GORSH, \L IKI NG SWEE’PEA WlLL''ll PWE HAVE TWO N WE’VE GOT TO GO "SI /"WELL-IF WE X T 1 f*AND YOU X CHIEF MINISTER, W HAVE TO GO TO J MAJOR TROUBLES-\ AND SMOOTH THINGS) ( GOTTA GO- ) APOLOGIZE NICE X WE CAN’T LET HINViFZ CUSPIDONIA AND S. THOSE BERN DEMONS A OVER-WE’VE JUST / \WE GOTTA GO f~Z TO KING CABOOSO \ BLUFF APOLOGIZE TO KING ' AND KING CABOOSO! J GOT TO GO r—-- 7 S AND NO STICKING I \US CABOOSO— WE DON’T NO PEACE, / U- OUT OF THE 7 NO REST x Fr -. r 7jU -TONGUr „jg iSMC i WCS Bds WW wWr ) A

I Cave? i 10. Who signed the death warrant J of Mary, Queen of Scots? o SCHOOL BONDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' pany. Indianapolis, $73; Indianap1 oils Bond & Share Company, $171; McNurlen & Htmcilman, $91.50; Kenneth S. Johnson, Indianapolis, $205.80. D. Burdette Custer is the attorney tor the school and Ben Me Cullough. trustee. o GREAT BRITAIN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE/ opening tomorrow at Stuttgart and the Nazi party rally opening Sept. 5 at Nuremberg. The task is an extremely deli-

cate oue, but the government of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain has now fully and publicly recognized the danger of immediate trouble and thus improved

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CHAPTER XXVII Whitney went back to New York the next day and wasa little surprised when neither Tod nor Helena met her traifi. It was raining dismally, New York looked cold and dispirited like an old woman who had drawn into her petticoats, and Whitney bumped about disconsolately in the cab she took to Murray Hill. Arrived there she found the apartment in great disorder, a steamer trunk standing open in the bedroom and Helena throwing things into it distractedly. She looked up and said: “Hello, darling, did you have a good time and did you find the love of your life worth waiting for?” Then she said: “Thank heaven, you’ve come back. Fran Talmadge broke her arm this morning and I get to go to London to do articles on George V’s Jubilee instead of her. It’s a six o’clock sailing and I've still to go to the office and the bank . . .” Only then she looked up and saw Whitney, huddled flushed and miserable in a chair, and said: “Good heavens, you look awful, child . . . or are you ill?” Whitney sneezed twice and shook her head. "No. Just the beginning of a cold, I guess. It seems that at my age wet canoe cushions do result in colds in the head. Here, let me finish packing for you and you attend to some of the other things ...” Four hours later, Helena was on her way to Europe and Whitney was crawling into bed with a hot water bottle and a bad chill. She thought: “It’s funny Tod didn’t telephone or come around . . . but he will tomorrow . . .” But he didn’t. It was three days before he called the apartment on Murray Hill, and when he did Whitney was too sick to talk to him. Carrie, the colored woman who came . in daily and cleaned, answered the telephone. She said she guessed Miss Whitney was pretty sick all right. She said, no, sir, she hadn’t had no doctor. She said, she sure was burning up with fever and wouldn't eat nothing nohow and did talk awfully funny. Tod swore softly and told Carrie not to dare leave until he could get there. All the way to the apartment he tortured himself with fears and recriminations. If she were seriously ill, and obviously she was, he was to blame for it. He should have called her before. He had stayed away from her deliberately. Since that night when he. had told her about Scott and Olivia, he had been a crazy man, who had seen no one, gone nowhere. He had sent word to the offic< that he Was sick and had prowled the streets, his hat draws ' low over his eyes, not noticing where . he was going, caring less. He had known when she went to Boston and he had knpwn that probably she was back. A dozen times he had found himself at a telephone about to call her and as many times he had turned away, determined not to. He had finally decided to make every effort possible to get out of the city immediately and then fate had played into his hands. The office was transferring their Paris correspondent to Berlin and he had been chosen to replace him sometime during the early summer. Secure in the knowledge that he was not going to be forced to be in the same country with Whitney and Scott much longer, he had telephoned at last, only to discover that she was ill. How ill, he didn’t dare think, but if she couldn’t talk to him and was burning up with fever, she must be pretty ill. , Whitney lay, white-faced and weak, in a high hospital bed, her hair spread out in a dark fan against the white pillows. She said: “It’s funny I don’t remember your coming or being brought here or anything ... the first thing I remember was waking up in the middle of the night and asking for a drink of water and a nurse brought it to me. I tried to sit up and she I pushed me back and then I Baid,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1938.

