Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 135, Decatur, Adams County, 7 June 1932 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES — — —•" — — • 1 * FOR SALE FOR SA.LE Oil Staves S4.M to $42.50; .Mattresses $4.98 to sls Bed Springs, $7 to sl2; Iron beds. $6. felt base‘rugs $4.98 to $6.50; All electric radio sets $25; Bargains in dining room, bed room and living ro.m suites and kltehes cabinets Sprague Furniture Co., Monroe street, Phono IM.. 134-6 t FOR SALE —11 slioats weighing about 60 lbs. each, and some brood sows. E. A. Straubi 1 mile south of Peterson. 133G3tx FOR RENT FOR KENT- 2 light housekeeping rooms in modern home, first floor, private entrance. 310 North Third St., Phone 511. (b) 133-3 t FOR - RENT—Mode: n house, good location may be leased. Address Citizens Bank. Portland, Ind gl34x>tx FOR"”RENT — Two front - >ffice rooms Heat furnished. Inquire Niblick and Co. 134-3 t HOUSE FOR RENT -.Modern, 2 blocks from count house Call 1029 C. A. Burdg. 121-)tx ; FOR TRADE Farms to trade for eify properties. See J. H. Engle, “Berne, Ind. g!34-2tx WANTED WANTED— Salesman between the | ages of 23 and 45. Salary and ' commission. Address Box W. S. L. care.. Decatur Democrat Co. 13ua.,t x | WANTED To RENT — Furnished lower apartment or small house. Inquire Box 5-. MC., Decatur Democrat. g135-3t ” —o DAWES RESIGNS FINANCE JOB (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) detit"signed just a few minutes be~fore announcing Dawes’ retirement. Dawes leaves the reconstruction} corporation just as President ■ Hoover is seeking to have con-} gross double its capitalization to} $3,000,000,000 (.B) so it can take a still larger part in the administration’s program of economic rehabilitazion and unemployment relief. Dawes in his letter of resignation recalled that he had assumed the presidency of the corporation last winter with the understanding "that i would lie release;! when its work was well established. He said this work was "now well on} its way with loans already atlth-} orized for about $700,000,000 and its operations are now properly j svstemized and effective.’’ Dawes has been prominent in the public sei vice ever since he* became purchasing agent for the American expeditionary force in • Fiance as a brigadier general in | 1917. President Harding called} him in 1921 to be first director of, the budget. In 1923 he was sent I to Europe with Owen D. Young* to write the Dawes reparations, plan. In 1921 he was elected vicepresident. He did not care much: for the task of presiding over the} Senate and sharply’ denounced | senators and senate procedure as i time wasters. As soon as his term as vice-president was up. President Hoover sent him to Great Britain as ambassador. Ho, resigned this post last winter and | almost immediately was named | head of the reconstruction cor-' poration. COURTHOUSE Real Estate Transfers Sin Burk et ux n 2 of inlot I Decatu to Eva J. Acker for SI.OO. ~ Eva J. Acker, n-2 cf in lot 4 Deertur, to Sim Burk et ux for SI.OO. ■■■■KBanroacHKassßßKzsa FLORENCE HOLTIIOUSE Stenographic Work Typewriting Judg'' I. T. Merrvtuaifs Law Office, K. of C. Bld«. If you have any extra typewriting or stenographic work I will be glad to do it. Phone 42 for appointment. Ashbaucher’s MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS ■ BERNE MARKET Corrected Juno 7 No commission and no yardage. Hogs. 100-150 pounds $3.00 150-220 ipounds $3.33 . 220-250 pounds $3.20 250-300 pounds $.1.00 Roughs. $2.00. Stags $1.25. Vealera, $11.75. Spring lambs $6.00. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. Wheat, old *.51% .*3% .56% Wheat, new .51% .53% Corn .SB% .31% .32% Oats .20% .20% .21% Rye .31% .33% .37% FORT WAYNE LIVE STOCK Fort Wayne, Ind.. June 7.—(U.R) — Hog market, 15-20 c higher; pigs and light lights. $3.25-$3.50; lights. $3.50$3.60: mediums. * $3.4b-$3.50; heavies, $3.20-$3.40; roughs, $2.50; stags $1.25; calves, $5.50; ewe and wether lambs, $6 $6.50; bucks. $5-$5.50. EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., June 7. —(U.R) Hogs: on sale. 1,000; active, steady with Monday’s average; good to choice 160-220 lbs.. $4; 225240 lbs.. $3.90; 250 lbs.. $2.75; pigs i. nd underweights, $3.50 $3.75. Cattle. Receipts. 