Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 169, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1932 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES » — —♦

FOR FOR Adams j street, or will W^ fr!r^(I>r * mß1 ’ I ler property. Steele or , Herman Gilllg, phone 268. g!6B 3tx FOR SALE Mattresses. The Way you rest and sleep tonight is the ; way you work tomorrow. Regular ( |« mattresses, $4.98; regular sl2 I mattresses, $10; spring filled matIresMßM. |l2; sls and S2O. Sprague ■ Furniture Comptuy, Monroe St. Phono 199. blti9-3t FOR RENT II I 1... , — " ■■ . FOR Rent— 6 room house, semi- ; i modern. $8 month. Inquire at 310 ( Eleventh street. g167-3tx ( LOST AND FOL ND LOST — Platinum covered brooch measuring about 1% inches long. Filigree work, centered with di intotid. Finder please return to the Eugene Runyon residence. 103 South 4th. Street. Reward. gl6"-3tl WANTED WANTED TO BUY—An old build-j fug to wreck and move away. See i Harry Daniels, Pleasant Mills i al6tl-3tx 1 " o — Five Men Are Scalded WJien Boiler Explodes P Cortland, <lnd„ July 18—(UP) —[; Five men were scalded, one fatally when a threshing machine boiler’s exploded on a farm near here. 1 •Arthur Harvey died in a hospital t of his burns. Garris Goble, Cort- 1 land, and John Anderson, Bedford. I will recover, hospital physicians;: srfd. R. L. Brown and Jake Elkins t sustained lesser-burns. i *?- —0 ; WOTK E TO MIV-HIIMIir.VI* In the Viliiiiiw Circuit < ourt in Vacation, 1D32 < uiimc No. 113117 iiT/tfl E OF 1NI»IA NA > AJAAMS COUNTY SS: L The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance) coHljiHny, a corporation, Plaintiff. < V< William Richard. Edith Rich- • a rdf hia wife, George H. Bright. Flo Bright, Edward N. Tonnvllitr, Mary » A. '’STonnellier, his wife. William Zimmerman, Goss A. LaMar, Ann E. ( lat Mar, his wife, Albert Egly, Ann 1 S. Kgly, his wife, Tom Archbold, The ( fwrvt National bank, a corporation, ’ Jacob Barger, Win. Irelan, (’ora 1 Irejfiin, his wife, Edward NeedstivieX J ‘eft ndants. Trie plaintiff in the above entitled cauat having filed its complaint' ].<*rulu, together with an affidavit of a competent person that the defendants, William Richard and Edith! Ric hard, his wife, are non-residents . of the State of Indiana, and that the <»bject of this action is to foreclose a'Tnortgage upon real estate in AdaQis County, in the Stat, of Indiana, ribed as follows, towit: .Commencing at the Northwest corner of the Northeast quarter of Section 13, Township 26 North, Range 14 East; thence running South on the half section line 88 i rods; thence East on a line parallel! with the North section line ISO rods, . thence North on a line parallel with the East line of said Section, 88 reds, to the North line of said Sectkin; thence West on the North sec-| Uon line 80 rods, to the place of beginning, containing II acres, more or less ami that the said defendants' William Richard and Edith Richard, his wife, are necessary parties! tfiercto. Now, therefore, said defendants, VVilliam Richard ami Edith Rbchard h»s wife, are hereby notified that* ifbless the.\ be and appear in the' Adams Circuit Court on the 16th davl of September 1932, at the count | house. In the town of Decatur, in. said county and state, and answer or demur to said complaint, the! same will be heard and determined in their absence. -In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the aaaj of tlie said court, this 18th dav <U’ July A. L>. 1932. — Milton *c. W’erling Clerk, Adams Circuit Court H. M. De Voss and Howard A. Sommer, attorney for plaintiff July 18-25-A-l 0 _ I’IBI.M NOTH E Notice is hereby given that li Will receive bids for school bus i drivers for the ensuing school year. £ r m. Bids shall be opened at 8 !*• M. July 26 1932 at my office •_w»n tracts shall be awarded to the Mhrest and best responsible bidder. Route 1, 50 miles, route 2, 40 miles. I Eoute 3, 25 miles per day more or less j l.’c trustee and advisory board will reserve the right to reject any and all bids. Ridders must be prepared io carry public liability insurance, and furnish shed for bus. ARTHUR BLAKEY Trustee Union Twp. I 4 July 11-18 j NOTICE TO TAX.PA YERS OF I M’E( IAI VPI’ROi'HI * HON Notice is hereby given th" taxpayers of the City of Decatur. Indiana. that at the regular meeting' Jg ’he Common Council in and for' •aid City at the Council Room at I 7:00 o clock P. M on the sth day of July, 1932, Said Common Council considered and made the following! appropriations, towit: Fund No. 20—Fire Dept. lUfJl Uf J* alr * SIOO.OO Fund No. 22—Fire Dept. Supplies 50 00 Fund No. 40—Street Dept. Repairs & Operating autos 250.00 ' Fund No. H—City Hall. ‘ fax payers appearing shall have Mu- right to I* l heard thereon, after li appropriations have been delerinlneii, ten or more tiix|Fivc,r.s reeling themselves aggrieved bv • neb approprintlonß, mat appeal to th- Sihh Hoard of Tax t'onimUsioneis for further and final action t nerof by filing a petition therefore' with the County Auditor within ten : days »after due publication of this notice. ** Dated this sth dav of Julv ]932 «■ ALICE CHRISTEN • City Clerk July 11-18; ■vtrrit e oi- 1 iqi in vriox , Js hereby given that on June 21. 1932. by a vote nf the aharetoolders owning two thirds nf the •lock of Old Adams County Bank of Decatur. Indiana it was determined lhat said hank should go into liquidation and be closed and the directors of said bank were authorized and empowered to appoint a liquidating agent therefor; that thereafter the director! of said bank appointed Leo lager as such liquidating agent and -wild Leo Yager has duly quailfled as such. OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK By Leo Yager, Liquidating Agent July 11-13-25