chance* of overcoming It. In Czechoslovakia. it was considered significant that tbs leaders of the Hungarian minority were reported forming a common front |

'Where am I?’ Just like that. Sk you see. Tod, people really do sa; j that when they've been out for I , t while. And she said, ‘You're al , right, Miss. Prentice. You’re aid ,j and we’re taking care of you . . . n And I said, ‘But I’m not in my owi v bed,' and she said, ‘No, we though ’ e we could take better care of you hen in the hospital . . . now be a root .. girl and go back to sleep.’ And was a good girl and went back t< n sleep.” t “You slept most of the time foi j three days,” said Tod, walkin] e around her high bed and sitting c down carefully on the foot of it ’> “You were pretty sick. Whit." If “I thought it was just a cold. 1 p had n-j idea it would turn into th< r flu.” g "Well, it did.” He looked at her and looked awaj I again. He almost never looked at » her for any length of time anj , more. It was easier not to. Easiei . to carry on these casual, rathei j pointless conversations with her ii he looked out the window or at th< door or the bed table. Today then were pale yellow roses on the bed ' table. Whitney reached out and ’ touched them tentatively. ‘ “Lovely,” she said softly. Then: ’‘Scott sent them, I suppose?” B “Sure he sent them.” “Nice of him to remember that 1 like yellow roses ... not pink ones or ■ red ones or even those yellowish tea 5 roses . . . but this kind. Sweet of r him to remember, don't you think, : Tod?” “Sure. Swell of him to remember. And he telephoned every day. He would have come himself but his ’ firm was right in the middle of an > important court case and it would - have been pretty tough for him to • leave . . .” ’ Scott hadn’t sent the roses. Tod 1 had sent them himself. But the 1 rest was true. And Scott would have I sent ths roses if he had thought of : it. He simply hadn’t thought of it. ' That was all. Scott was like that. I If he were taking a girl out to I dinner he would remember to send ‘ flowers but he wasn’t used to send--1 ing flowers to people who were sick. He didn’t very much like people who ' were sick. He was always embarrassed and self-conscious around ' them and the smell of a hospital ' made him sick. Whitney said suddenly: “Pm glad he didn't come. Scott is funny about hospitals. Don’t you remember the ; time Aunt Claire had an operation for something and Scott lied about ■ having a sore throat so he wouldn’t ■ have to go and so* her? I remember I he said: ‘Honest, Whit, I can’t stand ■t... ihai awful smeii and aii those 1 people sick and stretchers being rolled around. It get» me, that’s all.’ ” Tod said: “Sure, I remember. But he was just a kid then. He wouldn’t feel that way now.” But even as he said it, he wasn’t so sure. Scott probably still didn’t like hospitals. Tod didn’t mind them. But then he didn’t mind a lot of things that Scott did. But the sight of Whitney’s face, white and bigeyed against her pillow, was the worst sort of punishment. But only because he could not put his arms around her, bury his own face in that soft, dark cloud of her hair. Awful to have to sit here day after day and pretend that old, casual friendliness when he no longer felt it . . . when, so far as she was concerned, he never could feel it again. He thought: “It’s damned funny that after all these years my love for her should suddenly turn around and bite me in the face. It’s damned funny that after being able to take it for years, it’s suddenly got me licked.” And then he thought: “Why can’t Scott leave that damn silly case and come over here to New York where he belongs? Why should I have to torture myself so by coming here every day and sitting for hours when It’s him she wants to see and not me?” Three days later Scott came. He was allowed to stay fifteen minutes.