50; cows fully j } steady; cutter grades, $1.25-$2; fat cows, $3-$3.25; plain grass steers I unsold. Calves: Receipts, 150; vealers isoc higher; good to choice $6; com- : mon and medium. $5.75-$6. Sheep: Receipts. 200; lambs firm: merely good Kentucky lambs including bucks. $7.75; choice quoted, $8.25. uOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected June 7 No. 2. New Wheat 40c 30 lbs. W-hite Oats 16c 28 lbs. White oats 15c Ba r ley 30c • Rye .. 30c ; Soy Beans 30c i New Na. 3 White Cora 27c . ' New No. 3 Yellow Corn 30c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen St Shark's -S-pa ii<”» The largest -ujn ra‘:ng sharks sometimes attain 2 length of 3n to to feet. It IS not trfe that ihe fe Dale shark Is blind. Ihe pllot-llsli ! x member -;f the mackerel family vnd only about 12 Inches le.'.g. sv >mpanles ships and rl—i sharks guiding the aharks tc their food It swims cluse in front of the shark, but probably does iL.'” tr reed or fragments scattered by .he shark i and also to seem? orot-Fllo*’ frow Ya snem’.'s o Cc.aada Protects Walrus The walrns In Canadian wiiura if protected N» one la allowed to kill them except for food, and rhe number in any ine year Is limited | to seven for Eskimos and four for } whites. Tlie walrus Is an tmpos. tant food for the Eskimo and his dogs. All kills have to he report arj to the m<>nntod poller DR. ( . V. CONNELL '■ETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases of cattle and poultry. Oi7.ce and Res. 508 No. 3rd st. I PHONE 102. . I S. E. BLACK } FUNERAL DIRECTOR The service we render is incomparable. All calls answered day or night. Ambulance Service 500 - Phones - 727 MBS. BLACK LADY ATTENDANT i or Belter Health Sec DR. U. FROHN APFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. Phone 314 IC4 So. 3rd st. OTfnManaraMMMaMHtaMMVWataßtaMMaaWtaa* > —— ■' ■■■■" ——... 1 ■■ ■-- — — N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST > Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted , HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8 00 p. ni. Telephone 135 LOBENSTEIN & DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance Service, Office Phone 90. i | Residence Phone, Decatur 1041 Residence Phone, Monroe 81 LADY ATTENDANT.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1932.
11l I.MB! i: THE YTE'R SHOWING “( HE VHNG THE (111 \TEK” l.’i Mrjß I'M AVHOTTER,I pYTvAS VOU^bU.THAIStUHO UIUQ fQLO YOO \1 I abSIUKELY HO V "'CI XILL VOUPIXASe) THAT DAME NEARLY) I JUS YER. THE LOWEST Down- "W T oH ) /SSoiFFRENCE WHO TELL ME LU HO TOLD 7 I JUS* 7 I Ml KILLED ME-6IVE JfoUKOUT I MEAN THE LOW DOWNEST Q|Q THfKT ? 7 nmF h/J OVER GUESSED) I’LL K ME A DRIHK OF /(U HO STOLE SUIAB I EVER LAID ME / ?? YER »T»‘ 7 \RF t ■ VARNISH-1 FEEL/ OLIVE OYL’S .7 > DOLLARS 7 ) [7 FAINT ,--V-10NE VAN* 7' TEN THOOSNO DOLLARS / bHoT.EH?y , |C 1// K 7 rt_ Ld Ar \ “"I (VELL-.-Hlt Sv t± i w k WB-A KJBy JBL: ufc’r ' --prCZzf 5- * — r < ‘ ' / /—JjB ■ x for' A I/ i i j \ .— t y \ ( './ •l‘ ► ■ '• »•••»• )>h lv<r I 1- * —a., -i— ■ —J ■ ■ —, . ■ ■■■■—- —— - m - M
* Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these j ; lest questions? Turn to Page } Four for the answers. 1. Who wrote "Heart Hungry?" 2. Name the six N. w England states? 3. What office is hold by Paul von Hindenbuig? 4. By what .popular term is tuberculosis called? 5. Hrw much travel expense is the President of the U. S. allowed annually ’’ 6. What state pr duces toe largest amount of coal? 7. in whit city is Paddington Station located? 9. What are the school colors of | the U. S. Military Academy? 10. In wha’ country did Cecil i Rhodes become famous. o —— HOSPITAL NOTES Mi.