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected July IS No commission ano uo yardage. — Ilogs 100-150 pounds $4.40 150-200 pounds $4.80 220-250 pounds $4 60 150-300 pounds $4.40 Roughs $3.00 Stags $1.50. Vealers SB.OO. Spring lambs $5.00. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. Wheat, old .44% .46% -50% i Wheat, new .44% .46% Corn .31 .31% .31% Oats .18% -18% -21% Fort Wayne Livestock Market Hog market 15c. lower; pigs $4.50-4.60; light lights $4.60-4.75; lights $4.75-4.85; mediums $4.60-1 4.75; heavies $4.50-4.60; roughs $3.75-4.00; stags $2.50-3.00. < Calves $6; ewe and wether lambs $5.75; bucks $4.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y„ July 18.—(U.R)! , -Hogs: on sale. 2,700; weights below 220 lbs., active to packers: 15c 'over Friday's average; heavier

weights arther slow, 10-15 c higher; good to choice, 160-210 lbs., $5.50; plainer kinds. $5.40; 230-260 lbs.. $.15-$5.35; few 300 lbs.. $4.85; pigs and underweights, $5.25-$5.40. Cattle: Receipts, 1,400; dry fed steers and yearlings, active. 15-25 c higher: good to choice, SB-25-$8.90; top. $9; good steers and weighty heifers. $8.25; praciically moderate feds below $8; grassers steady to 25c higher; lower grades draggy; tieshy offerings. $6.25-$6.75; plainer kinds. $4.50-$5.60; fat cows. $3.75-$4.50; cutter grades. $1.50$2.75. Calves: Receipts. 150; vealers weak to 50c lower; bulk better lot, $7; few. $7.50: common and medium, $5-$6.25. Sheep: Receipts, 4.400; lambs fairly active; steady at last week’s decline; good to choice natives, leniently sorted. $6.50; few decks. $6.75-$7; inbetween grades. $6; throwouts. $1.25 $5; inferior lots downward to $3. uOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected July 18 No. 1 New Wheat 60 lbs er better 35c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs ... .. 34c 30 ll>s. White Oats 15c New Oats 13c Soy Beans 30c New No. 3. White Corn 32c No. 3 Yellow corn . .. 37c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen lie Socialists Enlist Jobless St. Louis —(UP) —The socialist party, which polled fewer thiin 2,500 votes in Missouri in 1928 has placed a virtually complete state and national ticket in the field this year. The party has started a campaign to enlist unemployed.

