Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 17 February 1939 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

I Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Torn to page Four for the answers. — « 1. What Is copra? 2. What became of the Balkan kingdom of Montenegro? 3. lias the moon an atmosphere? 4. Why are jewels used tn watches? 'W 6. Where is the resting place of the British Unknow Soldier? 6. Name the last Czar of Russia. 7. In the U. S.. what is internal revenue? 5. What Is the correct pronunciation of the word credence? $. What does “pro and con” moan? 19. Name the first president of the American Red Cross.

Public Sale On account of poor health, I am quitting farming and will sell at public auction, 4' ■> miles west and 1 mile north of Rockford, 2 miles east of Willshire on No. 33, then miles south, on j| iurs( | a F e b ruar y 23,1939 COMMENCING AT 10:00 A. M. 4 — HEAD OF HORSES — 4 Roan Horse, 7, wt. 1650: Sorrel Horse, 6, wt. 1650: Bay Mare, 10, wt 1600 Sorrel Mare. wt. 1500. 13 _ HEAD OF CATTLE — 13 Guernsey Cow. 4, with calf by side; Guernsey Cow. 5. be fresh by day of sale; 2 Guernsey Cows, 5, be fresh in March; 2 Guernsey Cows, milk ing good flow; 1 Jersey Cow, fresh, milking good flow; 6 Y sailing HelfHOGS and SHEEP — 6 Sows, farrow March and April; 20 Feeder Hogs; 15 Ewes, lamb in March. IMPLEMENTS Wallis 12-20 Tractor; Oliver Tractor disc, used 2 season; 2 Turnbull wagons- 2 four wheel trailers; Manure spreader; Hoosier 10 disc Fertilizer grain drill; End gate seeder; Rotary Hoe; IHC 4 Roll corn shred der; Riding cultivator; 2 Row Riding Cultivator: Black Hawk Cor: Planter with fertilizer attachment: Beet lifter: Teilde-; Fanning 'llli Mower; Corn Sheller; New 30 inch Buzz Saw; Roller; 5 ton Fairbank & Morris wagon scale; 2 double sets breeching harness, like new. Horse Collars; 60 gal. kettle; Lard Press; Power sausage grinder; DeLaval No. 12 cream separator; 2 Incubators; 1,000 chick size zrooder stove; Some Household goods and articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—Cash. Quilt Will Be Sold By Bethel Ladies Aid. FLOYD HILL, Owner ROY 3. JOHNSON—Auctioneer. WM. LEE—Clerk. Lunch By Fairview Ladies Aid. Public Sale I will sell at public auction at my residence, % mile west of Bluffton on Smoky Row Pike, on MONDAY, February 20,1939 Sale Commencing at 10:00 A. M. 4 HEAD HORSES One black horse, 12 years old, and 1 brown horse, 13 years old. weight 3400 lbs. This team will sell together. One bay, 7 years old. weight 1600; 1 dapple gray horse, 6 years old. weight 1450. These horses are all good workers in any harness single or double. 6 HEAD CATTLE On° Jersey heifer with calf by side; 1 Jersey cow, 4 years old, due io freshen by day of sale; 4 Jersey heifers, due to freshen soon. 60 HEAD HAMPSHIRE HOGS Five tried sows and 4 good gilts; 1 Hampshire male hog, 1 year old; 50 head of shoats, weight from 60 to 140 pounds. The sows will farrow from April 3rd to 13th. 21 HEAD SHEEP Twenty-one head of Shropshire ewes, all 3 years old. Due to lamb in March. CHICKENS One hundred fifty White Leghorn and White Rocks. All young. HAY AND GRAIN Six hundred bushels good corn; 250 bushels oats; about 16 tons of good alfalfa hay and about 3 tons of baled straw. FARM MACHINERY Two good wagons, one with good grain bed, the other with good bundle rack; 1 McCormick-Deering manure spreader; 1 John Deere corn planter with trucks, 1 year old; McCormick-Deering double disc, 1 cultipacker; 1 Hoosier 12-hoe grain drill; mowing machine; hay loader; side delivery hay rake; tedder; 3 corn plows, two 1-row and 1 new Ohio 2-row, never been used: 2 good walking breaking plows. 12 inch and 14-lnch John Deere; new single shovel plow; Oliver riding plow; good gasoline engine; dump bed; hog troughs; hog fountain sot winter; hog feeder; hog oiler; water tank; cider press; hay forks, scoops; 175-foot hay rope; grapple fork and pulleys; many mlscellan eous articles not mentioned. HARNESS Two sets of heavy work harness, extra good condition; 3 good leather collars; 2 pair fly nets, good; 2 pair leather housings. TERMS—CASH • Anyone wanting credit see Vaughn Scott at Old-First National Bank, Bluffton, Indiana. HARRY A. JOHNSON, Owner Ellcnberger Bros.—Auctioneer Vaughn Scott —Clerk.

