Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 20 April 1932 — Page 5
K - EK SEES si RE I>EEEAT II 1 01 BOX! s Bli L rllu.M "AGE ONE' Hie Alli'""" 1 i» l:,sl fM " T '"; n "<• uncertain lan XiH i,f ,h " n< w Gia' hi'" , I',, _-.|. 1 I I- anxious to .Its ' mil '" n,lnrts n.H'!" that th- bonus will a I’espHe his fro K. against it and he will vet, 1 causing ial and Indus BM, ~ reached the House. ... '«), ;llll „»sible to prevent ■MK. ..(■ ■;,»■ f th- bonus in con ~-nation there wifi naiighi and the country b. i" 'he that law enacted last H^K r ,„ • wlerans to ~., p. 1 . of the ■ ', adjusted - lilieral grant. /nation points out
■ " SYNOPSIS lon I ansing. Jost twenty pretty i- '•tudjinc for an operhot drram« of romance. morninc she meets wealthy Sargent, "ho used to spend summers in her home town. He attracted hy her beauty. Lily married sister. May. with she boards objects to Ken, his family "snobs.” When Lou tells Ken she cannot see so often as she must practice, leaves CHAPTER FIVE She walked on to work. Walked the ■ * -es • f Fox, Johansen and . B ijuntey. a" rneys at law. She was .■ ■ •" "rreHt-arr: operator. It wasn't ir.ter*'-'ng work, and it didn't very well. She had chosen it -era;. --cause it gave her to study during the quiet .Si Today there was little to do. She XStaSteamed the words of an Italian > Read through the score of' S'--- w ,'dn't let Ken come ~'B| nto her r nd. She could hardly tn get r. me, to practice. ■ I Scales -,ght. Exercises. Carehard, exacting work. H I In the c • ■ g room, stretched out the i r May lay, listening. It MBuas Raymonds night for lodge. ■ I Raymond's sister Irene came She had with her some silk she "« ted .May to help her ■cut M I From he- place at the piano in MBfe'- m Lily Lou heard them M'.alking. . . May's bored “Os course MB Yes, I think you did tell me .. . MB'-''r.ni ' ' ■' asn t t>iat nice.” Irene's »B>:mpering chatter, “He said . . . H I well fellow ... I nearly died . . . awYu ' crush on m e. .. . We're not Bp rra "- v er !W’d, but he said .. ." Lily Lou wont on with her cxerHM vises. “Silly thing!” she thought engaged.” II Up and down the scale .. . her 111 voice clear, limpid. . . . But she ||B couldn't keep her mind on it, after H all - IB She reached for the Butterfly 111 iC ° re '’ ' lhe “waiting theme.” She IB I t^°' J ßht of Butterfly waiting, for 111 the lover who would never come ■ I back any mote . . . and loneliness spem ed to ooze out of the very Wl "alls, and settle on her, in a fog of n pa ' n> * * B “Un bel di vedremo. . . “Some || I day h» 11 come," she sang, her voice BM „ w emotion. B| Gee. Lily Lou can sure sing,” B I lr enc said. She dashed a sent!- '■ u 1 0?' 3 ' tear out her eye. She || > had weak, pale blue eyes, and was M I . J y ’ w ’P' n ß her glasses. M She does, pretty well. She’d do , j r , had more time to H ’ May said seriously. 11 I i H| Ut S,le st ' rre d uneasily, sighed a M ' dle as ’he tried to concentrate on IB . “ P at tern for Irene’s stepin. Lily '™>s scales were all right, but she nil iikj' l '' s ,be Butterfly number. II I i t a btt ' e tOf> rbuch feeling in ]| Ilme for all that later ... much iB I */' '' " at - mattered now was jjgj| technique. »I f n^ ap i a sa ’d s he went out with a IB c ■ °* ast bight. He SAIL) it was e d Largent.” Irene’s pale gfa’scs < ' rC elitter ’ n £ behind the II I V’ U S vo ’ ce san «? on - She 11 ' no SOt heyond the “waiting theme” II I cu tht score was btrangc to IB I hit. ’ , , ou Kht to stop before she II “V * « e nolp an( l May shouted B Y<ni r « off key!” M if B A c °nldn't stop. Because ■■ k.‘ ° d" 1 ’ hed weaken and call II V° n the telephone. -■ am/” arge pt didn’t take the train IB I h.‘, m ? >re .' L ’ ,y Eou suspected that B| her lat#r ° ne - He had told |W ar tr at ri e lat?r one wa h his regul! NciHnn.n' K 1 ? JUit taken lhe II larlv _? y . before ' and then regu- || la rly, after he met her.
