Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 165, Decatur, Adams County, 14 July 1931 — Page 5
■NS FOR BOY BYER'S TRIAL ■REATE ALARM Li,. gists . Worried Descending Age IV of Criminals IJ. g ... jui.7 u—cu-R)— The in - Ik. -:'‘i ,o niil 1,1 ; ■S., ... , .ml of Varney Corry. ■■.. mm dering Po-, Ml "p. l.Sumi:. .»:«> order-. IM t .oin hittlt « winl i — ‘ cnmmoloSKver lh, ’- v ? be MSilrro ialn.r age of criminal Ml- '""" 'l'"' are • ||'Hl- | |K -• u.iyami tlf Juvenile court of I existence. Workers Interested workers who ■“i, ,n -l.oiild not Ini -miii..- ii.i'-i HK. ' 1 |HK l; I
V & & Y- ] IJILw "■IIIMDE-INS 011 ißixlgi l Brothers ■H 6's and S’s and line \cii Plymouth B* [930 Model A E l ord Tudors EB Model \ ''Port Coupe EB * °nl Std. Coupe —- |B l ord A Roadster 893B 93 ' 1 I’odue D.A. Roadster Hodue D.A. Sedan EM Dods'e S Sedan l "< \ < hailenger Sed. < hrv«der 62 Sedan HB Essex Coach |H Buick Roadster Nash Landau Sedan Dodge I a>t I'our Sed. Essex Coupe BB Buick Std. ( oach BH1 I '-' Essex Coaches Dodge l our Coupe | -TRICKS—||B Chevrolet I' 2 Ton |B C hevrolet l'/ z Ton |B Indiana 1 Ton |jE Indiana 2 'lon Dump ■ I TERMS TO SUIT B 'OCR NEEDS || SAYLORS ■ lITOR ('O. N' First st.
oglst and head of the department of research sociology of the lust! tute for Juvenile Research. Attorneys said that because the boy was indicted by the grand I jury, the chief justice of the crimI inal court had no choice but Vo as- ' sign the case for trial to a criminal court judge. Nolle Prosse Necessary In order to have the case transferred to the Juvenile court, legal 1 authorities said, it would be neees- ! aarj* first to have it nolle prossed | by the .state’s attorney and then to tile a petition in the Juvenile i court to the effect that the Corry boy is a delinquent. Miss Addanis declared the proIcedure wrong. i “I would not minimize the gravj ity of liis killing," she said, ’but the very fact that he did so and carried a gun showed that there was something stupid in it and points tho way to the court in i which the case should be handled." SOLDIERS GET SWIM LESSONS El Paso, Tex. — (UP) — Uncle Sam is going to teach his soldiers how to swim and the swimming instructions start with the soldiers at Fort Bliss here. Teaching the soldiers here howto get along in water is the first step oh the part of the government to teach soldiers lifesaving resuscitation and swimming. Capt. A. T. McCue, Red Cross representative, is giving the instructions, and when he leaves, advanced students will carry on the work "The step in teaching soldiers to swim was taken this far inland, where there is little water be</ ise statistics prove that the largest share of drownings happen in inland states. Captain McCue said. "In states where there is water. I a larger number of inhabitants! know how to swim. "Strangely enough, a large num- I ber of sailors cannot swim. Their commanders always argued khat ships were so safe they didn't need to swim." o MONROE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Berger Mr and i I Mrs. W. O. Delhi and soil William ! of Elkhart and Miss Gretchen Au | burn of Maisht'ield Ind., were the ; week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. i John Floyd. Mr and Mrs. Frank Breiner of Decatur were the dinner guests of I Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crist on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Badders and Mr. and Mrs. William Badders spent Sunday in Fort Wayne the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Badders. Rev and Mrs. E. M. Dunbar attended to business in Bluffton on Saturday afternoon. Mrs. A. D. Crist ami daughter Donna Lou of Winchester is spending the week with her parents Mr. and Mrs Forest Andrews. