Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 120, Decatur, Adams County, 19 May 1932 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES * 4 I FOR SALE FOR SALE — Cabbaue, tomatoes, cauliflower, and yam plants. Hen-, ry Huuak. 204 South 10th St. phone 677. 117-3 t FOR SALE—One 1927 Star Six sport roadster. Motorcycle, 1930 model, in stood condition. Call C-870 U7-3tx FOR SALE-- Oil Stoves >4.98 to $42.50; Mattresses, $4.98 to sls Bed Springs, $7 to 12; Iron beds, $6 to sl2; 9 x 12 felt base rugs $4.98 to $6.50; All electric radio sets $25; | Bargains in dining room, bed room , and living room suites and kitchen cabinets. Sprague Furniture Co.. ! Monrtle street, Phone 199. 117-6 t FOR SALE- Yam plants at 25 cents j per hundred. Curtis Miller, Phone *64 B. l!9-3tci - - -- ----- - FOR SALE —S room all modern ! home, good location, on highway. [ Also ’ 1929 model "A" Ford sport; coupe, rumble seat, good tires and ' upholstering, paint like new. Must [ have S9O cash at once. See or : write-me at Pleasant Mills. Ind. A Bryce Daniels. 117t2x FOR SALE Sweet potato and yam i lauts. Decatur Floral Co. Phone 100 ' 113-6teodx - FOR SALE Just arrived two car . loads of Fordson Tractors. So?:, the new 15-30 Fordson before you , buy your next tractor. Equipped with epade lugs, dash control 400 j to 1600 R.P.M. Get our price, 2 used Fordsons. 1 I.H.C. Tractor, J .on- parts new and used tractor ■ thresher drive belts at . a reduction. Ge: your tractor re- • bort£!f with our modern boring bar wlffch costs $395.00. Craigville J Garage. Craigville, Ind. FAJIMs FOR SALE—Nice 40 acres close to Decatur in Washington t township, at right price. 96 acres I tn Washing! n township, well itn- I i troved. you . an't beat this buy in- I Adams county. SO acres, can trade < for smaller fsr.n or city property. .1. H. Harvey Realty Co.. Monroe, Indiana. 117-3txeod rOR BALE 1 new trailer; also 2 used lawn mowers. Frank Schmitz, corner First and Jefferson Sts. FOR SALE — Yam and sweet po tala plant- at 30 cents a hundred. Phone W. M, Speakman, 7963. 117-3 U FOR SALE—New trailer. Inquire Sls North Second street. Phone 1219. 117-3tx WANTED WANTED— To clean wall paper. 1 cisterns, window rugs, wa-h h uses, porches. Call 210. Straub. 117-3 t WAN TED— Sale-man between the Ages of 23 and 45. Salary and commission. Addre-s Box 325. Fort Wayne. Ind. 118-3tx WANTED—To buy at ome 6 r 7 room house, preferably one story.! Phone 265. 119-3 t WANTEDr—To dean rugs and cisterns. Phone 965. 120-3tx -i ■ — ■ 4» 1 ' ■■■ ■- - and “West” •Never t e twain »hnW mePf” I* d phr.iMp borrowed fr«»in rhe |»<»eni "The Bailed of Km st and VVhsi. ' bj Rudyard Kipling The full siiriiifi i •trice nf rhe expressinn run hi gained only by reading the entin poem Isolated fr»»m the text th* j lines are interpreted xs» rne<ini:»g *thaf (*e<r|sh* <»f rhe eastern r’vihr.M I thin snrh ns rhe f'blnese nnd rhe Japanese and those of the wester* Civilization ancb as the English m the American. cinntit atiiliate uper • truly friendly ha Ma-* Q O/stM UrtPha OyMenr should su* be dur fng th«»ir spawnin'! nmnhti but ahoald he protected rr. tills period It is merely ■ rnkedibwe thnt these mnn»h« in > year d> no* < nnt »1o the tetter ’r’ however are not m: wholesome dnr’rj rtese month*. if •••“w r -o«h from on pot Inter? 0 — Color* Brighter Church Orange carpets, -reej* rrws and gnriy painted r.M’s MM he— * io tmdmrrf Rtt- Hhn’s chnrvn England the vlcai nellevhig that «u<b :.nfiWnrs.< wIR uttrerr young people —9 Volcanic Bf»lt In rne AlnsKjin peninsula and ti.r j Aleutian Islands the United States possesses one nf the most important m’rnne h«’<« ’»■ rrnrtd /- — x Ambulance Service. Any time, p lacs or C stance, we are at the command of this community. W. Tl. Zwick & Son FUNERAL DIRECTORS Mrs. Zwick, Lady Attendant Funeral Home Ambulance Service j 514 Iff. Second 'Tel- 303 ami 61 ' ' 1 nr,-as-.-_-=
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 19 No commission and no yardage. Hogs, 100-150 pounds $2.90 150-220 p. unds $3.10 220-350 pounds $2.90 250-300 pounds $2.80 Roughs, $2.(Hi. Stags $1.25. Veaters $5.00. Spring lambs $6 00 — EAST BUFFALO livestock East Buffalo. N. Y. May 19 — (U.R) i —Livestock: I.