-s Louise BieirerkCi, Decatur. R ute 4. underwent a mijor emergency it.eration Monday at the Adams County Memo: irl Hospital. Miss Glennys Arnold, Decatur. Route 2. submitted to a major operation this nroraing at the local hospital. o -IIKHIir -SAI.K iii the ttlaiHM Circuit Court. Male Os liHliaiHi. < aiiNc I 1338 The Pruilential Insurance Company <»f America, A body corporate, VS. Minnvrva Heller, lx?muvi Heller. Courtney Heller, Daisy Heller, William H. Clark, By virtue of an order of sale to me directed ami delivered from the Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court in the above entitled cause, 1 haw levied upon and will expose for sale by public AUCTION at the Court House door, east entrance, first floor in said County, between the hours of 1$) o'cloc k A. M. ami 4 o’clock P. \I., on Thursday, the 30th day of June A. D. 1932 the rents and profits, for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate, TO-WIT. The northeast quarter of the 1 northeast quarter and the north half I of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter ail in uc< lion thirty- I three (33) Township Twenty-fivel (25) north of range Thirteen (13)1 east of the si'conii principal Merridian ' • ontaininK sixty (»»0) acres, more or : less; situated in Adams County, State j j of Indiana. And on failure to realize the full I amount of the judgment interest thereon ami costs, I will at the same I time and in the manner aforesaid I offer for sale the fee simple of the : above described premises, taken as the property of the defendants, to satisfy said order of Sale. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or Appraisement Burl Johnson, Sheriff Adams County, Indiana Lenhart, Heller, and Schurger Attys June 7-14-21 \<» i i< i; TO \ox- it I: sll >i; \ i s In the lilMimi Circuit Court Ipril Term lUZIU ( .not’ No. 13150 STATE OF INDIANA ADAMS COI NIY. SS: The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, a corporation, Plaintiff. VS. Jacob M. Hoffman, Lucy A. Hoffman, his wife, Douglas Haney, Paul Schulte, E. L. Lee, whose true chris--1 tian name is to plaintiff unknown, Emma Schulte, ('arl E. Kirchhoff, | Paul Schulte Oil and Gas, Incorporatl ed, The Peoples Ixian and Trust .Company, a corporation, Jacob Bar--1 ger. Defendants. The plaintiff in tiie above entitled cause halving filed its complaint | herein, together with an affidavit of a cuiupetent person that the defendants, Paul Schulte, E. L. Lee. whose true Christian name is to plaintiff unknown, Emma Schute, and Carl E. Kirchhoff, are non-resi-tdents of the Slate of Indiana, and that the object of this action is to forec lose a .nortgage upon real estate in Adams Count*, in the State I of Indiana, described as follows,, toI wit:Ihe Southeast quarter of 'the Southeast quarter of Section 8, conl taming 40 a res, more or less, except one-half acre out of the southwest coiner thereof, being 10 rods North and South, by 8 rods East and West, for school purposes, and leaving after said exception, acres, more or less; also, the Northeast quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 17, containing 4U acres more or less, all in Township 26 North llange 15 East, and containing in the •aggregate, after said exception, a> res more or less and that the said defendants, Douglas Ha.ney, FausJ Sthulte, E. L. Lee, whose true Christian name is to plaintiff unknown, Emma Schulte, and Garl E. Kirchhoff are necessary parties thereto. Now, thertefore, said defendants Douglas Haney, Paul Schulte,’ E. L. Lee, whose true Christian name is to plaintiff unknown, Emma Schulte and Carl feJ. Kirchhoff are hereby notified that unless they be and appear i t the Adams Circuit Court on the 6tn day of September, 1932. at the court house, in the town of Decatur, in said county ami state, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will he heard and determined in their absence. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, and affixed the seal of said Court, this 31 day of May, A. D„ 1932. .Milton C. Werling Clerk, Adams Circuit Court H. M. De Voss and Howard A. Sommer, attorneys for plaintiff. May 31 June 7-14 o- — \ p|»<»iatment of Executrix, •. No. 21)17 Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Executrix of the estate of William Schajr.'Tloh, Ute of Adorns county, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Anna C. Schamerloh, Executrix May 28, 1932 May 31 June 7-14