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ROTARY HOLDS I (CONTINUED FROM FADE ONE) J Wayne, president of the Central I Sugar company of this city, and a ! brother of the principal speaker, also spoke briefly, stressing the great value of cooperation between , industry and the farmer. - -o . Brooder House Is Destroyed By Fire A brooder house, owned by Abraham Lehman of southeast of . Berne, was completely destroyed by fire last night about midnight. The tire was attributed to an overheated brooder stove. Approximate- , ly 1,200 month-old chicks were also destroyed in the flames.

i KIT | A z EVELYN WELLS <

SYNOPSIS In the spring of 1829, Kit Carson, then 19, first rode with a party of trappers from Taos, New Mexico, across the desert and into California. The men aought beaver fur which was then to commerce what gold was later to become. Fighting the Apache, harried by Mexican authorities, ambushed by the Mojave redskins, adding always to their store of thick pelts—the party reached Los Angeles before they returned home. Again "Taos lightning” seared trapper throats, and for one brief week Kit knew riches and revelry. At length, "ITI never be such a tarnation fool again,” vowed Kit, nor was he. In the fall of 1830 Kit rode again with a band of trappers who followed what would later be the Oregon trail. Snow — and Blackfeet Indians — halted them in the region which •was later to become part of Wyoming. Kit first caught sight of a beautiful Blackfeet girl, who was to play so great a part in his destiny, as he and his men come upon some hostile Indians. CHAPTER VII Deadly enemies were about to clash desperately in this Wyoming pass, and this slender girl with the Blackfeet was against Kit Carson. He dashed with the other trappers toward the opening into the plain. But his head turned to watch her. The Indians on the hill raced along the skyline. Their flint tipped arrows came down like plummets. One brought death to a trapper riding beside Kit Carson. He found yimself thinking “If we fought them—captured her.” No chance for fighting. They •ould only scurry before the storming arrows. Out of the pass they raced to the safe snowy plain. Looking back they saw the Blackfeet watching from the hill. “They won’t follow,’’ said Kit. day, men, warn’t she a beauty?” But no one else had noticed the girl in white docskin with wampum studding her long dark braided hair. They had recognized the man she rode beside as the great Blackfoot, Chief Red Bear, noted for his ferocity “Dumed if I’m not beginning to think I dreamed her,” Kit was telling himself before long. But when at night the stars pressed over the stillness of Wyoming he saw her image clearly outlined against them. In winter camp on the Arkansas River, Kit got permission to pursue some Crow horse thieves. With eleven men he had been scouring a wild region for days, when .. Turning toward the snow burdened trees they saw smoke rising. The Indians they were hunting were there dancing the horse-steal dance behind sagebrush breastworks. The stolen horses were tied to trees. “We’ll try Injun tricks on those Crows,” began Kit and then started. “Say, iook°at that Chief with the shield. He’s no Crow. That’s Red Bear.” With a shock he remembered the girl who had ridden beside this notorious Blackfeet chief. “Crow and Blackfeet together, , thought Kit, studying the scene in the copse, “that means trouble in any language. We’ll wait till night.” That night while the dancewearied Injuns slept, Kit and three other trappers crawled on hands and knees over the snow to the Indian camp. Not a dog barked as they cut the leather thongs from the stolen horses and drove them lightly away. Joining the other men, Kit shook with laughter. “We showed those Injuns a trick, he chuckled and then sobered. “Now we’ll have to be ready for them. Sooner or later we’ll have to fight them. How about now?” Was it revenge Kit wanted, or was he thinking of Chief Red Bear I asleep under his painted shield and the mystery of a girl in white doeskin? He pictured her riding over I the pass, her eyes meeting his, two hundred feet below, contemptuous and yet strangely gentle. He thought, “If a man could but tame her...." „ Was it this made him order his