with the Sudeten Germans In negotiations for a settlement with the government. The repo''* B came during the visit of Admiral Nicholas Hotthy, regent of Hungary. - ~i r - ■

So Whitney had been over-excited at ly hi* coming, had exhausted her still a slender strength getting ready for ill him and then had found that talking •k to him tired her unexpectedly. She cried weakly when the purse came -n in and said with professional cheerlit fulness that he had better not stay re any longer. She had looked forxl ward to seeing him for days and 1 then in the end it had been so disto appointing. Leaving the hospital, with Tod, »r Scott was petulant and annoyed. He ig said: “It seems darn funny that she ,g can see me for only about fifteen t. minutes but she doesn’t seem to mind having you around indefiI nitely.” ie Tod hailed a cab. “It’s probably the difference between being in love with someone and not being,” he exy plained dryly. “Besides, she’s used it to me ... I’m always around underiy foot like the nurses and doctors." ■r Scott was somewhat appeased. He nr said, his voice more amiable: “Yes, if I suppose that explain* it. And, by ie the way, it was damn swell of you ■e to send those roses. Thanks a lot” d “Oh, that’s all right. I knew you'd d want her to have some.” “Os course. And it was pretty • smooth of you to remember that she liked yellow roses. That seemed to mean a lot to her. You know, the I fact that I had remembered that she r liked yellow roses .. .’’ a Tod said: “Sure, I know.” f “Funny you remembering it. I t, don’t, even now ... I would probably have sent orchids or something..” r. Then he said: “Look, Tod, do you e think I’m to blame for this damn s illness? I insisted upon her going n canoeing, you see, and it had been d raining. The cushions were sort of o wet and she said something about her coat not being very warm but j I didn't think . . .” e No, you wouldn’t think. You e never do. You’re a handsome mug. f Scott, and women fall for you. I used to myself. I used to think you ;. made the world and tied a little pink 3 ribbon around it. But I don’t any 1 more. I think I hate you a little, - Scott, for all the things you have . done to Whitney ... for all the , things you will still do to her and . that no one can save her from . . . 1 because she loves you. Yes, I do 1 hate you, Scott, but I can’t tell you so. I can just buy a taxi and a din1 ner for you and treat you politely t and thank heaven that I am soon 3 leaving this country and will not t have to see you for a long, long t time. . . . t He said: "No, I don’t suppose that r had anything to do with it. She 1 Probably would have had it anyway. » xua uuttvi d«<u ent Waa pieiiy run j down . . i A week later she was tack home. Thinner. Her cheeks paper-white. t Tod, coming to see her, found her t up and dressed and looking as if she shouldn’t be. ’ She said: “I ve lost my looks com- ■ pletely, darling, and I’m weak as a ; cat. Thank heaven, Scott can’t get ‘ away until next week-end.” Tod thought: “She doesn't mind ■ having me see her looking washed ; out and ill but would hate to have ’ him. She wore herself out that other ’ time trying to look beautiful for 1 him . . .” He *«id abruptly: “I suppose you I are terribly happy, Whit? I sunt pose everything is just as you want it to be?” , She looked at him. -her eyes r thoughtful. She said: “Why, yes. I ■ suppose it is. Only I’ve been so sick j I haven’t been able to realize it . . . ] to take it in completely, I mean.” , She laughed, an uncertain little rush ■ of laughter that twisted about his : heart like cruel fingers. She said, > B P.* a “ sri F urgently: “But everything rJwHI be lovely, Tod. It has to be, I don t you see? It can’t be any other . way. Think of it, darling, after all • these years I am going to marry > Scott.” Tod said: “I have thought of it.” (To be continued) • Copyright. 1 Hr, k, KU, r M tur n *ndk*U.