f’EMKRJcFWEI By HAZEL LIVINGSTON ——m COPYRIOHT IO3J BY K.U'TG c'BATt'fLt'S
CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO "You’ll ruin your voice, you darn fool!” Gwin wired her from Long Island. “No, you won’t,” Tony said, “not while you keep your voice forward, and don’t force it.” And after that it was easy, so easy that it never again seemed hard. She was singing in the chorus of Madame Butterfly. In the second i act, Rosa de Rocca, who was singing the title role in spite of a serious throat affliction, found herself unable to continue. They hustled Lily Lou into the costume, told her •he’d have to go on. She waited, cold and a little weary, in the wings, while the announcement was made. Heard the subdued banging of seats, the little indignant murmur of the disappointed, who were leaving . . . “They’re all leaving, down front,” somebody said. That would have unnerved her a year ago. It did not matter so much now. This was her chance, her big opportunity, and the audience was walking out before she started. It would have mattered frightfully, once. But she was used to disappointment now, and there was nobody left but Tony to care. Her mother gone . . . Ken . . . Ken, who was to have come to the end of the world to see her make her debut, gone, God only knew where . . . Almost from the first she knew that the audience—what was left of it—was with her. She didn’t have to throw herself into the part, she WAS Butterfly, waiting, believing, despairing, giving up at last . . . “Bravo!” someone shouted from the gallery. “Success! Success!” Tony was on the stage, embracing her almost before the curtain fell.
• » • • Tina brought Lily Lou the morning papers, while she was still in bed. She turned to the drama pages, saw the headlines . . . Turned away, a little sick w-ith the excitement. After five years . . . after she had almost given up . . . Success . . . Young Robin, glowing and happy, after his early morning play in the park, opened the door a crack, came running to the bed to throw his arms around her and ask to pls| Indian—“just a minute, only a minute. I p’omised Tina I wouldn’t play, only a minute with you!” She pressed his cold cheek 'against hers, hugged him until he squirmed—- “ Le’s play, tnother-er—-Le’s play!” So she submitted to being scalped, and they hunted for scouts under the pillow. After that Tina led him away, and she turned once more to the papers. But she knew what was in them. She’d known ever since last night, almost from the moment that she made her first entrance she knew. “Lily Lou Lansing rises from the night clubs, to sing the second act of Butterfly ... a romantic figure, . young, slim and beautiful, pos- ! sessed of a superb soprano voice that soars effortlessly into the higher reaches . . The telephone began to ring. Reporters came. Strange people to ! congratulate her. Strange agents with contracts. “A wonderful piece of luck.” T on y sa id. “Dramatic, do you see? In the midst of a dull season, the new prima donna -out of the night chihst Os course you’re no more out of the night clubs than I’m out of the Royal Navy, but it makes no
WOULD ABOLISH ROAD LEVIES - (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEi ; cut that since enactment of the tax t road conditions have improved to a point where the money is being considered to pay off bunds and to be used for other q,ui,poses. He called 4 attention to cite of the proposals ‘.o come before the special ses-ion cC the legislature, which provides ’ that a portion of the gasoline tax ?lbe (jive, tect to smtii governmeatal units to reduce lo al taxes. x Other officers elected were: vice 4 ! president, L. H. Hobbs, Gary; sec-