be paid for 20 years under the original bonus law Hence it con-1 alders unfair the demand for full; payment of these certificates now, years before they mature. MASSIE’S WIFE AIDS HUSBAND I —». ■■■■■■■ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE, roborate testimony of her hits I band's mental breakdown after she was attacked by five native hoodlums. The defense's first admission 1 that Lieut. Massie was the actual slayer of Kahahawai one of the alleged attackers —came with start--1 Ung suddenness from Dr. Thomas ’ J. Orblson as he gave an expert’s version of the shooting. 'Tn my opinion," Dr.. Orblson said. "Massie was insane when he ‘ killed Kahahawai." He said it so quietly and calmly I that the mixed jury of whites, Orli entals and half-castes, as well as ■ the whole courtroom, failed lor a ' moment to grasp the import of his ■' words. The jury listened intently, but gave no outward sign of Interest, r "He wanted Kahahawai to con- , fess that he attacked Mrs. Massie." t Dr. Orbison continued suavely. "By • shooting Kahahawai. Massie defeatr ed his purpose. His reasoning was c distinctly imperfect.” The young lieutenant, seated t with his co-defendants. Mrs. Grave □ Hubbard Fortescue and E. J Lord
“EMBERS OF LOVE”
By HAZEL LIVINGSTON
II v When she got on the train, she slipped into thefirst vacant scat.
And now he had decided she it at random, started reading, not wasn’t worth getting up half an knowing what she read. hour early for. Well, that was all Going from the train to the boat right. She didn’t have time to worry she was sure she heard Ken s voice, about Ken Sargent. Some day, per- She felt her face, her noct, even haps, but now now. . . . Not with ears getting red. but she wouldn t all the studying she had to do . . . turn. all the hours and hours of study- i He walked right past her. He was j nff . . t e with a man, a big. pompous, heavyOnce, singing over a gay little set man, with thick eyebrows, and French sohg, with the window open a darkly weatherbeaten, reddish to the sweet April evening, she face . . . something familiar about looked up just in time to see the him. . . . Oh! It was becau'» there Sargent’s Cadillac go by. was a sort of resemblance to Ken. Ken wasn't driving. He was sit- ~ . Ken’s father —no doubt about it. ting low in the seat, laughing back Kentfield Carey Sargent, who at a girl tn green at the wheel. owned the steamship line. . She A green sport outfit the girl had. caught his eye. He looked at her, Green, to match Hie car. with slow, impersonal interest. She Lily Lou’s voice tightened. Her turned away. throat hurt. There were no seats left in the She got up from the piano and front of the boat, so Lily Lou stood went into the kitchen to offer to near the rail, glad of the wind that help May with the ironing. cooled her hot cheeks, hoping Ken “I’d much rather you went on wouldn’t see her . . hoping he with your practicing, honey.” May would . . despising hcrseL for a said, touched because Lily Lou was 1 fool • ■ , A , , ij . offering to help with Raymonds', “Why. Lily Lou! Awfuly glad to Shirts I see y° u! ” “I can’t practice all the time!” Ken’s voice. ... There he was. his “Why Lily Lou. you’re all face all alight wtth pleasure. She wrought up 1 tell you, you go to I managed to say something, to talk and