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s ■ ■■ — * RATES One Time—Minimum charge of 2»c for 20 worde or leee. Over 20 worde, per word Two Tlmee—Minimum charge 1 of 40c for 20 worde or lees. Over 20 worde 2c per word for the twe tlmee. Three j’lmee— Minimum charge 5 of 50c for 20 worde or leee. Over 20 worde 2J/ a o per word ' for the three tlmee. : I Card* of Thank* 350 1 | Obituarist and varies. ... 11-00 : Open rate-display advertising 85c per column Inch.« ; FOR SALE FOR SALE — Four colts. Bay roan and sorrell. coming two. Bay coming three, broke. Four t makes rebuilt sweepers. Decatur j • Hatchery. 200 k 6t-x | I FOR SALE — Half Shepherd and • | halt Collje Pups. Extra good ' stock. 3 months old. Cheap If tak- ■ en at once. Phone 0-866, M. F. J ' Sprunger. 2003 t-x 1 FOR SALE—Property located at I I 919 Winchester street, five -room i house in good condition. If inter- , ) ested call 937.200g4t I , FOR SALE — Walnut dining room I , , suite. Six chairs, table and buff-1 i et included. Phone 456 for inform-! | ation. 201 k 3t; : FOR SALE — New Kozy Coach | House Trailer. Must be sold on ' accounty of illness. Priced to sell. 1 511 West Madison St., Decatur, Ind., 202 3t-x - ; FOR SALE — My Beautiful S7OO player piano and rolls for $36 before moving. Write me today. Will tell you where in Decatur it can be seen. Mrs. John Riedel. Water-, ford, Wis„ R. 1.202 1 t-x FOR SALE — Eight well bred Du- 1 roc gilts. Also open buggy or handy wagon. Walter Whittenbar-; ger. 5 miles northeast Decatur, ■rm -"---“X FOR SALE —Baumgartner’s Super! Quality Bloodtest Baby Chicks every Tuesday. Order now. Baumgartner Hatchery, 6 miles west and 9 miles south of Decatur, Craigville phone. 250 T. F. - FOR KENT~ FOR RENT — 6-room modern I i flat, heat furnished, above Sorg . Meat Market. Modern 7-room house on N. 4th .St., automatic i heat H. P. Schmitt, phone 967. 200 b 3 t FOR RENT — Modern house, 215 j N. Third St., vacant Sept. 1. Inquire Elizabeth Costello, 420 Clogs St. 2003 t FOR RENT — Two modern apartments. Four room lower and five room upper. Inquire 713 N. Second St. * 202 3t FOR RENT — Sleeping rooms in ' ail modern house. 315 N. 4th. Phone 783. 201 3t ( FOR RENT — Furnished apartment — kitchenette, living room with studio couch. Ground floor. Phone 218. 413 West Adatns. 202 k 3t o —- WANTED WANTED —Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts of title. French Quinn. 152-ni-w-f WANTED — WELL DRlLLlNG—special Harvest prices; any size, anyw’here, any depth. Buffenbarger, 627 N. Seventh st., phone 959. 182t80x WANTED — Young man wants farm wor k. Experienced. Or work to an investment. Box 531, Daily Democrat. 201 3t-x - WANTED — Girl or woman for general house work. Anthony | Spangler, route 1, last house north of Monmouth 201-g3t to Germany. In Rome, a pessimistic view was taken in regard to both Czechoslovakia and Spain. Two wellinformed diplomatic sources told the United Press in separate conversations that the next two weeks probably will b<> the most serious for Europe since the German seizure of Austria. Necessarily, Premier Benito Mussolini, who has vast ! commitments In Spain and who i has never been happy about the . new Nazi honiief adjoining Italy, will be a potent factor in the outt tome of Britain’s moves. o— ———— Trade In a Gooo Town — Decatur JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth st. Phone 102. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined . Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30to11:J0 12:30 to 5.00 Saturdays, 8.00 p. m. Telephone 135.