OTHO LOBENSTEIN FUNERAL PARLOR Monroe, Ind. Mrs. Lobenstein. Lady Attendant. Business phone 90—Residence 81. Free Ambulance Service 24 hour service. YAGER BROTHERS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service, day or right. Lady Attendant Phone I(Y>44 Funeral Home, 110 So. First Si. S. E. BLACK Funeral Director Efficient, courteous, capable service. Calls answered day and night. Ambulance service. 500—Phones—727 J. M. DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTOR Modern, Dependable 24 hour service. MRS. DOAN, Lady AJtendant. Ambulance Service anywhere. Phone 1041 I'or Better Health Sec DR. IL FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: to to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m„ 6 to 8 p. m. Phone 314 IC4 So. 3rd st. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8 00 p, m. Telephone 135

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JULY 18. 1932.

—• THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING “POOR SERVICE. - K»“V VJEIL ME DOV>/n ( V/FIL AVJ RIGHT IF YAVJON'f] V/ERE A HtINNE.RO MILES REAVV/J WHftl JUST 'i A , VUHO , FTDDu n J il o^?S\VoSut T ARevmi’i.r- . > YA MW BE SORRY VA DiD- -J Wi Now h ' \ - tl’-t/oH l AIN'T HEUER S€€N ft J" i ’ X - .jr 1 ■ ' XA jTßoueu. bW' ■ ~ oA < X-> fit ' ii ; -.a -f r ■■ 7 \ \ ( Dont want to) . >l®. ; XxvV . p, * / i ■ ._L2?. k • , \\- ■ ABe PUT fWHORC) -)

_ A Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these test questions’ Turn to Page Four for the answers. ♦ ——— ♦ 1. Name the King of Sweden? 2. Name the nine planets? 3. Name the tipper and lower He uses of the Czechoslovakian Parliament? 4. When was Napoleon 111, of France overthrown? 5. Who wrote "Pride and Preju-1 dice?" 6. What Speaker of the U. S. i House of R presentatives wa-s fa-! tnilHrly known as "Uncle Joe?" 7. Os what country is lAthens the j capital? 8. Why were the Egyptian Pyra-1 mids built? 9. What is the Nathional Anthem j of the United States? 10. For what mtlitary honor does ; D. S. C., stand? COURTHOUSE Real Estate Transfers Myrtle A. Daniels et al. in lot 26. Pleasant Mills to Will D. Evans f >r: SI.OO. Lena M. Durkin in lot 1, Decatur to Harve Sprague et al for SI.OO. On change of venue fr: tn lAUen ' Stsperior Court. No. 2. a new case i was filed here today entitled First i and Tri State Bank and Trust Co.. I of Fort Wayne vs. Leslie A, and I Hazel B. Baumgartner, suit on notes and to foreclose mortgage on lot 132 in Southwood Park. Fort Wayne, demand $7,000. Vesey, Shoaf and 'Hoffman are attorneys for plaintiff and Ray Welty for thej defendants. Another new case filed today was The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company vs. William Richards et al. note and foreclosure of mortgage on 44 acres in Monrce township, demand $3,000. An affidavit iris been filed at clerks office for the recomniittinent of Vera Hoekingberry to East Haven hospital. GOVERNMENT IS READY TO DEAL BLOW TO CRIME — CONTINUED FROM PAGE? ONE : ments. Highlights of the investigation] which sent operatives to gangster haunts in New York. Pennsylvania. Florida. Michigan. Ohio, Wisconsin. Illinois and Indiana since Novemter, 1930, are:, 1. Approximately 200 persons are accused in the report of connection with the syndicate which traded in liquor over all the nation. They included 'managers' of bottling works, breweries, cooperage:;, distilleries, trucking companies, vice resorts, roadhouses, night dubs and bank officials. 2. Capone had an Income of more than $2,000,000, from the sources revealed in the report, in the 11 years since Jan. 6. 1921 when first he gained control of the gang with machine guns and "one-way rides." 3. The syndicate’s ramifications extended into business enterprises and banks; the gang owned fleets of trucks and at its bidding bank accounts were kept secret and names changed. 4. In the course of the investigation more than 2,000,000 gallons of beer was dumped by raiders in onslaughts on 50 breweries, and 40H persons were arrested. Included in the report was a ' blue book" of gangland. Heading the list was this notation on Capone : "Alphonse Capone, executive director of the syndicate and head man of the gang.” Others named in the investlga-