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Ray and son Bobby and Carl of Grabrill visited Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson on I Sunday. Mrs. James A Hemtricks and t Mrs. I. R. Haynes called on Mrs Maud Dorwin at Decatur on Sunday ! evening Miss Ruth Gilbert is visiting relatives at Montpelier for a few days Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith and Mr and Mrs. Ben DeVor of Decatur - spent, tho week-end with Mr. and i Mrs. George Smith at Bucyrus, 0.. i Mr. and Mrs. Russel Arter of Fort - I Wayne was visiting relatives in . Monroe on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Janies V. Hendricks spent Sunday at Geneva the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ray Mr. and Mrs. John Moore and i son Jack of Hartford City spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Tabler. Mr. and Mrs 11. E. Forrar and i Mr and Mrs. Delbert Beals of Port | land motored to Garrett on Sunday j and spent the day. | Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wagoner 'of Geneva visited Mr. ha Wagoner >on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bahner and daughter Ruth and son Max and Mr and Mrs. Jacob Scherer spent Sunday ip Fort Wayne with Mr. and Mrs. M. J Scherer and family. I Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Crist entertained at Sunday dinner Mr. and M.s. Lewis Frisinger and daughter Betty, Bonnie and Bertha of Rockford, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Murtaugh and Mrs Hattie Andrews of Decatur. I Miss Lois Huffman spent the week-end with Miss Ocie Striker living’ south of Monroe. o Odd Tropical Creo The sandbox tree, native In the tropics. Ims a fruit that looks . somewhat like an orange and that bursts with a sharp report when ripe. It is often cultivated for Its woolly capsules, which are about the size of an orange. These have a number of cells, each containing a seed Hom* Garden Hint Sift the eartn to be used In pots or boxes for starting seeds of ar, nuals in the house. It is easily done by using a common ki'cher. sieve, and is well worth the es JtovU
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1931.
Anti-Valleeites Jubilant 4s Crooner Goes Benedict * * * * * * When Rudy Found “the Girl of His Vagabond Dreams” and Changed from Crooning to Cooing, He Cured Chronic Valleephobia Epidemic Among Males. St “ ! > •’ ' j F JI M® [ > ■ !■■ '*i RudyVavuee S i I Ending what seemed to the men of America a never-ending search for the girl of his dreams, Rudy Vallee, the crooner whose megaphone has alienated the affections of thousands of romance-loving women throughout the nation, considerably enhanced h»s popularity among his own sex by his marriage to Fay Webb, film player and daughter of Santa I Monica's (Cal.) chief of police. Many a man who has come from his office after a hard day's work, only to be compelled to listen to raves on the crooner, is now happy in the realization that at last he’ll get a little bit of attention from his women folk. Rudy’s bride is just what one would expect her to be physically, but it is another matter whether she'll agree with the crooner’s dictum that “man is naturally polygamous, and when he runs around with another woman his wife should regard his detour from the straight and narrow as perfectly natural.” It wasn’t generally known that Vallee had already engaged in a matrimonial venture, the first Mrs. Vallee being Leonie McCoy, daughter of a coffee magnate. That marriage was annulled after twenty-three days and Rudy's ex-wife is now the mate of Howard Coulter, U. S. naval officer.
