Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 112, Decatur, Adams County, 10 May 1932 — Page 5

r-FICER i ADVICE i. rk. who h“ te i aw for more istructa his enterllleM you’re shot order nearly emit York his a IWXm 111 Arizona. He ■.lthTr depute stopped two rob lllinerß ' ■ Vork was searching ■ ' „ York pulled his gun. ■ ' ng and killing the man. ■ holdups -on was examined was dis. .o. >ed lie had put sliells in a .38 Colt h ‘ T |„. saved York's are "I' Yorks /Krih»»»» ■ f ..,.h1.|. v>. . smoking them ■ n.'ialh are m an ugly mood. ■mlo are a lot of trouble, too. ■ a rule n ev are only silly, ■ianceroiis. ■„ fr gen.v rolls hold more „t danger than any type ot police work. - ■ B f ,ond Mortal Power (ho h.h .1 back to its first and nature and its 3ie^fll P '"t„ .. .. outgoings of dors In the first In hi- "entire power. Is it ' Kp* t.e ' for mortal in Valuable Rock Kineo. ft** high and intn M n.seliead lake. In is said to be the biggest mass of hornblende In the Hum!.:" !<■ is roek contain a," and occurs hi - and In columnar. er nalar form. Il once »r II ■" so- arrowheads ■ Claclenaker* Celebrate titmdrejk: anniversary of r ■ Master, War ,^K a n<t IV."'hip of the Art of of 1' -ktimki! g of the City

IvOa I ®/ v< y ■ '' B AMERICAN ■LAWN MOWERS in owning your own Mower. The neighborhood pest is the fellow always borrowing ■ And Owning is So Easy B at Today's Prices. [ “LAWN QUEEN” ■ *> in. cut - *■ Sail Bearing ■ 0 in. wheel <T*£* nr ■ 1 blades tbO. I 3 I “EASY CUT” in. cut $4.50 I "LAWN KING” in. cut Bearing QH Qr 1 ln - "heel . eb I .t/eJ ■ “MONARCH” Bearing ■ blades W inch cut d»Q ar ■ "in. wheel . ■All of tf, e castings used in ■° Ur Lawn Mowers are ■ ni ade hy the Decatur Casta! nt : ’ 0 Patronize Home ■’“Wry. ■ALSO COMPLETE line I LRASS SHEARS and Bi RAKES, etc. ■Jchafer Hdw. Co

'EMKKer lOVEI *9 HAZEL LIVINGSTON ■■ <ii COPYMOHT 1031 BY KINV fWATU/IFS 3YNDVZATK, INC. i ■ . ■ ■ l

SYNOPSIS Lily Lou Lansing, young and ‘ pretty telephone operator, givea up 1 her opportunity for an operatic ca- • reer to marry wealthy Ken Sargent. ' Ken’s parents had hoped their son < would marry the socially prominent 1 Peggy Sage and threaten to have 1 the marriage annulled. The young i couple go housekeeping and are i ideally happy. Then Ken loses his position and. one night. Lily Lou hears him sobbing. Next day, Ken s father calls on Lily Lou. He stuns her with the news that her marriage has been annulled, and gives her SSOO and a railroad ticket to New York. Feeling that Ken no longer cares. Lily Lou leaves. She arrives in New York and takes a furnished room. Lily Lou is just about desperate searching for work when Maxine Rochon. another lodger, offers her a position playing the piano for a dancing teacher. Maxine suggests that they rent a room from the wealthy Mrs. Paula Manchester, whose hobby is befriending young artists and boarding them reasonably in her sumptuous home. CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT Lily Lou sank into one of the deeply cushioned chairs. She saw the grand piano near the windows, the thick, silky rugs, the Japanese prints on the walls. The pretty maid brought a tea tray which she placed on the low table by Mrs. Manchester’s chair. “This is perfectly ridiculous. Why, Maxine and I could no more fit in here . . Lily Lou’s troubled thoughts were interrupted by the soft thud of a great orange Persian cat, who had noiselessly entered the room, and decided to jump into her lap. “Oh! The lovely thing!” she cried, “The lovely, lovely Oh. do let me pet you, pussy cat!’’ She hadn’t realized how sorely she needed to fondle something, to feel some warm, living thing in her arms. Her brown eyes softened. For a moment she was afraid she was going to cry. . . . This room, the only attractive one she had entered since she shut the door on her own apartment ... shut her heart against Ken, against love, against memories. . . . She forgot her tea. Forgot to listen to Mrs. Manchester and Maxine, chattering about Wanda’s art, and the Andre Werain exhibit. The warm, soft weight in her arms moved, pressed against her heart. “Ken, 1 can’t be without you!” she cried silently. “I can’t bear it...oh, Ken...come back to me. ..It’s no use my trying to go 0n....” “And is it Miss Lansing, or Mrs. Lansing?” Mrs. Manchester was asking in her sweet, thin voice. “Thank fortune you said ‘Miss Lansing’ ” Maxine exulted on the wav home. “Now it’s all set. We’ll hear from her tomorrow, you’ll see. By the way—ARE you married?” Maxine Rochon's wise yellowish eyes were studying Lily Lou’s rather wan, colorless face. Lily Lou shook her head. “No,” she said tunelessly, “I’m not. I’m Miss Lansing, all right.’ They walked on, silently. “Why do you ask?” Lily Lou asked suddenly. It just occurred to her that it was a queer question. Why should Maxine think . . “Oh, I just wondered. Most everybody has been married or some--1 thing. I was. Boy out in Los Angeles. Fool that I was. But don’t let on to Mrs. Manchester. She’s not playing godmother to old married women. It’s young artists she’s interested in—rdon’t you forget, and tell! "I won’t. But she didn’t say anything about wanting us to come.” "She will. You cinched it when you hugged the cat. I’d have done it myself, but they give me the creeps. She’ll take us—” “I don’t see why—"