Ashbaucher’s MAJE S T I C FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739

[Ylurder iheNiGHT Club Lady ' THE NEW THATCHER COLT DETECTIVE MYSTERY Z-) BY ANTHONY ABBOT er cwrcj

SYNOPSIS Lola Carcwe, “The Night Club Lady”, and her guest. Christine Quires, are mysteriously murdered in the former’s apartment. Scorpions were the instruments of death. The police suspect Guy Everett, th* last person to see Christine alive. Lola had blackmailed Everett. He, however, claims that Christine discovered a plot to kill lada and feared for her own life because of her knowledge. Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt learns that a young Paris bank clerk, named Basil Boucher, loved Lola. After robbing a bank to buy her a ruby, Basil disappeared. His parents sold medical laboratory specimens. Mrs. Carcwe, Lola's mother, became hysterical at the mention of Basil, calling her daughter a beast and saying Lola never loved him. Edward Quires, Christine's brother, left his Rochester home for New York following the receipt of a telegram the day of the murders. Christine was to have inherited wealth shortly. Suspicion also points to Dr. Hugh Baldwin when it is disclosed that he purchased scorpions. He had stated heart failure caused the deaths. Colt, calling to question Baldwin, finds him dead — from a scorpion bite! Mrs. Baldwin reveals that she knew her husband was involved with Lola. A search of the physician's desk is made. t CHATTER THIRTY-THREE COLT was opening drawer after drawer without finding a shred, not a scrap, of any intimate, personal data. There remained but two drawers yet to go, when I heard Colt give a low exclamation of triumphant surprise. “Look, Tony!” he called. “Look what we have found here!” The Commissioner was holding up an envelope, long and white and sealed, across the face of which was written in bold black strokes: “Statement of Hugh Baldwin, M.D. To be opened only if and when he dies suddenly or mysteriously.” Colt handled that envelope with the greatest care. He realized that here in his hand might lie an explanation of three tragedies. On the other hand, it might be nothing of the kind. Often enough, fraudulent statements cleverly forged have been left near dead bodies, to make death appear selfinflicted. In such cases the very sealing of the envelope may hold a fragile and yet most valuable clue. Thus Colt treated this sealed document with almost reverential respect. He carried it over to the window and held it up to the light. Through the rather flimsy linen paper of the envelope, he could make out some of the written characters within. Then with the blade of a pocket knife, he began to work loose the lower flaps of the envelope—the parts that are sealed in the factory—leaving the flap which the writer had pasted down untouched for further examination. Now he drew forth from the envelope a sheaf of papers, written across in bold lettering with a heavy black pencil, in a strongly eharactertistic hand. We sat down and read the statement together: “I am leaving this memorandum because I fully realize that I may be put out of the way by my enemies—or that I may yet decide to end my own worthless life. In either case, I want the truth to be known. I say my enemies, but I should say Christine Quires and Lola Carewe. I do not intend to lose my life at the whim of these two vampires in human form or go out without leaving behind me the evidence that shall revenge my murder. And it is likely that if I do go suddenly and violently, it will be murder. “The facts of my relationship with these two women are simple and direct enough. I was the physician for Mr. Gifford, the husband of Lola Carewe. Mr. Gifford was not a very ill man at the time of tion report include: Ralph Capone (Al's brother), listed as "collector and in charge of retail business." Phil D'Andrea. Capone's bodyguard, who was sent to jail because he carried a revolver to his superior's income tax fraud trial. Jack Guzik, described as a “financier and the head of the

■A’Ol mil /k ii , ot ( // Il “Look, Tony!" he called. "Look what we have found here!”