By Alice Alden New York. —Has Rudy Vallee dis-1 ■overed his ideal woman? Outwardly, at least. Ray Webb' seems to answer to the qualifica-, lions demanded by the arch-crooner j from the girl of his dreams. But is |she the type of girl who, to quote I Rudy’s own words, ‘Arnows that! man is naturally polygamous and I .that iris occasional slips from reci- i tude do not mean a thing.” For this i is one of the principal tenets of, Rudy’s matrimonial creed, as set | | forth in his description of his ideal, girl. Perhaps the red-haired orches-1 tra director will have to delete this; item from the list since the beau- i teous Fay looks as though she is the | kind of girl who is going to demand —and get—all the attention. Any-' i way. she is a beautiful brunette, fair I [of fare and form as befits a beauty, , of Southern California. From reports, it would appear; that men an over the country are I doing a little crooning on their own! account They are crooning of their joy that the’flapper's delight has, taken unto himself a wife, and they are hoping that their wives, sweet-1 hearts, sisters and even elderly I aunts, will now come to their senses j and transfer their spare affection to I ; , even Primo Camera. Anyway, most 1 . | men could understand why a girl i ; would idolize a prize fighter. But I to get back to Rudy, his bride and , ■ the hos s of ‘ daffydills” or worship- ■ • crs of the man who made the megaphone a symbol of love and pas | j sion. I I For some time there have been I reports that Vallee was to wed. Friends who saw his new fourteen room apartment at 55 Central Park . West; reported that there was a 1 1 feminine touch about it and that it [ ■ just was made for a luxurous love ' nest. But Rudy continued to bo non J committal. And when he signed his I J record contract at the hotel where, I he is directing his orchestra it was . believed that Rudy was getting to! r the goal of a nest egg Sufficient to, support a beautiful bride. And his 1 admiration of the devotion'for Fay Webb was a Rialto secret. Which meant that everybody knew it except his legion of feminine admir-1 ers. Not that Rudy iiasn't figured-.in the love news before. His first mar riage, which was to Leonle McCoy daughter of a coffee king, was an nulled a few years ago in White Plains. N. Y. Since then. Rudy has i been reported engaged to this and i that show girl or night club enter- ' tainer. Why. on X r al!ee'-, wedding night, when the party attended the , ; new and smart Club Napoleon, who was-sitting at the next table but | the other brunette charmer, Agnes
I O'Loughlin, who once had claimed [ the bridgroom as her very own boy i i iriend and even sued him for S2OV,- ■ 000 when he tried to deny it. But it! ; must be recorded that Agnes was , . very sweet about the whole affair. ; She and her new boy friend moved; I over to the wedding supper table | ; and drank a toast to the erstwhile | pal and his new bride. 'To friends Rudy lifts revealed[ I some details of his courtship of the! [ girl he met when he went to Holly- [ ' wood to make a movie. She is the , (laughter of the Chief of Police of I Santa Monica, California. And even | I in the seashore spot where so many : I film beauties have their beach homes, Miss Webb was celebrated for her glamorous beauty. Although I they met over two years ago, they , have oniy been engaged for six i months. Perhaps it is that Rudy has I been too busy to pay much atten- ■ lion to getting married until now. but it is known that he even had ’ to snatch the time from his many I duties to slip over to West Orange,' ■ New Jersey, to make his ideal girl I his own. . Shrewd commentators and recorI ders of the amusement world are I already speculating on Rudy’s future. will his lure now that he is a 1 benedict, fade? Will the thousands [of women who gazed at Rudy j through the gossamer veil of illu--1 sion leave their hero to sing his I songs to the girl of his dreams a- ' lone? Oi will he become a more ! romantic figure than ever, now that he is the husband of an extremely beautiful girl? Will his admirers | find new thrills and depths in the croony voice that has found that ' romance, even vicarious romance, i lias paid to the estimated tune of almost one million dollars. Time land the “daffydills” will tell. oIndustrial Museums The American Association of M VJ . scums says that the Deutsches mu scum In Munich Is the largest In dustrial museum In the world, and i the second museum in this class is probably the Science museum In London. There are many Indus triaJ museums in Europe, but few in this country. Our largest is the Museum of Science and Industry. Chicago, although we have a large ■ commercial museum nt I‘hlladel- ; phla. o • Supplication Broadly, precatory words are ' words of prayer, supplication and beseeching. In law, such phrases as “It is my wish and desire.” “entreat." "heartily beseech." when contained in a will in which no ex- | press trust is created, nevertheless will be construed by the courts as implying an 'utent to create a trust. 1