Bandit's Kick Was Too Much Los Angeles, Cal.. —(UP) —Fred P. Noakes didn’t mind being held up. but when the bandit kicked him he lost his patience. Whereup n Noakes took the gun away from the bandit and beat him on the head The bandit fled, leaving behind his own purse. It was empty. Cotton in Road Builuing Js an experiment, 500 feet of /nad were built near Gonzales, Texas, with unbleached canvas as a hinder. After 15 months of heavy i traffic the pavement showed no ! signs of wear. If the ma tai I continues to stand up well. >t s said that the state wll. a.opt Ibis form of construction. — k ftilosophical Belief Flrpirlcisiu Is the philosophical I view that experience Is tho source and the criterion of all knowledge 1 tlie theory that all knowledge l» derived from material or data ex Istfng In the form of particular states nf n«»ns<**nM«nPss | Great Collection of Maps ’ The Library of Congress has a collection of l.tmilOO maps. —— ' " "* O Paradis.: and Hel> A fool's paradise Is only the ant* for a fool's hell.— Stanley ( Baldwin

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 1(1, 1932.

“Because she's bored to death, 1 innocent! She'll take us in and give 1 us about two hundred dollars’ worth I of food and service for about I twenty apiece, and she’ll say she’s doing it for art’s sake. Helping the ' striving young artist. • Striving I young artist, my eye! She's doing ' it because she wants company, and < something to brag about to her i friends. I told you we could live for almost nothing if we just met ' the right people. Wanda Pillsbury hasn’t bought a meal for herself in two years—” “Still I don’t think Mrs. Manchester wants us,” Lily Lou insisted stoutly. But six days later she was settled in the green and ivory guest room of Mrs. Paula Wellfield Manchester’s flat, with Maxine's touseled head on the other narrow green bed, and Maxine’s shabby, none too dainty garments hanging — when Maxine remembered to hang them —in the closet next to hers. The past six days had been packed with excitement. It made Lily Lou’s head ache, just to think about it. In the first place, there was the row with Mrs. Grampas. Lily Lou had paid for her room up to the fifteenth of October, and they moved on the first. “Make her refund. Don’t let her cheat you!” Maxine had urged. So Lily Lou broached the subject and received a tirade of abuse. Mrs. Grampas didn’t expect gratitude for all she’d done, not she! But she didn’t expect to be . robbed either. No indeed! And if a girl wanted to leave her honest, respectable, clean house to go heaven knew where—well.., Thank goodness, that was all over, and they were out of the place, and settled at Mrs. Manchester’s. Lily Lou could not see, even yet, why Mrs. Manchester should want to take them in, for twenty dollars a month. “Why twenty a month? That doesn’t begin to pay for what we actually cost her for food and linen —” , “Oh, she doesn’t need the money,” ' Maxine said airily. “She could just as well take us for nothing, but like ’ all her kind she’s too mean for that. Wants to make us suffer a little. ’ Oh, well! We couldn't do better for twenty bucks!” ’ Maxine made herself at home from the first, but Lily Lou suffered agonies of shyness, afraid to take a bath lest Mrs. Manchester • want the bathroom while she had ■ it, afraid to serve herself enough ; food to keep a canary alive, from, the dishes the maid offered at her ■ left side. She was even afraid to ’ practice at first. But Mrs. Manchester was out much of the time, 1 and gradually Lily Lou began to feel ! at home, to accept small services 1 from Sadie, the willing maid, and • to become really fond of the three huge orange cats who wandered t majestically through the rooms. i Now that she had a place to live i and a job she’d have to do someI thing about her voice .. . i “I’ll try to get an audition with Tolari Saturday or Sunday,” she thought, feeling sick in anticipat tion. Suppose he said she had no > voice? Better to know it at once, . in that case .. . “Lily Lou Lansing, are you a ■ coward?” she asked herself, staring • at her rather greenish image in Mrs. Manchester’s excellent mirror. “Are you just deliberately putting it off ?” But no ... it was because she didn’t really feel well. That was it. If she felt better it would be ' different. If she had gone the very • moment she came to New York it ’ would have been so much easier, i Now, what with her hours at the ; dancing class, and having to be > home on time for meals, and hearing all this talk about things she had never heard of. “Not one girl