his marriage. He suffered from in- t digestion and I treated him for j this with a simple remedy. But < upon one occasion, I wrote a pre- 1 scription and through some incalculable fragment of circumstance 1 which deflected my attention at the i time I was writing the prescrip- 1 tion, I wrote down an ingredient ; which I had no intention of order- 1 ing. The combination which I had < prescribed resulted therefore in a 1 poisonous dose. The fact is that I, : his trusted physician, killed Mr. : Gifford. “Os course, I did not intend to i kill him. But he did die solely as a result of my carelessness. When I realized what had happened, I was struck dumb with horror. I had always been an honorable practitioner. I have often heard the joke that I doctors bury their mistakes. I know ! that honorable doctors do nothing I of the kind. I went directly to the I widow, whom the world now knows as Lola Carewc, and told her what ' I had done. She took pity on me • with what seemed to me then a ■ great compassion. She told me that ■ she could find it in the heart to ■ forgive and forget, but that she felt f in justice to herself I should write t out a statement and give it to her. “This I did. I thought the matter ‘ i was over. The door was closed on I i that incident and I breathed freely, j - In a little while, it was to me as if | it had never happened. But how - wrong I was! Suddenly I had to 1 open that door in my life again, i For Lola Carewe now began to take ' advantage of my position to hold i over me a power that practically : made me her slave. She made me t invest my savings in her worthless' f schemes. And worse than that she - had me do! o “At the time her husband died, t I had the moral courage to face e the world and acknowledge my misI take. I could have begun life all ■1 over again—if not in my proses- , » sion, then in some other work e where new success did not depend | o upon the trust of people who would e commit their safety, their v e r y | r lives, to my hands. In the exalta- • I tion of my remorse I could have I t given up being a doctor and started life anew. But now that inspired ? mood had passed. I had been for--8 given. I did not have the courage - to defy Lola when she made these 1 demands on me. Now my career, s my profession, my .work, had bes come dearer to me than anything I gang since Capone's departure.’' , although Guzik, too, is in the i ! penitentiary. o . Famous Educator Dies After Long Illness H Champaign, 111., July 18—(UP)— ! j Tic-mas Arkle Clark, famous educa-! i

i else. I am a good physician and I am proud of my record in spite of that one fatal mistake. But I have been a weak tool in this woman’s hands. “It was thus that I came to know the real mystery of Lola Ca rewe. I was one of the few men in New York who ever knew the truth about her. Os course I did not know all. Probably no one but Lol; could claim that sinister distinc ticm. But I knew enough to unde! stand the amazing practices whic she introduced into New York learned how Lola kept herself ui ceasingly in funds, although sht was notoriously one of the most extravagant women in New York. “Lola Carewe was a blackmailer That was the only card she knew how to play. She would not gam ble or steal, and I do not believr she had it in her heart to love anj man. No other crime interested hei except extortion. In that grisly am awful business she seemed to take an unholy pleasure. From this came her money, in a secret, underground river of gold. The number of men and women in New York City who have paid tribute to this blackmailing beauty would astonish the rest of the town. “Lola introduced no fancy | sleights of her own into her blackmailing schemes. She used the timeI worn methods. She first led her victim into some vicious practice or (pursuit, got overwhelming evidence, and then bled him for the rest of his life. It is a game probably as old as the Bible courtesans. There is nothing new in it. But it continues to be terribly effective. “How, then, did I fit in to such ' a picture? How could I help her in her infamous conduct? The answer is simple and horrible—l provided drugs for her friends. She seduced and made them everlasting victims of cocaine, morphine, hasheesh, and opium. She generally began with the use of marihuana cigal rettes. 1 provided the drags. I was (in her power—the only power that I she understood or cared to use—i and she blackmailed me into giv- ' ing her victims the drugs they de|nianded. Later, she did not care whether I gave them the drugs or not —all that she wanted, then, was tribute money. If it were not forthcoming, wife or husband was betrayed, homes wrecked—it was seldom that her levy was not paid on time. (Ta Re Continued) Copyright 1931, hr Covici I- rWe. Inc. Distributed by Kins Feituret Syndicate. Inc. tor and former dean of men at the University of Illinois, dead at his j home here today. He was 70 years | old. Clark's death followed a-n illnase i of severil months from intestinal disease. He was reported to have been tu a coma for several days. o — Get the Habit—Traae at Homa