rest, instep Take a Mok | back to him brightly. But she w with you if you aren’t sleepy, and conscious of the older man. Ken s when rm though I’ll bring you a f athe \ watchl " K ; t ’ n h ’ toTT. cup of chocolate and we’ll have it man who was with him. too Am Mffrihnr shall we’” other well dressed man of affairs tO LiJS Lou shook' her head. She . Ken’s kind different from was touched, too. There was little hers. show of affection between them. "That’s dad over there, though they loved each other dear- There was a look of pude about ly “Please. Maysie — I'd rather him. iron. You go to lied. I'm too rest-1 “I know, Lily Lou said I. aw . » I him once, long ago. on lhe lake. "You’ll be tired in the morning," l And your mother Though I don’t May predicted. But she relin- believe I’d remember her All she quished the iron. “I’m about half really remembered was Mrs Sardead,” she admitted Rent’s clothes very pretty ones, and Mav was right. Lily Lou was big hats, and away she had of tired‘in the morning. Tired and laughing and talking out loud, igWhen lhe clock went off noring the people who might be she st'opded it. Decided to sleep! listening, actmg as if she were all just one minute more. And missed ! alone she and her friends . . jusi one mil , Ken hegltßte( i. He wasn t geding “HcTthink I did it on account anywhere with Lily Lon. and beef him.”’ she thought, self-eon- sides hi. father and Mr. Johns seiously. on the way to the station, would rag hint ~ . . When «he rot on the train she See you soon, he ba 1. slinJLi into the first vacant seat. Lily Lou smiled, and turned away, I Sfe wouldn’t look around for him., It was as if she were dism.snng oj-’d her magazine It wat an ! him. mstead of be leaving her I old one. and she had read every , _ I story in it. No matter. She opened
DECATUK DAILY DEMOCHAT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1032.
and A. O. Johes, tue navy men.lt I bowed his head in his arms at men i ;tlon of the attack. Mrs. Forescue,! mother of the girl, gripped the side 1 of her chair. i Lieut. .Massie had testified he > held a gun "to frighten” Kahahawai i while he and Mrs. Fortescue taxed < the native for a confession. When l the native said, "yes, we done it," Massie's mind became a blank and ' he knew nothing of what followed, , the physician declared. ' Appa-entiy unaware of the sen-1 I sat lon he created, Dr. Orblson i , settled himself !n the witness chair, i II arranged his ear phones —he is > partly defeaned—and addressed the .jjury. . "Grief and sljock ' induced by the ; attack on Mrs. Massie produced in sanity in Lieut. Massie, the doctor i said. He said lie believed it was /true that Massie's mind became a I blank. "Such cases of Insanity are not j ■ infrequent," he explained in care- i 'fully chosen lay terms. "I asked ; i Massie why lie didn't kill Kaliaha-; s wai at first. He replied there were ; .three reasons. First he was born t in Kentucky and that his original; training coupled with his service I ■ career had bred in him respect for 11 " and order. Second, he said ! y It ar Admiral Yates Stirling. Jr..! - had asked him not to do anything s to 'further unsettle’ the unsettled conditions in Honolulu after the d attack, and third, he said he meree.ly wanted to dear his wife's name djot ugly rumors that started when! —.