HOSI’I I'AL NOTE* 1,. G. Herminghuysen, Wren, ' Ohio. Route 1 submitted to a major 1 operation at the Adams County Me--1 mortal Hospital this mo; niug. i — 0 _ — I Uncle Eban •‘if 1’ had took os long,” said j Uncle Eben. "to create de world as i it has took to find away to run It. I Adam tin' Eve wottlfln’ hah no Garden of Edon ready fob 'em yet "Vashlngton Star Marital Shoals A So odish ».mtlstielan reports ; that the first year of married dfe Is not so critical as popular tradition would have It, hu' that the time when marriages are " ely to go on the rocks Is during the fifth to the tenth years of wedded life.. I — Paris No Longer “Wal.'ed” 1 Paris is no longer a walled city, the fortifications having been razed following the World war. At that time thev measured about— or —t miles in circumference and inclosed un area of about 00 square miles. o Atonement s Quality If the Atonement were not too I wide for our intellectual comprehension. 1' would be too narrow lor our spiritual nr-cess »♦.—Ear, ' | four. K. G. ' Dance Wednesday Sunset. I

in sixty succeeds in voice," Wanda Pillsbury said. “Now if I could play the way you can I wouldn’t even try to sing—” v In the studio building where Wanda had her classes there were many teachers of voice. She saw them going in and out of their doors. Heard snatches of song, catch phrases — “She forces that white tone!” “Voice too far back!” “Never properly placed—” Nobody had ever placed her voice. Should it have ben placed? Prices were frightening, too. Five dollars for half an hour was just nothing. Dwight Gwin, the coach, whose studio was on the same floor with Wanda’s, got twenty. Very likely Tolari would charge as much. And then there was this business of getting an audition. Some of the teachers had secretaries. Wanda Pillsbury said they nearly all made you pay for at least ten lessons in advance.

“I’m going to have an audition with Tolari on Sunday,” she wrote the family, glad that she had something definite to write at last. “I’m going to take three songs, ‘Lo Hear the Gentle Lark,’ and ‘The Bell Song from Lakme' and the ‘Mad Scene from Lucia’ ” Her choice seemed important ■■— impressive, as she wrote, but on her way to the Bronx to sing for the great Tolai», it seemed smarty and silly. He’d think she had a nerve, to try the “Mad Scene” . . better leave that out. . . .

She grew suddenly confused and dizzy, wandering through the unfamiliar streets, hating to ask, afraid she’d got off at the wrong place .... In front of a dusty brick house set back a few feet from the street, with a tiny plot of lumpy grass and sickly flowers in front, she paused to look up the address she had taken from the telephone book. This was the place, all right . . . A slatternly looking woman admitted her. After a long wait in the hall a small, dark-eyed man ir. a velvet jacket opened the door of the front room and motioned her in, hospitably. Tolari! The master. The man who Miss Seaman said could make her famous ... . “My teacher, Miss Augusta Seaman—” she began in a tight, small vaiee. He didn’t want to hear about Miss Seaman, he wanted to try her voice. She persisted. “Miss Seaman. You must remember her. She studied with you, years ago in Chicago—” Years ago... but he looked so you ng. ... Os course. There was a mistake. It was the wrong Tolari. She knew it before he told her, laughing: "Oh, old Cesare Tolari! But he has not taught for five years! Come, come! He is senile, a paralytic now. Only the funeral march left for him. You had better stay with me. Come, we shall try your voice.” She was ashamed of the way she pushed by him, to the door. Her silly, mumbled apologies. He must have thought her crazy. She might as well have stayed and let him try her voice. . . . Tolari no longer teaching ... all Miss Seaman promised gone. . . . Two months wasted, most of her mtney spent. . . . The day v id turned cold. It was good to get into the warm living room, and sink into one of the deeply cushioned chairs. Just to be comfortable. To drink the good hot tea that Mrs Manchester offered, and not to think of her voice, her future, anything . . . just be comfortable . . rest. .. . Presently she went into her room to get the home papers that May sent her nearly every week, al! rolled up with cotton twine The inner paper was turned to the society section, heavily marked with black pencil. It fell open in her hands. (To Be Continued) ( noynghl by Kins Feature* Syndicate, tne.