difference, it sounds well. You’re , made, Lily!” , “Thanks to you, Tony—and Nshlman, and Gwin and my mother and t my Uncle Eph. and all the others—” “Nonsense, Lily! People can help just so much. After that—poof! , You must blow up, unless you have 1 it—the spark—the flame—” “I don’t feel flaming, Tony. Just f tired.” . I He laughed, kissed her limp fin- . gers. “You will rest!” She laughed, too. “Os course!” • But she wouldn’t tell Tony the | truth—that it had been too hard, • that she was too tired, spiritually, to really care. Success was just life i for Robin now, education, advan- . tages. For herself, it was all over. . She had accomplished what she had . struggled for. And it wasn’t worth . while. Well, no turning back .. . on and on . . . > She sang Butterfly again to a standing room only house. Sang ( Violetta, in Traviata next, sang it ! with all the frail charm of which . Tony dreamed. Sang Mignon three . nights later, with vivacity and brilliance, then Butterfly again. New York was mad over her. ’ Artists wanted to paint her. Adver- . risers wanted her to endorse van- ■ ishing cream, toothpaste, cigar- , ettes, and wave lotion. . “But she knows a dozen —two dozen roles!” Tony said. “She’s just starting! Didn’t she troupe for two , years with Toscani?” She had. and she did. Revivals of , old Favorites were promiaad, Lily i Lou Lansing to sing Gilda, Lucia. Tosca . . . rumors of a new opera created for her . . . Tony’s Balkia. The youngest prima donna. Lily Lou Lansing, not yet twenty-one! Lily Lou was almost‘twenty-six, l . but that’s the way with iL There was a special nurse for Robin now —a French one, for old
times’ sake, and Tina was to be her personal maid. She kept the same apartment, though she had it alone ( now. Maxine Rochon had gone back t to Los Angeles. Some sort of job i in pictures. Friends? Oh, yes. A star has friends. And cronies—Tony, half a dozen real friends. Happy? Is anyone really happy, she asked herself. ’ Sometimes she thought that after ’ all it might be simpler to marry . Tony. , Still, she didn’t love Tony. She ’ didn’t want to marry. It was just j that Tony wanted her, and he had been so good to her. While she was trying to make up ,! her mind, there came the chance to ’ go to San Francisco, as guest artist , with the San Francisco Opera company. Three roles. Mignon, Travi- • ata and Snow Maiden, so» the last r matinee. 1 She hesitated at first. It would be 5 hard to go back, and there was really no one left to care very • much whether she did or not. Dad ’ . . . but he never wrote. . . . May ? said that they didn’t even know ’ where he was, half the rime. - There was the matter of Robin, t too. She wouldn’t make the long ! > trip without him, and if she took • him . . . e Well, what difference did it make? e What could the world do to her now? Even if they did find out. - her position was assured, and o Robin’s, too. s She sighed. “Robin, we’re going out west, ” you’ll see your grandpa,” she told ? him. “And your aunts, and your e cousins.” t Never having met them he was e unimpressed. “Will there be Int dians? I would like a little Indian o to play with!” '
. rotary, C. C. Dietz Michigan City, I iI tieasurer, Charles H. Kryder, South * | bend. M. E. Nobiett wits continue as ( I manager. Town Clerkship Just i Family Heritage! - : SCITUATE. R.l tU.R> — The town] >i clerkship of Scituate seems to be; >I a heritage of the Remington j 1 ! family. s] Dewitt C. Remington was elect ! . ; ed as town clerk in 1875. * Daniel H. Remington, his son. j * ; was his deputy, and succeeded 1 hint ip 1878. “ Daniel is now serving his 47th ■ ■ year as town clerk, having been
“I’m afraid not, darling." “Then let’s not go, mother. Let’s go to Coney Island instead. Shall we?” “I’m afraid it’s too late to change our minds. I’m afraid we’ll have te go out west,” she told him, and she knew that she was sorry. She shouldn’t have decided to go. • • • Madame Lansing, Lily Lou Lansing, youngest Metropolitan star, guest artist with the San Francisco Opera company, registered at the Fairmont hotel in San Francisco. Lily Lou read all about it in the papers. She read all the notices abowt Lily Lou Lansing, Metropolitan star, with an avid interest that was more than half impersonal. She never felt that it was really she. She wasn’t this glamorous person she read about. She was just herself, Lily Lou, who used to live in Woodlake, and had a broken heart once, and a little son now. Still ... it was she! She had paid all the old Lily Lou’s debts