a jury failed to convict Kahahawai and the others of the attack." Prosecutor John C. Kelley searchingß’ cross-questioned Dr. Orbison in an effort to draw a compromise statement from him. but the alienist Insisted he believed Massie was completely insane a' the time of the slaying. Dr. Williams, who was an expert witness In the Los Angeles trial of William Edward Hickman for the slaying of Marion Parker and the Phoenix, Ariz., murder trial of Winnie Ruth Judd, used abstruse med-| ical terms in testifying he agreed j with Dr. Orbison. “Ambulatory automatism” and| "delirium psychosis" were among ■ the phrases in which Dr. Williams couched his testimony. The jury, appeared at times amused. ”A thing happened to Lieut. Massie that might happen to any man," i lie said, stroking his goatee. “He (tried to get redress but he found' lit impossible. He was under a ter- ! rifle mental strain. The idea of 'obtaining a confession became an' i obsession. Finally, when the con ! session came, a mental bomb ex-l ploded and a natural reflex led him Ito shoot Kahahawai. "I should say his condition was! similar to tint of a prize fighter' I out on his feet." Jones expressed vast relief when he learned Darrow woflld not call him as a witness. The prosecution often had intimated its belief that Jones was being shielded by Lieut , Massif, Thi' enlisted man. it was - 1 1 ‘ — ■ — *—-sir-
SYNOPSIS Lily Lou Lansing, just twenty and pretty, is studying for an operatic career, hut dreams of romance. One morning she meets wealthy Ken Sargent, who used to spend his summers in her home town. He is attracted by her beauty. Lily Lnu’s married sister. May, with whom she boards objects to Ken. calling his family “snobs.” Lily Lily l.ou tells Ken she cannot see him so often as she must practice, he leaves in anger. He no longer meets her mornings and when Lily Lou sees him with another girl, she is depressed. Then, Lily Lou sees . him with his father. Ken comes over ' and talks to her but she greets him coolly. CHAPTER SIX “Who's the handsome girl?” Kentfield Sargent asked, smiling. “Oh, a girl I knew when I was a kid. She’s going to sing in opera." Mr. Johns laughed. “Oh, they all arc. 1 never saw a vocal student who wasn’t!” Ken laughed a little, too. “1 suppose so,” he said. But his father didn’t laugh. “I wouldn’t be surprised if she did. She knows what she wants, that one. Who’s backing her, son?” "Nobody. Just her folks.” “Rich uncle? Moneyed cousins?” “I don’t think so. 1 don’t know—” Kentfield Sargent Sr. took another look al Lily Lou. Her profile was turned to him. He saw the flash of her dark, bright beauty, the long, clean line of her limbs, as the wind whipped her skirts. There was a girl ... in his youth. . . . But Ken Junior was another kind, liked his girls soft and fluffy. . . . A faint sigh escaped him. He turned back to his friend, Mr. Johns. It was months before he ever thought of Lily Lou again. • ♦ » For Lily Lou things went on the way they always did. The dull routine of lhe office. Catching trains. Sketchy dinners, hasty dishwash-
ings, sessions with the accompan- < isk, lessons, long hours poring over language books, Italian gram- j i mars. . . , Discouragement. . . . I'll never get anywhere. My lord, when I think of the girls that have all day | to work, and all the money they want . . . what earthly use is there : i of me even trying. . . . Besides, I’m j I sick of it. I can’t work all the time. . . I’ve got to have some fun. . . . I So she’d take a little ride after dinner with May and Raymond, sitting in the back seat of Raymond's . Chevrolet, with Raymond’s dad, and sometimes Irene beside her. They always went the same way . . out through town to the highway that wound through San Le- | andro and Hayward. Then back again, stopping for ice cream cones I at one of the creameries . . . vanilla 1 for Mr. Kittridge, strawberry for the others, and a long wait for Irene 1 to make up her mind. . . . Lily Lou always wished she'd stayed home ... at least she could i have accomplished something at ! home. . . . Sometimes she’d loave the piano, j to join the family group in the back j parlor. • • • j One night Irene came in all : athrill. She had a tiny diamond in a white-gold setting on her hand. ! “I'm engaged,” she shrilled, “engaged to be married!” "Who’s the lucky man?” May asked a little coldly. “Who? Bill Oakley of course . . . May! After al! I've told you!” Will Oakley was the slim youth Irene met last summer in Los Angeles. She'd talked enough about him. But she had talked about Sb many. Even embroidering O’s on her guest towels hadn’t impressed |