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUABV 17,

men back to ‘he Indian ancampment i when the sun ."owj over the world i of snow? They left their horses with two i men. One was Juan, an Indian boy Kit had brought from Oregon. The i ten crept on hands and knees over ' the snow, rifles and knives ready. < This would be hand-to-hand fight- < ing. J Kit stood to look over the brushwood barricade. He counted forty 1 Blackfeet and Crow warriors lying muffled in blankets around smolder- 1 ing fires. In the center Red Bear i slept under his buffalo hide ehield. > Even in sleep his dark face was 1 hawklike and arrogant. Was it jealousy? Kit hated that i

/ K ''ll SUcZ nt « *" v "'YJsk y JLkL wlw wwa I V fl’

Blackfeet and Crows trained deadly arrows on the dying trapper as Kit rushed from shelter to his rescue. « _ J 2 Ts3-i.. <msva fronnor nninFtillv’ kia

sleeping Indian. Derisively he gave t the Apache war cry learned on the t plains. Dogs barked, men sprang to their c feet clutching weapons. Foremost t was Red Bear and Kit knew why he c was high chief among Blackfoot I Taller than Kit, broader and Bther, Red Bear was the supreme savage in t paint and trappings of war. Black eyes and granite met over ‘ the sagebrush barricade. The same 1 1 thoughts glanced like arrows be- i i tween red chief and white trapper, t “Death for one of usl” thought i i Kit, and shouted the order for his r men to file. it i The ten trappers stood behind I: I trees and fired. Ten rifle balls roared I I into the brushwood barricade. Nine 1 1 Indians died, Kit learned later. 1 But it was the Chief he wanted. ’ And Red Bear’s hatred for Kit ( i seemed deep as Kit’s for him. He s i led the Indians who broke down the s ’ rear of their fort and crept around ; • it from tree to tree stalking the > white men. Hidden by alder they : i showered arrows from a new quar- j J ter upon the trappers who had : > thought them trapped within the 1 ! barricade. r Taken by surprise the trappers ; ran for safety. Kit dashed behind ; : another tree. An arrow struck its trunk as he gained shelter. Glanc- I ’ ing back he saw Red Bear’s savage v features behind a powerful bow. . Behind him the other trappers were t trying to spread out so they could not be surrounded. Rifle balls passed r whizzing arrows. Jones, one of the r trappers, leaned from his shelter to i fire. “Careful, Jones!” shouted Kit, r but too late. Ke had seen a copper o arm flex a giant bow and, as he s shouted, an arrow ran through e Jones’body. The shaft showed hidee ously red through its victim’s back as he pitched forward. s A dozen Indians sprang into the

open to train their arrows on the dying trapper as Kit Carson ran from the shelter of his tree trunk in a mad attempt to save Jones. A dozen arrows showered the wounded Jones as Kit sprang forward, caught up the trapper and dragged him to safety. Behind another tree he saw a trapper curl slowly downward, and soon the trampled snow under his buffalohide boots became crimson. “We’ll have to get out of here! yelled Kit But his men were already retreating from the grove, running from tree to tree, turning to fire at the stalking redskins. As he strained, pulling Jones over the snow, he saw the other wounded