BUTTE TAMED AS GAS BOOM OPENED CITY Old Underworld Forces Beaten By State’s Attorney General BUTTE. Mont (U.R) Butte, | once proud in its boast of bgsing the widest of the wlde-op.m towns, lias been tamed. Forcibly, reluctantly tamed. It writhes under the orders which! turned its gaming tables upside! down and summarily stopped the window-tar.'ing along Galena and i Mercury streets. The “greatest mining camp on j earth." where liquor was strong! and woman submissive, no longer I is the city c-f a score of books and ! : articles ranging in title from "The | ; Perch of the Devil” to "Sin in the' I Desert.” The "better element”! !l< ng deployed the reputation the I city had gained. Then came depression. Mln,as were curtailed. Drought lowered ■ - agricultural returns. Vast indusi try came to the aid of the state. I A long finger of pipp started from the Northern Montana gas fields ! to the industries of Southern Montana; another from the gas fields of Wyoming to the southern cities. And in their wake were groups known as "camp followers” — wo-1 I men and “tin horn” gamlflers. It was history repeating itself. Authorities, who had elected to I “forget" Montana's gambling laws,! | wt re ipminded sharply of them by ! ■ the state’s attorney general, L. A. I I Foot, who urged "prompt and vigi orous action.” Not only in Butte, but elsewhere ! in the state, a sudden activity by j i county authorities resulted in the! closing of scores of gambling halls. | Federal prohibition agents co I operated, raiding in several coun-1 ■ ties along the right-of-way ol the| j tenuous pipeline. CHINA FAVORING LOVE MATCHES Peiping. —(UP)— Three of the highest ott'ii lais in China, General Chiang Kar-sliek, Marshal Chang ! Hang, and H. H. Kung. Minister of Industry, have given great impetus i to the movement of "love matches" in China. The Chinese press recently re- ] ported that General Chiang had “ar-! ! ranged" a marriage between the I eldest daughter of Marshal Chang I who is 14. and the eldest son of ! Kung. But Cbu Kwang-mu. Marshal Changs chief secretary, explains ; that the press report is not true. He ! | said that Marshal Bhang and Kung I both believe in "love matches,” and did not arrange a marriage between Hie yonng people. It is true, however, Chu declared that General Chiang suggested that such a marriage would be a happy one. .and that Marshal Chiang’s daughter was introduced to Kung’s u son during the Marshal's recent rripl i to-Nanking. This official version of the incident has encouraged youthful reformers, who are fighting the old sys- ; tern of arranging marriages "sight i unseen” in China. Chef Declares Dinner Reveals Man’s Character I JanesviHe, Wis., —(UP) —A man | shows liis real character at dinner, : according to Corne.lius McDonald, J who has been cooking and telling | yams lor 60 years. He is known as t the champion "liar” of Rock County , and likes to lean on the counter in , his chef’s apron and cap and entertain his guests with highly impos-1 1 sible tales. J “I’ve pleased some great custos mers in my day.” McDonald declart ed "but George Ade had them all ! r | beat. Then there was Robert Inger-1 i soli, ’the infidel’ 1 always call him.' ’| and Richard Mansfield. They liked ' ': my food.” Germany Introduces New Tube For Radio Sets Berlin. —(UP) —A now tube for | receiving sets operating from direct i current has just been introduced ! here after years of research. It is . expected that the discovery will out- . date hundreds of thousands of sets ! now in operation, since its installs- i tion in an old receiver would be too! ! costly. The new tube is designed to pcr- ' mit the taring of lull 220 volts dir- ! eel current into the set. without the I use of a rheostat which hitherto! has been necessary to reduce the I current to the necessary 3:5 volts per tube. With alternating current this reduction is done through a transt'ol nrer. o_ Tree-Sitting Cat Quits Knoxville. Tenn - (U.R)A tree-sitt [ *ng cat spent a week in a tree here ! without food or water before it was 1 I forcibly lowered to the ground.