testified, "stood guard” outside Mrs it Fortescue's cottage during the fatal interflow with Kahahawai. NO PROGRESS IN KIDNAPING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! "Jafsie." still was continuing his mysterious trips, the latest ending In a mishap. The retired school teat her was returning from a six ; hour trip in a row boat when hr 1 fell overboard near a pier. Nearby boatmen pulled "Jafsie" from i the river. He was taken home In ■ | a car when he refused medical, attention The boat trip presumably was , taken by Condon in connection I with ills activitiy to establish con-1 tact with the kidnapers. His only, answer to queries concerning his i negotiate. was: ' "Yes. I i: U a message." It was not known if Condon met i anyone on his boat trip, but he probably could have received a | message from some passing boat without attracting attention. He I rowed from City Island in the I East river to Baxter creek inlet, i i a distance of several miles. As a sequel to Henry (Red) Johnson's I ; questioning in tlie kidnaping, the; i sailor sweetheart of Betty Gow. I the Lindbergh baby nurse, was de i ported by the United States today. Johnson was aboard the liner Europa when It sailed. He . will be landed in Germany. '
COPYRIGHT 1931 BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE. INC
them much. . . . She had embroidered so many other letters before. “Wil! you give me my wedding?” She rattled on. “Can I be married here? I want a home wedding. Just a simple, sweet, home wedding. A few friends, and the family—” Her nose was pink with excitement. Her eyeglasses glistened. May sat up on her couch. She was impressed at last. Her voice was dreamy. . . . “We could have it in the parlor, by putting a bell in the baywindow. And I suppose we could have a supper . . . creamed chicken would be easy, and I could ! get the cake made . . . how many • guests do you think* Irene?” Lily Lou joined in the congratulations, admired the ring, listened i all over again to the story of the j meeting, the courtship, Irene’s plans. So it wasn’t imagination. Someone really loved Irene. Someone had asked her to marry him. Irene ! with the collar bones, and the snif- I fles. and the pop-out pale blue I eyes. . . . Lily Lou went back to her sing-. ing. Worked, as she had never I worked before. By the first of May even Ray-1 mond was insisting that she go home to the lake for a rest, take her two weeks’ vacation early. For there was no longer any mis- ’ taking it. Lily Lou was a sick girl. They were glad to have her home. The old dog, Shep, looked at her i for a moment, his dim eyes wori ried. Then his tail thumped on the i porch floor. He gave a sharp, an- • guished bark, and hurled himself on . I her, barking, making funny noises , I in his throat, trying to lick her face, . I to make up for not knowing her 31 right away. ... It had been so long. . And now he followed her everywhere. Silent. Adoring. r Her mother cried a little because Lily Lou was so thin and pale. She had a good strong chicken broth s simmering on back of the stove, - and Lily Lou was to have a cup of i. it every two hours, unless she’d - rather have milk, with a nice fresh
egg beaten in. She got up earlier than ever, to cook things for the invalid before she went off to teach school. She taught in the little gray primary school on the flat. In two more years she would have her pension. Dad was clerking in Rufe Fletcher’s store. There weren’t many summer people yet, but Rufe took Dad on early this year. “Kind of wish I was around home, so's I could look after the girl,” he said, a little wistfully. Uncle Eph came down from the mountain to see her. Uncle Eph was Dad’s brother. Lily Lou loved him, though she knew her mother shuddered to see him. Uncle Eph never amounted to much. He worked as z a sheep shearer, sometimes, borrowed from Dad a lot, and sometimes got drunk or. moonshine whisky. Lily Lou thought hr was a romantic figure, though she wa> a little ashamed of him too . . . He was so strong and sunburnt, so independent of what tn» people in the town thought about him. He had the life he loved, in his little shack with his woolly dog, and the sheep, and his phonograph and radio, and he didn't care whether he was respected or not. Some of the girls Lily Lou had gone to school with dropped in to see her. Bess put all her children in the back seat of her old flivver and drove in from Lakeport. Bringing with her oranges, and the baby’s food in a gunny sack tilled with newspapers and melting ice. She asked quick, direct questions. Lily Lou had to tell her about her progress with her music, and all about Raymond and May. and ■ whether they Were really saving for I a home.