ARRIVALS Norman Lewis is the name ot the eleven and one-half pound boy baby born to Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Sheets of rural route 4, Decatur, Saturday, May 7. The baby is the fourth child and the fourth son in the family. 0 Linnaeus Given Credit The work of l.intmetts. the cele brated Swedish naturalist and botanist (1707-78). Is considered as the starting point of the modern theory ■ of evolution Ancient Religious Beliefs Both the Greek and the Roman i conception of the aftet life was exceedingly hazy, bul both Included states of future blessedness or woe. according to the pleasing or offending of the god« while <<» earth. —o- —— Settled by Dutch Harlem in Ne t York city was settled about UH) by people fr«u> Haarlem in Holland and 'be name was given it by Gov. Peter Stuyvesant In LG3O. Room for Expansion The addition of numerals to the old telephone designations in York citv will allow for expansion of 154 tears without making any chauge in the cataloguing system, i

SOVIET FIGHTS BREAD SHORTAGE MOSCOW--OJ.R) The shortage! of bread has become a criticall problem for millions in the | Ukraine, the Volga region and, to j a lesser extent, Crimea and the | Caucasus. In Ukrainian cities like Kiev • and Odessa, bread of inferior 1 quality sells in government co--1 operative shops at from three to live rubles a loaf. In the private market, upon which millions must lepend because the government, ! supplies are Insufficient, bread prices are fantastic, sometimes as high as 15 or 20 rubles a kilogram. Tens of thousands of persons I receive food packages, especially bread, regularly from Moscow. ' Leningrad and other northern | cities which are better supplied : The post office in Moscow is flood-| ed with packages addressed to cities when 1 the bread famine is (ini usually sharp. Recently the bread ration was I suspended in Kiev. Odessa. Zhito , mir and other Ukrainian cities, on i account of the shortage. Factory I I workers usually are able to obtain their bread rations In their "closed I r.tores." AU others must buy at : the so-called commercial shops or i in the private market and pay the exorbitant prices. L. o Pilgrim’* Memento There Is a Jlnyllower commemo oration stone nt Plymouth England which records, the fact flint Ply i mouth was the last point touched I by the Pilgrim Fathers on their way ! to Amerfoi. o Humanity's Crucible Throughout history, course.'. ; chsiacter, Intelligence and hard j work have wrested victory from ths mist adverse circumstances —.'lol j Iler’s Weekly Not of Importance “By de time you Is old enough," sold Uncle Eben. "to tell de difTretire between a broken tienrt an’ disappointed vanity, you's old enough to j realize dst it doesn’t make much I dlfl’rence no-how.” - Wnshingtop ' Star. o Making a World It takes all sorts of peo[J» to | make a world, which accounts for i the sort of a world we have. —Los ' Angeles Times.

Suicide I ■ar ’"■ w float ■■■■ mrp wykif 1 J 1 a / Z I J- ■ Ji i -H I JSk OHL Donald M. Ryerson, millionaire industrialist of Chicago, who shot and killed himself Sunday at his Lake Forest, 111., home. Mr. Ryerson had been suffering from a nervous breakdown, caused by overwork. He was chairman of the board of Joseph T. Ryerson & Son. pioneer Chicago iron and steel firm, and president of the; ! ReetUSmith Company of Milwaukee. I Center ot “Cold Pole” The lowest teiiqieratlbe on the | earth oi-eiirs In winder tn the north east part of Siberia, the some what indefinite center <>♦ greu’est cold being known as (lie "cold pole' At '’erklioyunsk In tills region. a temperature ot H 0.4 depreetbelow Zero Fahrenheit, was recirfd ed on lltnuary Ift. rhe lowest I i." er recorded near the ground tA • tegular meteotoiogi-al < ttlon Right* in Invention A shop right is a right to use an Invention which Is automatically created <ai behaif of the owner of the shop, when the invention is dei veleped in such shop by an emI plqyee who uses the time and ' equipment of the shop for produc 1 Ing the Invention. Snrti shop rights r are non-assignable and npply alone s I to Inventions pertaining to tlm em p|oyer‘> business