trapper painfully dragging his way to another tree trunk. The man was close to death. But dread of Indian torture could keep a man struggling to escape while dying. Kit’s heart turnad within him. "Jim! Johnson!" he shouted to the seven trappers, "Form a circle.” Instantly his men responded. They ran from the safety of alder trunks and closed in around the wounded men. In a fighting circle they backed their way out of the woods but before they reached the clearing two others were struck by arrows. Juan, the Indian boy, stood holding their horses. "Get the wounded on the horses. We’re safe now. Indians won’t follow out of the woods.” As Kit spoke, he turned and saw a giant form g’earn ing under a tree, a savage scowling face behind a chief’s shield. Red Bear bad followed, his arrow trained on Kit Carson. In that moment Kit Carson recognized a great chief. Red Bear was fearless. Red Bear alone had dared follow Kit to the woods’ edge. Now his body pulled baek in straining bronze from a mighty bow and a yard-long, feathered, flint-tipped arrow sped for Kit’s heart. Kit was holding the Maid by her bridle. In that moment his beloved horse turned her great eyes on him. Her head was Kit’s shield, for the chief’s arrow struck her soft throat. As the saddle-colored mare fell in the convulsions of death, Kit knew fury. He had loved the Maid, the first horse he had ever owned, gift of his Captain Young. He had ridden her to California, to adventure and romance. Now his cold glance went down his long rifle barrel to that copper face behind a second arrow. (To be continued) Coonithi kr w«iu. DlXrlbouA St Klu riaturaa KndlnU.

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“ ♦ ! I RATES - One Time—Minimum charge of H j 25c for 20 words or less. Over I 20 words, per word ’ sb Two Times—Minimum charge du I of 40c for 20 words or less. ; Over 20 words 2c per word tor _ the two times. i N< Three Times—Minimum charge of 50c for 20 words or lees. | [ej Over 20 words 2/»c per word . (n for the three times. I .. | Cards of Thanks -35 c ! Obituaries and verses „ SIOO | R Open rate • display advertising 35c per column inch. ♦ " ” ’I Q, FOR SALE « - — — st FOR SALE — 15 used Washers, O i Electric and Gas, small down | D payments. Heating stoves, oil “ ranges, sweepers at bargains. De- • <.atur Hatchery. 10-10 ts vv FOR SALE—Used Furniture: Two tc living room suites; 1 breakfast s< set; 1 kitchen cabinet. No reasonable cash offer will be refused. Sprague Furniture Co. Phone 199. - 39-3 t |V, FOR SALE—9xI2 Axminster Rug; I w Sellers cabinet base.* Phone 303 i or 716 N. Third St. 39-3 t j J( FOR SALE—Decatur Super-quality | *>’ chicks each week. Early chicks u make early fall layers. Order now • for March and April. Decatur | Hatchery. 41-3 t; o . OR SALE—New 1938 model elec- Cl trie stoves. Big reductions — y easy payments. Uhrick Bros. _J!± ' e, .OR SALE—S year old bay mare j ll and 12 feeder steers. Max y Thieme, phone 845-C, route 5, De-1 catur. 40-3tx I r FOR SALE —Good rubber tired 1 wagon. Priced for quick sale. 4 William Aeschliman, Decatur R. | . R. 4. Cralgville Phone. 40-3tx ’ FOR SALE —New 1938 Refrigerators —big reductions —Easy,payments. Uhrick Bros. 40-3 t FOR SALE — Three-year-o.d roan f gelding; brown horse, 9 years old; 19 head breeding ewes. 50 I head Barred Rock hens. Marcellus Davison. Four miles east Monroe, road 124. 40-3tx ( FOR SALE —8 room semi-modern 1 house, centrally located. Good condition. If interested, address Box “H'' care Democrat. 39-3tx ( r 'OR SATE— TT-ed Pianos: 3 used = pianos, SB, $35, $"5. Sprague t Furniture Co. Phone 199. 39-3 t s — — t FOR SALE—Philco, Zenith Radios ' —Have the newest thing in bat- j ery radios, runs as cheap as elecric sets. No batteries to recharge. Uhrick Bros. 40-3 t APPLE TREE SALE—Good clean 1 large trees, while they last, $3.50 per 10. Evergreens, shrubs, orna- 1 mentals and shade trees. We make awns. Riverside Nursery, Berne, .ndiana. 39-ts • FOR SALE — CHICKS. BAUMGARTNER’S Super Quality ] Jloodtested Baby Chicks Hatching now. See or write before buying. Priced low. Baumgartner's Hatch- ( ry, Route 4. Bluffton. 6 miles west. » miles south of Decatur. Craigille phone. OR SALE INVIGORATED CHICKS or better size and better egg production next fall, ask us about our AA” mating chicks. PINEDALE HATCHEY, Phone 432, Decatur. 34— FOR SALE — Registered Holstein bull, one year old. Credited. Phone 869-H. Byron J. Tricker. 40-3 t ———A-—o Miss Vera Porter of Shreve, 0., will arrive home this evening to spend the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Porter. — o NOTICI4 TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby giveo that sealed blds will be taken up to 10:00 A. M on Saturday March 4, 193!$ at the office of the Adams County surveyor, Decatur Indiana for the construction of the Wm. E. Witte et a! drain Preble Twp. Adams County Indiana. Specifications on file in the office of the afore.mentioned Surveyors. W. H- GHHom, Surveyor Adams County, Indiana. Feb. 4 Notice I My office will be closed Monday and Tuesday, February 20 and 21. Dr. N. A. Bixler | 17-18-20 For Radio Repairs Call MILLER RADIO SERVICE Phone 623 134 Monroe St. Residence phone 522.