SEN. WALTER I FACES TRIAL; (CONTINUED FROM PAGEJJNE) ' split this community into two bitterly opposing factions. Indicted with Walter were his father, B. S. Walter, vice president of the bank, and E. (). Grady, president. They were charged with accepting deposits when they were (aware that the bank was insolvent. : F iter launched an investigation lof the banks closing, it ultimately I resulted in the Indictments. Mean- ! while, however, two attempts were , made to remove Foster. Petitions were filed with Attorney General ! James M. Ogden, but he ruled the I matter was not in his jurisdiction. Foster himself then became the target of the Grand Jury's action. He was indicted on two charges of selling liquor and accepting 'bribe/ from bootleggers. Similar ! chargi s were preferred against Ori vllle Nelson, deputy sheriff. o GARDEN TRUCK BEING PLANTED ,CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE' ! backyard, will be given instruction ' in how to raise successful crops. A simple program of potatoes, carrots, turnips and parsnips is 1 being recommended by the com- ■ pany advisors. Harvester com- ■ pany experts normally employed I in advising western wheat farmers
“May ought to stay home and , raise a family instead of working. 1 taking a position that some single girl ought to have,” she said, “ano you say yourself that she's not saving much. Wearing herself out to buy clothes, to wear to work, to get money to buy more clothes — and so on forever. She might just as wellwmake up her mind to live on Raymond's salary, and REALLY get ahead. Besides, what’s a marriage without children . . . Regina! If you say one more word, mama 11 spank. I TOLD you. you COULD NOT go to the store to buy suckers j . . . what was 1 saying?” Lily Lou laughed. “You were just saying May ought to have chil- : . dren!” Bess laughed too. She pushed the ; straight, dark hair out of her eyes, smoothed the little voile dress, wrinkled from baby hands. “1 didn t say they weren't a nuisance. I just ! said there wasn’t much use in getI ting married, and not having them,” | she said. “It’s nice for a girl to have a ' career, like Lily Lou,” their mother I said gently. | “Yes, if she doesn’t marry. No | use trying to combine the career and marriage. You ought to know that!” Bess, who prided herself on being frank, couldn't resist that. She had always fought against her mother’s calm acceptance of Dad’s inability to support the family. “Now mother, if you don t work Dad will have to. He’ll find something, sooner than starve!” she used ■ to say over, and over. i But their mother went right on i teaching, signing up year after ,' year. Sometimes when times were ■I bad she took a school teacher. . 1 usually a young girl fresh from the '■ i city, to board. When someone offered Dad a job he took it. Othcr- > wise he went his complacent, easy 3 way, never worrying, just waiting i for something to turn up. , It was all so mixed up .. . nobody fi seemed very happy, except Uncle i Eph . . . II The second day she was home
Lily Lou met Bert Bartells, the boy the girls used to tease her about when she was at high. Bert had grown fat, and rather coarse looking. He looked prosperous though, and said he was working at the bank at Lakeport. “Come see us sometime!” Lily Lou suggested, hospitably. “Thanks—l will,” Bert said heartily- , But on Saturday he wrote her a note on the bank stationery. “On account of being engaged to Nadine Schmeltz I think it might be better not to accept your kind invitation to call on you,” he wrote with flourishes. The note was signed “Y’ours truly, Albert S. Bartells.’ Lily Lou tore it into little pieces. Probably it would have been better not to come here. Things were so different . . . Just her luck, for the first time in nearly seven years the Sargents were opening up their house. One of the reasons she had wanted to come to Woodlake was to avoid i having to sec Ken, and here he was, ■ not two miles away. i But after a day or two Lily Lou i ceased to worry about meeting Ken. 1 The Sargents’ house was on the i other shore—“the stylish side’ and they seemed in'lined to stay I there. Lily Uou never saw Ken, > though some of the guests, mostly i girls and boys in bright sports r clothes, were recognizable as they • skimmed by on the speed boa,, and > once or twice she-saw the flash of 1 the green sport car on the wide, . dusty road skirting the lake. She felt as she used to feel years r ago . . . watching from a distance 1 , . . aching to be part of the life 1 around her, and not knowing how1 (To Be ConiinuinD l.opj i ishl t> King t ealurea Syudu-aie, In-.