with the new Lily Lou’s money. She could buy the pretty things she saw in shops. A pink shaded lamp in a decorator’s window. . . . Iler sister May would love it. All right! Charge it to Madame Lansing. . . A smocked dress for Irene’s little girl, charge that, too. . . . Too bad I she couldn't buy pretty things for Robin, but he was so boyish now, a tall, sturdy 5-year-o)d who knew his ABC’s and could count, and wanted to go to school like the other boys, please moth-er! Did-he miss not having had a father? She didn’t know. Somej times she wondered. He asked her ! so little. She was away from him < so much. The French woman. | Marie, and the maid, Tina, meant i
more to him than she did, she thought sometimes. Yet they were such chums. They had such glorious plays together. He did so admire her in her costumes and wigs. She could never look at him without a lump in her throat, without wanting to take him into her arms and hold him tight and cry over him . . . Foolish . . . May came to see her the day she arrived. May grown a little heavier, a little older. Still working. Still broke. Looking with eyes of envy at the luxurious suite, Lily Lou’s lovely gowns. “I’d rather stay over in Oakland with you,” Lily Lou said truthfully, . “but I couldn’t impose on you with Robin, and besides, one has to put up a front—” “I could endure it,” May said dryly. “I could stand a forty dollar a day suite and a million dollars worth of clothes, to please my public. But I do think it was very silly i of you, Lily Lou, as 1 wrote you at ■ the time. Bess said the same thing. I Bess said you take an awful chance, ■ adopting a child. Os course Robin ’ seems cute, but you don’t know how he’ll turn out. You don’t know what , kind of people he came from.” ■ Angry tears stung Lily Lou’s ; eyes. Angry words sprung to her lips. But she choked back the tears. ■ and the words. There was nothing r she could say. She sat quiet and let , her sister tell her that an adopted | child was a terrible risk, and if she had to have a pet she would have done better to buy a dog, or a , ecuple of pedigreed cats. 1 Oh, how she longed for some one r who would understand . . . someone whom she could talk to . . . her 3 mother. . . . And her mother had - died, never knowing the truth . . , (To Be Continued) Copyright by King Features Syndicate. Inc.
| out of office from 1901 to 1913. Leroy Remington, his son. now ! is deputy clerk, and probably will | succeed his father. o — The Thunderstorm During an electric storm recent i ly. late at night, our little four-yenr- ; old daughter awoke and cinne into mj room and when snuggling aown ! said. "1 don’t like to hear therlomjn talking to each other like lhat~they get angry."—TTiicsgr Tribune. — „„,0 Bargains — Bargains tn Living Room, Dining Room Suits, Mat- . tresses and Rugs. Stuskey and Co. i Monroe, dur Phone number ia 44 ct. I
| WHAT. IS • A ■ KafaGA )EN| Sweetest Sweet Corn Home Grow n K
The "good old days” are, for the, I ! most part, mythical when studied |< closely and none of their fabled i< | glories is more easily knocked from 11 I its pedestal than sweet corn. The! I i sweet corn of the garden today is, < I far finer in quality, more quickly , i produced, and in every way super-; i icr to the sweet corn of fifty years '| ago of which we hear the ancients i talk. They had no Golden Bantam fifty years ago. The arrival of these nuggets of sweetness changed home j corn growing. This is the most generally grown home garden corn i because it is the sweetest. It has lent its sweetness to a number of , hybrids in which it figures as a parent together with its golden color. Time was when the golden color would have condemned a sweet corn untasted as “field corn.” Now the golden color is a badge of sweetness. Corn soil is proverbial as rich, I mellow, warm soil. That is the kind sweet corn wants. You can’t make it too rich and can't give it too much cultivation. There are two innovations in modern corn growing. One is planting the smaller growing types smh as Golden : Bantam in rows, the individual stalks from 8 inches to a foot apart in the row. instead of the timehonored hills with three or four stalks to a hill, the hills from two te three feet apart. The other is p anting corn in squares or rectangles instead of in long rows. In