NEWS... Foreign and Doinestic “Fresh Outbreak in Kashgar.” All right... read about it. it’s new, and probably interesting to you, personally. Maybe you have some friends out there. Maybe you are interested in independence on general principles. • Read ail the foreign news you wish. W print foreign ndws because we know that it is interesting to a proportion of our readers. But don’t forget to read ALSO the news of merchandise... the advertisements that tell you what to buy, where to buy it, and how much it will cost. You can find hardly a single advertisement that does not hold something of interest to you and your family. And the advertisements are always cheer lul news. There is never a shudder in this kind of news ... never an “Isn’t that too bad!” Wise shoppers arc never “too busy” to read the advertisements in this paper. In fact, the very advertisement they may have overlooked may be the one that holds the best new s for them, personally. So we say again: Read the advertisements ... all of them. Thej bring news cheerful news—news of profit for YOU. Decatur Daily Democrat

I'arming By Rules Lead To Successful Crops MICHIGAN CITY. Miss.—(U.R>R. E. Aldrich farms by rules and I sticks to them. When he puts In an acre of cotton he matches it with a row. And for every cow lit* ppts In two; acres ot feed crops. Ho has only ; pure-bred cows. His food crops feed cows, supply all the tenants and his family. And rotation of' crops takes care of building up soil. So when they talk about depression, it interests Aldrich not at all. His farm was washed by gullies and many other things were wrong with it when he first took It over, but Aldrich has stuck to his rules, made hay, cattle and cotton his cash crops and now Is rated one of the 10 best farmers in Mississippi. * Flrtt Tr«l« Innnet The fi**st railroad tunnel li thg : K'oodhead tunnel, which wait hegur IB the spring of IR-'llt The first i train passed through December 2 | 1845. Till** was over ’ ’4it was i known as the Manchesk.... Sheffield A Lincolnshire railway, r.ow tb« Greet Central division of tin Lon don A Nortb"csten> ral’wnv. ,— .... -o L'*ury in EngUnd It became legal to charge tn'erest for money lent In England in th* time of Henry y’ll. Before this In terest had been charged for gen eratlons hy legal fictions of part nershlp. breach of contract etc. Th< fi-st English permissive statutes fixed 10 per cent ns the legal llm'.t which i-mild !»• charged o World'* Hottest Spring The deep pool of boiling water near Mount Hekln. Iceland, once known as the Great geyser, is the hottest spring In the world.

ONE ADULT, 25c; TWO ADULTS, 35c; CHILDREN, 10c ADAMS THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT ‘‘A R E Y 0 U LISTE NIN G ” with Wm. Haines. Madge Evans, Anita Page, Karen Morley, Neil Hamilton, Wallace Ford, Jean Hersholt, Joan Marsh. Added-A “Boy Friends" Comedy and Sport Subject. i | Wednesday and Thursday—Nancy Carroll, Richard Arlen, ami Pauline > Frederick in ‘'WAYWARD." M■■■■■■■MBIMMIMMaW HMMaMMII I I W H I HMM MW «• I ■ MiWMMI I IHMIMBII .

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Stop Fineerprintlng 'Leggers Akron, O.—(UP)— Safety Dlruc- ‘ ter Luther A. Park has ordered tho Police Department to quit fingerj printing bootlcgge-s and vice resort operators because they are too numerous for economy. Look at Mla! Judged by Ills attitude » disap | pointed professional reformer's mental reservation might possibly he In i ierpreted after this fashion: "Why can’t people be like me—think as I do and do as T do?"—Toledo Blade. o. Englilh Court Procedure In the English courts a prisoner at assizes or quarter sessions may call upon any Junior barrister pres ent In court and not appearing for the prosecution to defend him at a fee of $5 Duck’* Flying Formation | Ducks do not often fly In V-formn-tlon. Some have supposed that this formation makes It easier for 1 a group of ten to twelve ducks to follow a leader, wltich Is usually ;an old gander A small group ol i ducks frequently fly In a straight , line or a slanting line. Enonnous flocks of flying dttckr do cot Uy ir i formation

THE CORT ; TONIGHT - TOMORROW ‘•The Menace” A startling story sure to scud the ‘ shivers down your spine. If you like thrills, you will like this one. | Added — "MUSICAL MYSTERY” comedy. Also Cartoon. 10c -15 c i , r I Thurs. & Fri. Joe E. Brown in » “FIREMAN SAVE MY CHILD." ’ I RWIMI—I «■■■■■ - Mi ■ .!_ __!■ II