Hogs, on sale. 2,000; rather slow, largely to packers; 5c to mostly 10c under Wednesday’s average; good ito choice, 150-200 lbs., $3.75; one Hoad, $3.80; 220-250 lbs.. $3.50-$3.C5; 275 lbs.. $3.25; pigs and under[weights, $3.50-$3.75. Cattle: Receipts, 100; cows barely steady at recent decline; cutter! grades. $1.25-$2; good yearlings.! 1 steers and heifers, $6. I Calves: Receipts. 100; vea’ers | [steady to 50c lower; mostly steady . ■at Wednesday’s full decline; bulk better lot. $6; common and medium 153.25-$4.75. Sheep: Receipts. 1.100; old crop [lambs, weak to 15c lower; choice! S4-lb. clippers. $5.90; spring lambs 25c lower; desirable 71-lb. Kentucky springers. $8.25: throwouts, $6.50-' $7.50; fat ewes, $1.25-32. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. ■ old [Wheat .55’-i .57*4 -59’s .61% : Wheat new .56% .59 Corn .30% .32% .34% .34% Oats .22% .22% .21% .23% Fort Wayne Livestock Fort Wayne May 19 —(UP) —Hog market steady Pi*- and light lights $3.0053.25; lights $2.25-3330; mediums 33.1543.25; Heavies $3.00-( $3.15; R nf-’hs $2.50; Stags $1.50; calves $5.00; Lambs $5.50. LOCAg GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 19 No. 2. New Wheat 4te 30 lbs. White Oats . . 18c 1 28 lbs. White Oats 17c Ba Hey 30c [ Rye —3O c I Soy Beans 3nc ' New No. 3 White Corn 29c New Jfc. 3 Yell w Corn 34c LOL XL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 9c Could Still Hear, However flk*n there was rhe up >»f 'he show rhrtf whs so had rlrit. after atmiii feu niinu!<*s. m man uame «»u« Hnd askt>ii rhe ia<lv n the other If siie could change his *Olll 10 ••nc behind 4 pillar - huhlin <>Hnh>n O Ari'ogtov Cemetcrj Maniion I'he inansii'ii in Arlington genie tery hns» been restored to the.condl- ' tlon In which it was when a private vesidence. a great deal of the orig mat famiture could not be «ecured. since it had come from Mount Vernon and h id been returned, hi/ period furniture has bi‘en vsed. It , is a handsome example of a planta riou n<«mp before the f’ivll •var — Qi — ... —— Beginning the Fantastic in the domain of the fantastic there are Known noimdan lines hnf thev rat*orsie apparent as soon ymi ni’gin however vairwelv. tn Ind 1 rate ordinary ti’iman drama. — Jean 1 Morienval Fr-nrh wr?-r S. E BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR Mi * R!a< k. L’klv Attendant Ca'ls answered promptly day or night. Office P nnne 500 Home phone 72? 1 Ambulance Service. H»r Better Health See DR. IL FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and NaturnpMh Office Hours; 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. nt.. 6to 8 p. m. Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. ?v. A. BIXLER OPTOTOETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted IIOCR.S: 8:;.(I to 11 30 12:30 tn 5:0f» Saturdays. 8:00 p. m. Tnlcphnnn 135 LOBENSTEIN & DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTORS Ir.-iIF answered promptly day or insht.. Aml>iil;iii<-<’ Service. Office Phonr 90. I Pbt>uo, LWc-vtnr 1041 . RasMnm-e PhAee, Mr-nroo 81 LADY ATTENDANT.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“WEAK WOMEN” I KNOCK VOU 1 ■*' < Ur-iX AL CD J —I —j -
— ——- - —■• —■ — ■'" ♦ | Test \our Knowledge | i | Can you answer seven of these | test questions? Turn to Page j Four for the answers. • « 1. What section of Asli Minor is; largely desert? 2. What is a Mantilla? I 3. Is a whale a warm blooded or ! [cold blooded animal? 4. What is the political party as- 1 filiati n of Senator Henrik Ship-, stead? 5. Whit nickname is oiven to 'denizens of the Pa is nnderwarld?’ 6. What is socrose? 7. Who was John D’yden? 8. Waal does the word Roi mean? 9. In what city is the B wery? 10. Whom did Robert Browning I marry? c — % |9|»4iiiif mrnt off X «iiiiiisi*t rat or \o. 21»IO N’t».ice in hereby given. That the j undersigned has been appointed Ad-j I mlnintrator of tlie estate of Benja-[ t min M. Smith late of Adams County' deceased. The estate is probably sol- ' ' vent. Mitch?) K. Smith Administrator ; James T. Merryman, Attorney. May 5, 19:12. ’ May 5-12-19 Get the Habit — Trade at Hon-r Sill 10% DISCOUNT ON YOUR . ELECTRIC ! LIGHT BILLS BY PAYING ON OR BEFORE May 20 POWER ! BILLS ARE ALSO DOE J -AND—MUST BE PAID
—BY—TWENTIETH GF MOKTHAT j CITY HALL
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Till RSDAY. MAY 19. 1932.