J ■ i®BWii»ul & StatMi
By HARRISON CAR ROLL. Owyrignt. tats Kina Vnasurw gindtraie ln« HOLLYWOOD. Cal., June Ofl.When audiences first roared at Flagg and Quirt on the screen they little reckoned what a trail of hard
boiled teams would follow in the wake. Now Fox has engaged Wi 1liam Boyd, he of the stage, to shout back at Spencer Tracy in a South Sea tn e 1 o d r qm a, i ‘After the Rain." This picture, I the next to go I into production at the Westwood studio, will thriftily com-
.. W ~ ztawe Wilhatn Boyd
bine the appeal of the Flagg-Quirt formula with the current rage for tropical backgrounds. Again thriftily, however, it will involve n<> ex- ! pensive location trips to Tahiti, or other blessed isles of the Pacific All of the exoticism of the southern latitudes will be reproduced in : Westwood Hills by laborers who ! have grown to be past-masters at crafty imitation of nature. The story will revolve around a captain of a trading boat (Boyd), bis girl (Peggy Shannon) and a . pearl fisher (Tracy). Under the direction of John Blystone, the eternal triangle will take shape again on the screen You'll ! notice. Pm sure, the interesting similarity between the title of this picture and the Somerset Maugham drama whieh United Artists is film i ing at the ever convenient Catalina T- — j You really couldn’t tell she had * anything on when you first taw hel 11 emerge from a distant stage on the Warner-First National lot. Three newspaper men stopped en i . tranced. “Who’g that?” snapped one. “Oh.” squelched Hub Keavy, I "she’s just one of the girls in the : technicolor shorts." WHAT THE GOSSIPS ARE ’ SAYING. Why were the two carloads of “ Beverly Hills officers guarding Marj lene Dietrich’s house the other day? ... It is reallv quite amusing, that 9 mistake of Countess Dentice de t- i Frasso. The other evening, they in y. i troduced Douglas Fairbanks. Jr., to ti 1 iter as a Russian count. With his
■ . In th,. thr I'l.inn in .1.,,. tion of ,li< wn (l. Mg Mil. s l' ill.' h 1 .« iilg Ih< I I 1 ;.;,- :' |P Speeding P. • Weds Bl Cop Who Arrested DK’I ROIT .UP) in.m ■■ I Il‘. It. \ > i>. . .i" :■'! ’he i l '"'' ' BH M.-.t'l. til. bis itti< 1 i li.ii:r ;or ping him. B| M. \ I he »as I'iVll ' :■ Waiter Mu'. ' \n< I!' w 1 '!» (stt-r. was ■ a- tbe ding. M| Violet Rcinwald RnH Tonight. I>. (. II-
| new haircut, 1..- • ■ vtwde. Ms » mustache, he v. a> -..e1: a good ■ I tation that .'he ' "» it t»g- b “" ■ in tact, that tin group at PicKl | finally broke ui and had to spul* I rib. But that wasn't the funM I Two evenings laa r. they introaae I her to the genuine thing. « Hans Haubold ten Emsieaei, ! less, lie also wore a monocle.! i bowed stiffly . d •‘No. no, not me." sniffed i countess, “1 went h r it once. I I not again," And she the count’s nmnocle. 1U «* • I wear that in sum m.ng. she“ This time they tipped the tn just in tune to avert internal™ | complications. I I'm loath to believe it. ‘ ' R K-O sweats that B >bby < lari, Clark and Mc< ulhnigh. smokeeW 50-cent cigars a day , ■ And we’re on the subject of Loretta Young wears L n g-W in her new picture. " la ' e 7’ ta , . . Guess what star it was o. someone said: "* wo w ?''k t could nail a sole right on her» foot'” And now they re übattenes of arc-liihts at sales. Saw it myself on Holl!*" Boulevard. The career of Frances Dee W extra to leading womanj" 4 F haps some day star ;roe« Chatting with F aram " u ." j cals, .discover they have twJ
hnedupM in the neat n ture. She supplant Sidney m erything Sale” and ’ Ail! plaM 1 leminine lean’ ■West P» in “' The first st is by AntW Veiler, son Bayard. »«“ takes pl‘J against theW eround®* fj.at depar
Frances Dee
ment store. Blond Gene plays opposite hran.estarv story is to he perm l mer at West Pomt with h sion of the Government. Starrett is another player in the cast. , DID YOU KNOW- whc „„ That Colleen Moore. fl bbon , million or so. I guess. »a' e i from packages.