MISCELLANEOUS ! CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead stock. Will pay for 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 -1 1 COPS CONTINUE (CONTINUED FROM FACE ONE) lishinents a day until yesterday . whe they swept into the "loop" i and invaded the State-Washington club near State and Madison ' streets, one of the busiest corners ; in the world. They drove 1.500 patrons into ■ the street, arrested three men and ’ for more than an hour, ripped their axes into $20,000 worth of furniture and other equipment. Simultaneously, two other squads raided five other resorts on the north and i south aides, arrested 10 men, and wrecked gamblln paraphernalia 1 and furnishings. Thus far Courtney's men have wrecked 15 handbooks and arrest|ed about 40 men. There are an | estimated 3,000 handbooks in the , city, all of which reportedly pay | tribute to the syndicate. Courtney has charged repeatedly that the operators are “hirelings" of Seai 'ace Al Capone’s gang and that, from their handbooks alone, ; they amass at least $1,000,000 a ■ year. A non-partisan committee, which complPted its report in 1935, estimated that the gross "take” from handbook*, policy rackets and other gambling in the city amounted to $47,000,000 annually. oTwo Filling Stations Looted This Morning Fort Wayne, Ind. Aug. 25 —(UP) | —Two blond bandits struck at an 'early hour this morning, holding up two filling stations, and escaped 1 leaving the police only meager dee- . criptions. The two first approached a station operated by Earl Hayes. After knocking him unconscious they escaped with between S6O end S7O Half an hour later, two :nen believed to be the same pair, held up Glenn Lantz aud made off with $47. 1 Q Man Is Drowned As Motor Boat Upsets Bremen. Ind., Aug. —(UP) —In sight or hits wife and child who had accompanied him here on a picnic, Pete Mosier, about 25, South Bend, .drowned in the Lake of the Woods i last night. Mosier was riding in an outboard motor boat when it upset. Harold I Dunlap, alao South Bend, also in ’ the boat, attempted to pull Mosier to shore but the latter fought so that Dunlap was forced to go on alone. Q NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF liMHTION AI, NPPHOPRI ITIONN Notice Is hereby given tnat the regular meeting of the Adams County Council of Adams County, Indiana, v, ill be held at the Auditors Office - in the Court Houxe at Decatur, Ind- ( Jena, at 10 o’clock A. M. on Tuesday, September 6, 1938. The County i Council will consider tUe following ■ additional appropriations which san! 1 officers consider necessary to meet (the extraordinary emergency exlst- ’ *ng at this time. • Hoad Right of Way >25,000.00 : Irene Byron Sanatorium L’,500.00 ‘ Court House, repair of bldg. 150.00 I Court House, Elec, current 300.00 , Co. Infirmary, Coal 100.09 Co. Infirmary elec, current 100.00 , Co. infirmary. Clothing ect. 250.00 ■ 'Co. Infirmary, medical «up. 100.00 , 1 '•<». Infirmary, disinfectants 100.00 Auditor, books * stationery 250.00 Election, Inspectors 250.0” • Elect io’i. Judges 100 00 Election, Clerks 20U.0” 1 Election, Sheriffs 100.0” Election Meals 50.00 • Clerk, Clerical assistance I for Gen. Election 50.00 j Clerk's Fees Adm. to I State Institutions 50.00 ■'Clerk, Telephone 2 • . Clerk, Supplies 100.00 Expense & Commitment of patients to state institutions 600.00 • Special Judge 30”.”0 . Circuit Court Telephone .... 