’’EMSSKor WE By HAZEL LIVINGSTON rngrrPZrtWT 1931 BY K.irm FfATUMS SYNDIC A.TK. INC. ——
SYNOPSIS Lily l.ou Lansing, young and| pretty telephone operator, gives up her opportunity for an operatie career to marry wealthy Ken Sargent. Ken's parents had hoped their son would marry the socially prominent Peggy Sage and threaten to have the marriage annulled. However. the young couple go housekeeping and are ideally happy. Then Ken loses his position and. one night, Lily Lou hears him sobbing. Next day, Ken’s father calls and informs Lily Lou her marriage has been annulled. Feeling Ken no longer cares, Lily Lou accepts a railroad ticket and SSOO from .Mr. Sargent and goes to New York. She rents a furnished room and through Maxine Rochon, one of the boarders, secures a position playing the piano for a dancing teacher. Later, she and Maxine go to live with the wealthy Mrs. Paula Manchester, whose hobby is befriending joung artists. Word comes that Ken is engaged to Peggy Sage and Lily Lou is depressed. Shortly after. Lily Lou is stunned with the realization she is to become a mother. She longs for Ken. thinking how proud he would have been, but refrains from writ- ' ing him. She loses her position but Dwight Gwin, the noted vocal instructor. employs her as his accompanist and promises to give her s: ging lessons. At times, Lily Ix>u is happy visioning a successful career but there are also hours of anguish when she thinks of her baby and feels so lonely w ithout Ken. One day,’ Nita Nahlman. the popular opera singer and Lily Lou's idol, calls on Gwin. After hearing Lily Lou sing, she offer- to take her to Europe. Lily Lou is in seventh heaven.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX Mrs. Manchester was delighted. Madame Nahlman! Really!” "Manchester gets a second-hand kick out of everything we do,” Maxine said. Maxine did not show much surprise at the news, but nothing surprised Maxine very much. She made a great fuss about Lily Lou’s good luek, and dragged all her clothes out of the closet to help her pack, then remembered an engagement, and went off in the midst of it. Nobody really cared very much what happened to you, here in New York. Not even Gwin. He was delighted in away. but in another way he didn’t seem to care. The same with Madame Nahlman. Offer you the other betkin her de luxe stateroom on the ship, promise to tutor you in Paris, and then seem to forget all about you. Lily I'OO stew to get her passport, her visas, to buy the little extra things one always needs, to drawout the $l5O .till left in the bank She was going to Europe with Nita Nahlman. She, Lily Lou Lansing from Woodlake. She hurried with her packing, her last minute ironing She wanted time to write a long letter to May. A little smile trembled at the corner of her mouth as she wrote. A sly little smile of triumph. . May knew a girl who had a friend who worked on a newspaper. Maj- would tell her friend, and the friend would tell her friend, and it would be in the paper, probably with that picture she had taken the year she was eighteen She had ehanged a lot since then, but Ker would remember her mote like that, so it was just as well. . . . She couldn’t help wanting Ken to know. There wasn’t any harm in that Not even Peggy Sage could object to that ... to his reading about her in a paper . . . She went to her bureau and took out the four newspaper clippings she had hidden under her handkerchiefs.