taßdmid die Scenes®
By HARRISON CARROLL. Copyright, 1931, Premier Syndicate, Ire. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., July 00— sad reminders of a more liberal age are the thousands of odd-shaped iquor bottles gathering dust on •he shelves of studio prop-rooms. At RKO alone more than 11,000 | lie awaiting the call of the director. I Beautifully crackled decanters from Italy, earthenware jugs from Holland, cut-glass bottles from France and the original “bootleg” talf pints from-the civil war days, they all suffer the same fate—the sophisticates and the lowbrows of ;he pre-prohibition era are shelved with democratic unconcern. But if it were different! Imagine these in your cellar; Ng Ka Py’s rom Tientsin, China; Tapo Chianti from old California; La Gitanos, from the rum distilleries of Jamaica; Rhum Negritas, from the West Indies; Goenaga Sauternes from Bordeaux; Pilsner from Hamburg; Gilka Kummel form Berlin; Pietro de-Vecchis. from Milan; Dawson’s Scotch, from Glasgow, and the well-remembered Haig and Haig. Poor soldiers from many heated battles. To think they must He there in the grave-yard of prohibition, restlessly awaiting resurrection. Anu. meanwhile, they run the risk of falling to an even lower estate. The movies have their moral obligation. And soon the drinking scene may be no more. MAYBE IT’S A DEAD LANGUAGE. . Among the bigger laughs of the week is Eddie Cantor’s gag about the Russian immigrant who went to a New York medium seeking to com- M municate with O > his late uncle. v After a while, <. v a voice was heard and the I medium direct- I ed: “It is your uncle, speak to O him." “But tell me, Eddie uncl?,” ex- Cantor, claimed the startled Russian, “when did you learn to speak English?” LATEST GOSSIP. These careless radio announcers. ’ When Ann Harding finished work Saturday, she went home and turned on the radio to listen to the fight No doubt she thought of Husband Harry Bannister, who had flown to Reno to be there in ' person. At that moment, the dis- ! tant announcer remarked brightly: “Mr Harry Bannister and Ann' Harding are just taking their seats.” Os course, the announcer ! was just reading from a list of names. But it was a tough spot for Harry at that. And with her sense of humor \nn probably made him stutter Wallie Beery, the hardy pilot, rose with the dawn to fly back to an S:3O call at the studio... Most of the writers at BUTLER'S POLICE PLANS CONFLICT Salem, Ore —(UP) —Policies sug-1 gested by Major-General Smedley D. Butler concerning the Oregon state police organization appear to be in conflict in some degree. Lack of time will not permit the organization to be thorougly trained . before it makes its public appearance, Charles Pray, superintendent of police, explained. Butler had stressed the necessity of a perfectly I trained force, claiming its initial appearance would create an important impression. Pray said the uniforms would be distinctive but tint gaudy; motorcycles will be used for transportation wlijerever possible; no diseuimination v(ill be made with regard to ago; it will make no difference it
About MAKE-UP... Screen Stars Say: “Vwz have solved the make-up question with 11 ('osmetic color harmony. ” /y . /) M If> you afc a bruncttc with colorings like Bcbe Daniels...very dark brown hair, black eyes * 7 ■* and creamy skin...you will enthuse about the perfect beauty of this color harmony make-up. Max Factor’s Rachelle Powder . SI.OO Max Factor’s Raspberry Rouge . . 50c Max Factor’s Medium- Lipstick . . 50c — ' — If you are a different type, permit Max Factor, Hollywood’s Make-Up King, to suggest a color harmony BEBF DANIELS for you. Ask for free complexion analysis card. J™* Factors Society The B. J. Smith Drug Co PHONE 82 — YOUR REXALL STORE.
•RKO now are working on a week to week basis... John Gilbert and his Hawaiian princess are still that way about each other. .. Someone asked Al Cohn what the new trend of motion pictures would be. “Hysteria,” he replied tersely... i j Viola Dana was back in town this I week to visit her sister, Shirley Mason (Mrs. Sydney Lanfield). Originally Vi had intended to stay for the blessed event at the Lanfield home, but she got lonesome and will return to .Colorado Springs, her home since she married Jimmie Thompson.. .Clarence Brown is on one of these diets. Claims to have lost 10 pounds in two weeks. .. Adrienne Ames, whose husband makes his millions in New York, will have her first screen role in “The Dover Road” ...The once precincts of the De Mille bungalow at M. G. M. now are invaded by scenarists. MORE MYSTERY DRAMAS. The mystery melodramas which some think will be the successors to the gangster films are get- M ting under way * ’ jl at several of 'i the studios. & 1 Paramount will ■ start to work I . 1 soon upon ■ si “Through the . J Window,” the W !