The Meaning of Weather Bureau Terms Used in Forecasts of Weather Conditions The weather bureau defines the terms used us follows: Clear.—No precipitation. Sky fr< >or nearly tree from clouds. Fair.—No precipitation, but the .hai.Kler of the sky may range from dear to partly cloudy. Generally fair.---Some variation in cloudiness and possibly some light precipitation in scattered places, but dear to partly cloudy sky over most of the area. Tills term is usually employed in forecasts for relatively large areas, such as u whole State or half of a State. Partly cloudy.—iNo predpitation. but some cloudiness Increasing cloudiness.—Sky dear or partly cloudy at the beginning of the period, becoming overcast by its dose; or. when the sRy is near ly overcast with thin, high clouds at the beginning of the period and Intermediate or low clouds develop iiefore Its dose. Mostly cloudy. Sky overcast, but occasional breaks of considerable duration. Cloudy.—No predpitation, but overcast sky. Unsettled.—Considerable cloudiness and threatening weather, with very little (less thai\.(>2 Inch) or no precipitation. Threatening. Sky overcast witli dark, lowering clouds, but precipitation unlikely. Rain.—Predpitation of comparatively long duration, as (listinguished from showers, such as frequently occur in the summer. Occasional rain. Rainfall at infrequent intervals; not prolonged. Showers. Intermittent rainfall of comparatively short duration. Sncw. Snowfall of relatively long duration. Occasional snow.—Snowfall at infrequent Intervals and not prolonged. Snow flurries.—Very light and intermittent snowfall. Clearing.—Pre ipitation in one period to end shortly after the beginning of the next, and followed soon thereafter by broken clouds or ; dear sky. Example: ' Rain tonight, clearing Friday morning." 3i ee t.—prcdpitatloiT in the form of small iee pellets produced by the freezing of ruin in the free air. These pellets ar edry, hence do not ( ling to anything in falling. Glaze.—An ice coating formed from rain freezing on objects in a very shallow layer of cold air (temperature of both the air and the objects being below the freezing point.) A deposit of glaze on an extensive scale is called an 'ice storm", but this term is not used in forecasts. Probably, probable, possibly.—Sometimes used in connection witli forecasts of precipitation to indicate the probability "Probably” or "probable” signifit s that, in the judgment of the forecaster. precipitation is very likely to occur "Possibly" indicates uncertainty. but that predpitation is more likely to occur than not.
or southern cotton planters have I Ifeen called in to analyze the soil | and ; i-.pare a map of what each 1 plot can best i'.roduce. Though on a garden plot scale,' the farming will be as scientific j as the long experience in agriculture of the harvester company 11 can make it. 1 1 Each man will be told just when ;' to plant his seeds, bow long it ■ will take for the vegetables to ripen and when to harvest the j crop. Buses will be provided to trans- [ port the workers to and front; their miniature farms. So that the normal market lor ! produce will not be affected, each I man is prohibited from selling his I I crop. Wives of the worker-farm j ers will be instructed in how to! I can and preserve any surplus. O/V YOVR FURNITURE, CAR. RADIO. ETC. IF YOUR MONTHLY PAYMESTTS no . furniture, radio, car, etc., are taking too much out of your income, why not pay all er part of them off with a loan from us and take advantage of our low weekly or monthly payments' We will lend you up to SIOO oo your own signature and security —no indorsers necessary—and or. terrir that will give you more time and much smaller pay- I merits. a Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. | Phone 237 Decatur, Ind ;