NEWGAS WELLS AiD DEPRESSION . I Geneva. N. Y.—(U.R) Dteeovery jot huge n ttnral gas fields, the exact |-Stent of which still is unknown. jtiStS set Fingor Lakes residents i dreaming of a gigantic new industry. | Gas production in counties to th*> south of here already has drawn
; The Sargent Steamship Line and I the Sage Navigation company had merged. Kentfield Carey Sargent. Third, en route for South America. Kentfield Carey Sargent. Third, general freight agent of the Sargent Navigation Company, on board the yacht Seaforth, to race next summer in the Pacific coast annuals. . . . Miss Peggy Alexander Sage, whose engagement to Kentfield Sargent, Third. . . . Lily Lou rolled up the clippings, stuck them in a corner of her trunk. Her conscience, the miserable Woodlake conscience, began to torture her. How could she go to Europe, with Madame Nahlman not knowing that in April. . . . She tried to remember Dwight Gwin's exact words. “None of her dam business! Don't you mention it to her. Trump up some excuse to see friends or something, and slip off to the American hospital at Neuilly. Nita’s broadminded. Keep your mouth shut and don’t spring it until you have to!” It had been the first thing she thought of. “I can’t go!” she had cried to Gwin two minutes after he had assured her that Madame Nahlman was serious about taking her. She had let him convince her, because she wanted to be convinced. She couldn’t give it up. Think of it . . . the chance to get away from New York, away from all the prying eyes ... It would be easy to slip away later, plead ill health perhaps, go to that hospital in Neuilly. . . . Nahlman need never really know. She’d have enough money—slso left of Ken’s father’s money, and over a hundred in currency,
saved from her salary from Gwin, j and a twenty dollar money order f her mother had sent her for her j birthday, and American money goes t so far in Europe now. Besides, < Nahlman said .that she wouldn't t need money—none at all— r Yes, and that was just it. How 1 could she let Nahlman pay all her expenses, and not tell her the c truth? She’d never take her if , she knew. Might as well give it , up right now. i But how could she back out ot it now, with Maxine already counting on bringing Frances over to takq j her place? People always are so disgusted with you when you say you’re going somewhere, and then | you don’t . . . Lily Lou walked up and down the small green and white room, [ stepping over little heaps of shoes and boxes and tissue paper cn the ' floor. She put her old lace dress in ' the trunk, and saw her mother making it, holding the needle and ( material too close to her tired eyes. . The Woodlake conscience tri- ! umphed. She wasn’t ashamed of having a baby, she had been married, by a minister. . . . But to cheat . Madame Nahlman. . . No. she , couldn’t do that. She put on her hat and coat and . called a taxi, glorying in her courage , and extravagance. r She drove up to the hotel in great > style, and sailed, head high, eyes I bright, Jo the desk. Madame Nahlman was out. i Back home A sleepless niffht. In the morning she went early to > the hotel. Madame Nahlman was t resting. “I’ll wait,” she said. t She sat alone in the lobby, surrounded by empty and a , general air of waiting. A green , uniformed porter languidly dusted j tables, straightened chairs. Two j bellhops drowsed on a bench. At ten Madame Nahlman anIt swered the telephone herself. s Lily Lou went up. Madame was - in bed, eating heartily of ham and eggs.
the sting froth the business depression in that section. Wells in one county alone nrodnco 1W.f100.000 cubic feet of gas a day. But the Finger Lakes region, of which Genova is the center, has one advantage over neighboring fit'ds. All producing wells so far drilled tn this vicinity have been in sandy soil. Most of them have "come in" with terrific force. Oil companies and stock promotion concerns have placed nearly half the farms in central New York under lest*.
I “I'll send for some breakfast for I you ... a cup of coffee, some brioche!" , Lily Lou was too shy. She said she had had breakfast. Then she . sat and watched Madame Nahlman • eat. It took a long while to gather I courage to say what she had come t to say. Madame Nahlman didn't • understand at first. She sat straight up in bed, her blue eyes . wide, her long, reddish hair drag- ' ging her shoulders. Lily Lou tried again. ■ This time there was no possible ’ misunderstanding Madame Nahlman drained her eoffee cup. put it down on the tray and stared at Lily ' Lou for a long minute. Then she fell back on her pillow hnd screamed with choking, gurgling laughter. She laughed until she cried, and ' Lily Lou had difficulty in not cry- [ ing, too. “Oh!” she choked, "if that isn’t the—the most—” When she quieted a little, Lily Lou rose to go. She was pale, and , very calm. “I thought you’d feel that way," she said. “It was nice of you to ask me to go, Madame Nahlman. I’m only sorry that it wasn’t possible—” Under the bright blue gaze of the hennaed prjma donna she could ' hardly continue. She spread her hands, in a hopeless gesture. “You have changed your mind, , you won’t come with me?" “Oh. no—l mean yes, of course I'd go, but how could I let you take me, when—when — ” Madame Nahlman went off into , another fit of laughter. She seemed . to be considering some private.