25.00 Surveyor, staking and l | allotting ditches 500.00 Repair to Tile Drains 500.00 • Trustees & Surveyors j Mileage 250.00 Highvtay Repairs > Highway, Assistants . 2,000.00 Highway, Truck and I Tractor Drivers 6.000.00 . Highway. Per Diem labor 7,000.00 . Highway, Gasoline & Oil 2,000.00 .Highway, Repair of Equip. 1.000.00 .Highway, Tires & Tubes . 1.000.00 Highway, Tile Sewer Pip? & Culverts 2,500.00 r Highway, Tractors and graders . ... 574.00 Highway, Transportation AID ■ • i W.4W Taxpayers appearing nt «u* h meeting shall have a right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriation as finally made wilt be automatically referred to the State • T.rard of Tax Commissioners, which Board will hold a further hearing within fifteen days at the County Auditors office of Adams County, Indiana, or at auch other place as may be designated. At such hearing,' taxpayers objecting'to such additional appropriations may be heard and interested taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when where such hearing will be held JOHN W. TYNDALL Auditor Adams County. Aug. 26 Sept. 2

MARKET s-.xajl Br.dy'. Market for Cr.lgvine, Cioied at 12 No ... .... . ind Veals reeeiv.-d eve-y 100 Io 120 || IS ■■ 120 to 1 |o || IS to to i-o to to 250 to 275 ll>s to t<> 350 lbs . and up Ronglis MH Stags VealeiH Ou.JH Yearlings ■■ CLEVELAND p Produce: Butto’ i 'standards '_?i. HM - y • small 10. bM i, :s , v Ohio W. I; .. . sack. EAST BUFFALO Livestock: Hogs soo; lower; t- ' down. I"- 1 ■ • wly . ilium (al cows quoted lightweight bn .- 0 Calve* to $1 io ’■ 6.50 and below. Sheep lambs steady to good Ives with 100 ks in. ! good trurkt-d ins s'•. ed roninnoi -'hsri sheep steady; tat •wes others 1.50-3.n0. raK FORT WAYNE Fort Way :- !• ■! A:c — Livestock: Hogs: st-ady: jji 24' 1 200 220 lbs. e.->": 1'" 240 280 lbs I’-" 1'" 260 280 lbs. 5.35: 300 '3OO 325 lbs. ' 140 160 lbs. 7 5". 120 100 120 lbs. 6.75. 9 Roughs 6.25; slags 5.00; M 11:00; lambs S 50. 9 INDIANAPOLIS LIVES?® Indianapolis. Ind., Aug- ■ <U.R> — Livestock: 3 Ilog receipts I' 7'"' Market 5 to 1" ' ■ ' l,,wer - fl lbs. 5.60-S.SO: lbs. 300-400 lbs. 7.60-' 6.75-7.75- Sows st< ady to IM lower, mostly 6.25-7.00. ■ Cattle 400, calves 500. SluM classes steady: few loadiM grass steers s"" O'" vn: ‘“fl mostly 5.25-6.75; cutter gra« 5.00; vealers 5u cents lugjeM 11-50. , . ■ Sheep 2,000. Lambs steadTM cents higher; bulk good and M lambs 8.50-9.00. ■ CHICAGO GRAIN CLO& Sept. Dec. March Wheat .... 62'A « Corn 52 49-S 51>* Oats 23% 24'/. LOCAL grain marke BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected August 26. Prices to be paid totnorro No. Wheat. 60 lbs. or better No. 2 Wheat, etc. New No. 2 Oats■ Yellow Corn New No. 2 Soy Beans Rye CENTRAL SOYA CO. New No. 2 Soy Beans o—• —" MARKETS AT A GLANCI Stocks irregularly lo* er 1,1 trade. . . I Bonds mixed and 'l"' e ' Curb stocks irregular Chicago stocks irregularCall money 1 per e' l ' t( Foreign exchange easy of the dollar. , h ( 1 Cotton futures up as m I cents a bale. . t Grains in ChlWg n ° n *“ ll ght tionally lower; corn up Chicago livestock. H 8 cattle weak; sheep strongRubber futures firm , Silver unchanged m at 42% cents a flue ounce-