Public Sale I wi l si ll al Public Auction al my n . id' iH", located 2 miles cast of Decatur on the I’iqna Road on THURSDAY, APR1L28,1932 Sale tn stilt at 10:30 a. m. the following property to-wit: 3 Head of Horses: I'<-rclipi.n, blue rmi'i. I years dd. weight about 1,50 ii pounds; roan mar . 10 year old. weight l.lian pound. ; black mam, I smooth month, weight 1,500 pounds. 30 Head of Purebred Holstein-, regint>.rnd and eligible, stale a<i credited t< si; llomeprove Fan Korndyke I.unde No. 730357, 10 ye n s aid. bred Feb. 6; Jot lie Lex no Korndyke Lunde DeKol. No. 11J279!L i i ycais old. bred Jan. 26; Jeunette Mercodcso Korndyke No. 1400066. I:; y<ai - eld, due June 15; Jo: ric Lunde Clothilde Pontiac. No. 1156675, n In 2 year, old; Jo'ric Albino Walker DeKol lleuwcrd No. 1156676, fresh. 2 ycais old; Jotric I.'.imoua Johinna Mrre‘*dose No. lt-6677, fresh, 2 yea s old: Jotric Juna lily Lttnde I>, K-d. No. 1156671, fresh 2 years old: Jotric Edith, 7 yeai , old. hied i-'i'h. 12; Jotric liutti tlady. 5 yearn old. bred Feb. 5; Jotric llutlerciip. ihl- -Inly ID, :t year; old; Jotric I.exaiina. bred Fell. It. 1 year, old; Jotric Manila, bred Fell. 10, 1 yens old: Jotric Dai.-y. tired Feb. It, I y<ai old; Jo'ric Lindy Walker, I'lcsh, t ,n-is old; Evlyn, br< I Feb. 7 years o'd; Greteb. bred -lan. 10. 5 yearn old. <> yearlina licit'i open; 5 lii ih-r. 1 to >1 month:.; Bull, I 'oir old, ire : dam 1.152 |»ui! d ; ol biffier. 22,773.5 pounds of milk, i Ohio State i-lnimpicii butter prQdlK’t-r; dam 1 day 31 3 pmnid of butler. til cows civiuga good How ol' milk, thill, I .ear, ~m sire, daina dam 31 poiiml- bolter. 2 bull calves, dam-: nd grandsires above IJttiO jioiiii Is. All sin use ( | whose ilam and -ire-, dams 22. mm Io Jh.tHto pounds of milk above l.ntio pounds of lint ter. This herd a I prnduend on our own farm. 26 Head of Sheep: 21 ews. 21 lamb-; 2 Slump lore Bucks. Farm Implement.-; J. D. 12 disc Fer ilizer Drill, late imwlel, Fly Jiig Dulclinmii hay loader; 7-ft. Wood binder; D-'ero mower; I*. nd <>. coin planter; 2 discs; 2 J I), corn plows; corn sled, spike harrow, spiiuy bhirow: (itltivuloi ; 2 plows; rake and |e,|der; 2 multure preader-. Ideal and International; wagon; grain ifmi .dock rwk combined. Mi:oe'!aneous; llarnc. D> La.al nil!t ■-■laipnp-nt I'-r I" ' . le'eoii-jr motor. :: bp., lib )2e volts single pbmo; I'/, |, p Mct'iirtniei. I riceiltig gas engine; 5 milk calm; lank Imalcr; hard coal stove; |e, illmr jroekt.r; I’cruis Mart in and bra- - beds and spring; wa slier, Iblt-egg in eiibar or; good shape; 1,000 chick broodi r ILL'.; corn and toed; potutoe . I mil oilier aiticles mil ineutioued. TERMS All sum.- under s2U.imi cash. Over that amount a credit of four moiiilis will be given, pnrehuser giving a good bi.iikable note • bearing interenl al S':; from dale and lo pay fifty percent of (ae< of ' note on day of sale. I'l discount for < ash oil sum: over $20.00. Luneli will be served on the grounds. J. 0. THICKER, Route 8, Phone 869-11. Member of Holstein-Friesian Association Auctioneers —Johnson and Daniels. W. A. Lower, Clerk
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BARGAINS — Bargains in Living Room, Dining R'oom Suits, Mattresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number is 44 ct. o BOYS—See our SI.OO special, full size, horse-hide baseball gliove. Best buy we have ever had in baseball gloves. H. Knapp & Son. 95-2 t r-WMM raaMMßsawaMßWMa mb. Notice I We will wash and grease ■ your car for I $l5O Ths includes checking t ree and brttery. flushing and refillinn radiator. u WE CALL FOR AND I DELIVER CARS W PROMPTLY. M Consult us for special ■ pi ices on guaranteed sim- ■ onizing. ■ CHRISMAN | SERVICE | STATION ? 2nd tind Marshal Sts. I Phone 897