■ story they purchased from dSgi Martin Flavin .S®!! and Joe Sherj man. Instead of George Bancroft, who was George originally an- Bancroft, n ou nc ed, the picture is to have William Boyd. Shooting probably will start after he completes an engagement with Chester Morris in “Corsair.” KINDNESS COMES HOME. From Leonard Scriven in Pawtucket, R. 1., comes a letter that ought to have general interest. “I always like to read your column,” writes Mr. Scriven, “especially when it contains something about Clive Brook. I’ll tell you ! why. | “One day during the war, in ! which I served as a private, I was ; standing in front of a theatre in London wondering if I could afford a seat in the gallery when .an English officer tapped me on ! the arm. He wrote on a pad that I he had lost his voice, and asked I me if 1 wanted to see the show. ' Then he took me to the box-office ! I and bought the best seats in the I theatre. “The officer was Clive Brooks. i 1 never saw him again, but always have remembered his kindness, and feel so glad he has recovered from shell shock, and has made such a success.” DID YOU KNOW That Irving Thalberg was only 24 when he took over his production post at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer? ' members are married or single, aud 1 i other suggestions offered will not j be deemed imperative. '! Butler advocated an organization ; of young, unmarried men. He sug- ■ gested uniforms with “lots of brass I aud color.” Butler said touring cars ; | carrying first aid, fire fighting and i i general motorists' relief equipment | I were the more practicable for trans- I 1 portation. o Car Hauls Family of 11 BOSTON (U.R> - Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Iverson presented a good; example of cheap transportation | when th arrived here from Spooner, Minn. In their five-pas-senger automobile, besides them 1 selves, were 11 of their 12 children. I o Girl of 12 Married •; Corryton, Tenn.— (U.R) —Beftha Mae Brooks, 12, married Samuel Booher. 22, here. Rev. Gus Boohi; er. father of the bridegroom, offi !' ciated. . |
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GOULD SEEKING SEAWEED GOLD Paris, July 14. —(U.R) Frank Jay Gould, scion of America's multi-mil-lionaire family, having made money out of Pyrenees dairy herds, chocolate, print paper, real estate developments, hotels along the golden sands of the French Riviera and ■ from the green top tables where' baccarat, shoes clog gaily day and ! night, has now turned to seaweed to further bolster Ills fortune. Simple, unadulterated seaweed, the kind (hat winds around your neck when you dive too deep, hitherto allowed to rot alcng the beaches, will be converted into gold dust, theoretically, by the Gould process. The* waters along the Brittany coast, where Gould owns a respectable number of seafront acres, abound with seaweed of a certain quality which is called by the rturdy Britons, "goemon.*’ This sea-wrack when burned and treated by a special process furnishes iodine. It can also be treated to make a very tasty cow food. It can also undergo a certain drying process and become the finest kind of fertilizer for the worn-out lands upon which vines grow. Seawrack is said to give an iodine flavor to certain wines. All those processes will be used by Gould in making his gold from ' seaweed, aud in addition, in view of tlie medical qualities of the iodine-producing weed, Gould plans to build tlie first idoine swimming pool in the world for persons needing such medical treatment. At Granville, in he is building a great pool along the ocean which will be filled half-and-half with seaweed and seawater. o Police Radio Develops New Thrill Seekers Los Angeles, — (UP) — Joining : that vast army ofeHre truvk chasers I is a new clan of thrill seekers which I lias come into existence since police ' here instituted the “tadio patrol dej tail.” I Police so far have failed to dis--1 (outage this new racket, which enF I ploys domestic" radios to obtain hot tips on which the most thrilling crimq, is being perpetrated. Radio fans, it has been discovered | tune in on the police department's I low wave station and listen to the | broadcast of holdups, traffic accidents and slayings. After they find out where the “radio patrol car” has been ordered they get into their own automobile I and go to the scene. Discovery of the “radio racket” was made when police learned Unit a certain couple was beating them to the scene of crimes and major automobile accidents. It appears that by buying a sim- | pie device at small cost, radio fans can listen in on the “crime wave.’.’ , One couple would pick and choose the holdups, or traffic accidents they wanted to see, police said. In some instances the “police radio broadcast" designed to expedite ; the capture of law violators, has i proven a means of escape for the j violators. Particularly is this the case in | connection with parties where reports have been received of hilarious evenings. Before police could arrive, the guests, forwarned by their tadio, I have taken a temporary recess.' o Son Willed $1 Worcester. Mass.— (U.R) —David E. Simmons left $1 to his son, explaining in his will that this amount ■represents my estimation of his love and esteem for me.” o — BARGAINS — Bargains In living room, dining room suite, mat- , tresses and rugs. Stuckey and Co. | Monroe, our Phone number is 44