priceless joke of her own. “Life! So complicated. . . . But never mind, you car. have all the babies you want. Have twins!” Another gale of laughter. “We sail tonight, just the same, only you will be seasick, my poor tittle girl. But never mind. That is life.” “I was married!” Lily Lou cried desperately. “1 married a boy who was not quite twenty-one, and his parents had it annulled. So I left, and came to New York—” "Ah, yes. To the tig city—" “No. not on that account. His father—” “His father is backing you? He has money?” The prima donna’s blue eyes had narrowed. This was no time to hedge. Lily Lou sensed that. “He is a wealthy man,” she said, “and he gave me my train ticket east and five hundred dollars. I have $l5O of i left. But I hope to send it all back to him as soon as 1 am earning a little more. I don’t know whether you'd say that was backing me or not . . .is it?” “No. But the child. They will provide for it? You have a settlement? Or will they take it?” “No! Oh, no. They don’t know about it. I didn’t tell them. 1 have enough money—l can manage. I’ll go to some little place for a while in France—that is, if you’ll take me—and then to the American hospital at Neuilly, and you won't be bothered—really! ” “But you can’t do that. You must write—or wire immediately. A marriage can’t be annulled when—” Madame Nahlman thrust one fat pink silk leg out of bed. Lily Lou had a vision of her wiring the Sargents, of old Mr. Sargent getting the news, and Ken and Peggy clinging together, cowering away from it. “No, I can’t tell them now. It’s too late. He’s engaged to be married again. Maybe he’s married — for all I know —” (To Hr Continued) Qwvricbt by K ng Features Syndicate. Ine.
Optimistic reports by geologists, combined with the high percentage of paying wells drilled in this vicinity, have combined to encourage the belief in some quarters tint the Finger Lakes region will shortly supply gas to the entire North Atlantic scabs3rd. —i —. n— Municipal Clerk 52 Years Boston.— (U.m hkiward J Lord I is serving nis 52hd year as clerk ot the BoMon municipal court. He thinks he is the dean of American court clerks. i
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JOBLESS STUDY IN IDLE HOURS London —(UP) —Learn while you do not eirn. is t’ie new slogan for unemployetl here. An experiment started by M rley college f r Working Men and Wo men provide free clause for the jobless in a la: ,'e variety of subjects. Experienced teachers have offe.ed their services voluntarily. Subjects range fr >m gymnastics
SPECIAL SALE OF FiNEOVAuI basket! Saturday] Sensational purchase of hundreds cf ' <-e quality, 'tnqfl png baskets, waste paper baskets, clothes clothes baskets. Neve- before have we of’e-ed suthtfl does savirjs on baskets. We are working day ant give our customers the very best values that the affords. SAVE SATURDAY ■ 50c value i| ■ Fancy New Clotheil Shopping Baskets Baskets I These attractive and service- (»!> .. ;. .d.y, -fl able Baskets will make your B' 1 ’ M>•Hum ladH shopping a pleasure. A Ileal 25c 49<| rgg 39c value 4-sewed I K CARPET BROOMS jbg SATURDAY OXLY gm .Made of good quality straw, the kind you I have been paying 39c for. Buy as many I as you want. Help sohe your house I cleaning problem with a new Broom. I US A 39c Broom Saturday for I I 19c 50c Value WASTE I’Al’i J! BASKS Just the very basket for home -fl or office. Well made basket. Fancy braid trim. A real g special for Saturday ....... ■ ■[ SI.OO value ' a,Ue . j Clothes Hampers Market BasKfl Oblong and square stjnpes. I .m-sH with lids. Color trim. H >‘iu ; will keep your room clean, i,n< |,r ' ' mo her’s work easier. — 59c 19< 75c Value Beautiful Truly a Beautiful fancy fl W f traw motor hag. You won t jja mind shopping with this JF handy basket IT’S TRUE ECONOMY TO SHOP 1 SCHAFER HDW. C
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