miscellaneous ! ARMERS ATTENTION - Call 870-A at our expense for dead tock removal. The Stadler Pro ucts Co. Frank Burger, agent. 13-ts ;OW HATCHING two hatches of Baby Chicks every week, all •adlng breeds; also Baby Duckings. Reasonable prices. Model latcbery, Monroe. lb-ts lEAL ESTATE and LOANS — I can make 5, 10 or 15 year farm oans at 4*4%. No commission. Jity loans at 5%, no commission, ,r FHA loans. If interested in elling or buying a property call >r see C. D. Lewton, Phone 406. lecatur NOTICE—Parlor suites recovered. We recover and repair anything. Ve buy and sell furniture. Deca- j ur Upholsters. Phone 420. 145 8.1 Second StreeL 14-30 t - WANTED VANTED—Salesman to work outside selling stoves, ranges, vashers, etc. for Decatur store. Automobile necessary. Answer by etter, giving age, etc., and past msiness experience Address Box .01 care Democrat. 41-2 t W ANTED TO RENT—4, 5 or 6room house. Prefer north part )f city. Write Box 100 care Demo:raL 40-3tx WANTED—Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts of title. French Quinn. 33-m-w-f WANTED TO BUY — Some sows or gilts due to farrow shortly, if reasonably priced. Write or call Harvey L. Steffen, Decatur route 4, Cralgville phone. 41-3tx WANTED —Meat to cure and Smoke. Gerber Meat Market. ■ 0— FOR RENT FOR RENT — 8-room, all-modern house. Excellent condition. Phone 937. 37-6 t FOR RENT—Apartment, 3 rooms, private bath. Private stairway. Corner Third and Monroe. Inquire Walls Bakery. Phone 346. '4O-3t CARD OF THANKS In this manner we desire to thank our many friends and relatives. for their kind words of sympathy, floral offerings and as.■iatance rendered us during the time of our recent sorrow. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Reynolds Itx and Children. o MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks: irregular in quiet trading. Bonds: irregular; U. S. governments lower. Curb stocks: irregularly higher. Chicago stocks: irregularly high-

er. Call money; one per cent. Foreign exchange: steady in relation to the dollar. Cotton: steady. Grains: wheat, firm up 3-8 to 13 cent; corn easy off about 1-4 cent. Rubber: firm. o TODAY S COMMON ERROR — Do not say. “He was a pecu- | liar old man;’’ say, "odd’’ or , | “unusual.” ♦— : • =' 1 ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER Book your sale early. Trust Co. Bldg. Phone 104 Phone 1022 Feb. 18—Frank Bentz, 2 miles East and 1 mile North of Decatur. Feb. 22 — Rupert L. Brandt, 3 miles north and 2 miles west of Rockford, Ohio. Registered Guernsey cattle sale Feb. 24 —Chester Grubb, 5% mi. i East and mile South of Will-1 shire. Mar. 2 —Sam Dellinger, 2 miles South of Willshire. Mar. 3—Steve Sibert, 2 miles North of Wabash, Ohio. Mar. 4 — Mrs. John Meyer, Va mile South and 1 mile West of Decatur on Peterson Road. Mar. 7 —Chas. Miltenberger, 4 miles South and 1 mile East of Convoy. Mar. B—John Belna, 1% miles Southeast, of Rockford. Ohio. DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases of cattle and poultry. 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. Teleohone 135