REUNION CALENDAR Sunday July 31 Haggard reunion. H. D. Osterman I lome, Winchester road. Fort Wayne Pleasant Mills lAlumni picnic, ■tun Set Park, east of Fuhrman reunion, home of Geo. Heyers, 1 mile west of .Monroeville. I Borne reunion. Sunset Park, | •ain or shine. Annual Cowin reunion. Sunset [’ark. southeast of Decatur Myers reunion, rain or shine, Sunday, August 7 Schafer reunh n. Legion Memo-1 rial Park, Dentfnr. Grimm reunion. Sunset Park I southeast of Decatur. Annual Dettinger reunion, rain I or shine, Sunset Park. Sundiy, August 14 Elzey reunion, Legion Memorial i Park, Decatur. Rellig and Reolim fimily reunion. Sunset Park, southeast of Decatur. Hewer reunion, Sunset Park. The annual reunion of the Bienz family, Sunset Park, Decatur. Sunday August 21 Butler family reunion, Sunset

Park, rain or shine. Aimiiial reunion <f the Smith fa-1 I tnily. Sunset Park. Decatur. I Kemmer family reunion. Sunset i I’jrk. southeast of Decatur. Annual Hakes reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. Sunday August 28 I lAnnaul Standiford and Faulkner reunion. Wren. O„ M -mortal Park. Annual Kortenber and Hackman reunion, Sun Set Park. Annual Kortenber-Hacknian reunion. SuniSet Park, rain or shine. Urick reunion, Sunset park, Decatur. September 4 Annual Brown reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. Labor Day, September 5 Lenhart annual reunion. Sun- | set Park, southeast of De atur. Reunion of Millinger family, Sun-1 set Park Decatur. • —o— RESUME OF WEEK’S ! ACTIVITY IN STATE LEGISLATURE GIVEN •'< iNTIXI Eli FROM I’AttE ONE I come tax is again being talked of. but at present it appears doubtful if the measure will ever become a law. Redi-tribution of the giwlitie tax has jeld interest all last week and it is a certainty that the. measure will finally pass. There are two decided factions in the matter: One group desire to have the Kas tax distributed in acc rd'inee to p „ ulation and the other group waits distribution in accordance with road mileage. of the .ilnili linient ot t.ie county highway -uperintenrtents' office declare tlvat it is a Purdue University measure, to give that scho' 1 much more political power, but dictating who the surveyor in each county .-hall appoint ■ as his road deputy. There is a stiff scrap being waged to keep the system as it fe. Township road control locks doorr.cd. Begardless cf the fart that Indranaptlis newspaper reporters Ilk’ to make light of the Legislature, a ala ge group in ea ch house Is realworking »-ard to accomplish mgs to benefit the people of the state. Confusion has ruled b th Houses since the first day and daily thousands visit the House a.id Senate chamber- only to hinder the progress of the sessions. Pr .oT drt " rS of ,he Asße ®*>ly are generally agreed that the session will as* 35 or 40 days, but there is still “u™. M rMI " b « lhat the Demounts are going to sweep , diana n . xt be feta recß X’X faCt that lhe have hl most of whom have been hide-bound Republicans the ’Demo attem|)tin K ’<> down the_ De mocrat!i wi th £avors . Mst

FLORENCE HOLTHOUSE Stenographic Work Typewriting ,u ’ T. Merrvmun-s Law |f v Olkt. K. ofc. Bklfl 'r * a '’ e aDy eXtra typewriting glad tn T P f iC WWk 1 wlll be ?lad to do it. Pho 42 appointment.

if the Dennwrats !> «,. v „ .• Ing this sudden cr.-iug,. amo Z who wint to be in Hi. i nsi4e smile and are going 'ways. Speaker Walter Myers !<« holding eonferem > daily House leaders and by the « this week a definite p „ should be ready for passage. The heat In t: e last few took Its toll in both lim Jse| members were gl id to vot ei! a motion to adjourn over the! end. By 5 o’clock Friday anersj j Houses were deserted, and] hers were on their way t«] [ homes or to lake resorts. ARRIVALS ‘ Attorney and Mr-. CO. Dari iiAnderson, ire the parents ofj j liaby born to th in Sunday og , .Inly 17 at the Anderson Ha , The baby was named JaneJ : Davisson was formerly Miss] , Stevens of this city. Lfoth a antLbaby are getti: g aong th I

Sin 10? DiSC-: jn| ON YOB I ELEC I Rlffl LIGHT I BILLS I 81 PAYING !| o« ml July 21 POWER! BILLS I ARE ALSO Oli —AND- ■ MUST BE fll —BY- ■ TWENTIETH 1 'I MONTH Ml CITY HAll ■ All Rural L Due This