mmhtpepjß daily report OFI AND FOREIGN MA RK °'jK Brady's Market f or Dec ( Cralgville Hoagi and I’oire. h-d rcl „, Veals revived VV(jr) , 100 to to 140 140 to 230 to to to 350 lbs., ami Veal ers Spring lambs Yearlings . Hh WHOLESALE EGG POULTRY Furmsbed oy SR Metz a Eqg p Gbltr> Decatur p hone Corrected February tin 1 lean lai g- ■ !■» and over. ]■, :■ , iM lean n,. p. . . . iieavv S'- - , ■ Wg H. avv li r . s, .>• ■■ ■ y m nr. MM l-egln : i.'gte. Heavy S .>>- HI i.epno. n S .i. s CHICAGO GRAIN Mar. May July Wheat ,6S Corn ,46 3 i 4s\ ji, Oats ... .27', FORT WAYNE LIVESTOcH Fort Way::- Feb i—LivestocK: ■ Hogs, steady - 220-240 lbs.. s<3o, KO-IVO ■ $8.30; 240-260 !!•> lbs.. $8.05; J'-lbs. 325 lbs.. $7.75: 325-35" lbs. M i 140-160 lbs $7.95: 120-140 ■ $7.70: 100-120 lbs. $7 45. H Roughs. $6.75 15.50. M Calves. $11.5": lambs. IS. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCH Indianapoli.-. Imi I'-l- 7 —Livestock: H Hog receipts, t- 5"". .164; market steady: 160-250 ■ ; sb.3o-ss.su; 250-30e lbs.. . 300-400 lbs. $7.6m57.50; ItH > lbs.. $7.15-$7.9; sows mostly fl $7.50. ■ I I Cattle. 500; calves. 500; stfl I cleanup trade, hardly <-yougfl i any class to test market; ' steers and heifers. i:fl .'cows, $4.25-$5.5". vealers stfl top. sl2. ■ Sheep, 1,500; lambs slow, J , cations around 15c lower; mostly $9 for good and <fl

lambs. EAST Bl c FALO LIVESTOC East Buffalo, N. Y • (U.R>— Livestock: Hogs, 600; 5c to occasK 10c under Thursday; good choice 180-225 lbs.. fS.IH trucked ins 140-220 lbs.. 58. odd lots 250-350-1’). butchers. I $8.25; packing sows, $6,504*Cattle, 200; cows aud bull tive, firm; few dairy type W $7-$8; beef cows. $6.50471 cutter and cutter c0w5,54.554 medium bulls. $6.60-s'lo, weights, $5.75-56.40. Calves, 200; vealers 50c h® good and choice sl2 ♦ ' $12.50; plain and medium, * sll. Sheep, 500; lambs unchMl good and choice natives westerns, 90 lbs., down, s••’ plain and medium. largely $9; fat ewes, $1354’. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Ohio, Feb. 17.—(U* Produce: Butter, steady; extras, standards, 2916 c. , Eggs, steady; extra 8™” 1916 c; extra firsts, 18c. receipts, 17c. h Live poultry. Arm: hens, 5 lbs., and up, 17-lSe; ducks,« 6 lbs, and up, 1516 c; tnnscova small, 13-14 c. . o Potatoes, Michigan ritssels $1.50 bag of 100 lbs.; Oh” $1.15-$1.40; katahdm $1 - ed Chippewas » 1!)n ’ J®"" ld( $1.30-11.40; Maine. $1 ■ »-• . $2; Texas red, D-75 bag ° 5 J Florida red, $1.75-$2 w |X LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected Febr nary 1 ' Prices to be paid tom° No. 1 Wheal, 60 lbs. or be 111 i No. 2 Wheat, etc .. . i Oats. 30 lbs. test 27c - j No. 2 Yellow Corn i New No. 4 fellow Corn No. 2 Soy Beans I Rye CENTRAL SOYA CO. No. 2 Sov Beans