Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 19 July 1932 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES » <' FOR SALE FOR SALE — 4lU"'We t Adan's street, or will exc)i«j,lge tor smaller property. Call - Steele or Herman GIIIIk, phone 268. g!6B-3tx FOR SALE - "Mattresses. The w'ay you rest and sleep tonight is the way you work tomorrow. Regular $6 mattresses, $4.98; regular *l2 mattresses, *10; spring tilled mattressdk, *l2; *ls and *2O. Sprague Furniture Company, Monroe St. Phone 199. b169-3t FDR SALE—s-piece - Walnut Dinl ng room suite, like new. Kitchen cabinett. Inquire at 115 Marshall ; St.. <W' phone 591. 170-3tx FOR SALE—Used piano in A-l eon ditien. Cabinet bench. Priced cheap for quick sale. Sprague Furniture Co., Monroe street. Phone 199. gl7o-3t PRIVATE SALE Os following furniture for cash at once, at 409 N. 7th S.t. Phone 1031; one 8 x 14 Wil-! ton rug, one 9 x 12 Axmi.nster rug. one three-piece overstuffer suite. < ne oak dining table, buffet and mirror, Nappanee kitchen cabinet, breakfast suite, 2 ipiece walnut bedroom suite with Simmons, springs and spring filled mattress! 1 fl-cor lamp, bridge lamlp, smoking stand, 2 end tables, one morris chair, '2 rockers, all in fine shape ■ and priced cheap for immediate' sale.” bl 70-1 tx FOR RENT FOR RENT— 6 room house, semi modern. *8 month. Inquire at 310 Eleventh street. g167-3tx 1 , WANTED WANTED TO BUY—An old build ing to wreck and move away. See Harry. Daniels. Pleasant Mills t a169-3tx’ 0 ’ WILD* the party who took the! wrong bathing suit by mistake. Monday night at the City Pool.! please return same to W. GuyBrown. Itx COURT HOUSE Real Ectate Transfers Roy Andrews, et ux. in lot 54, i Monroe to Adda Lobenstein for $1.09. — ()<sf B. Johnson et al. in lot 82.1 Monroe to Adda Lobenstein for *I.OO. Reunited After 55 Years Eau Claire,, AVis., —(UP)— Peter j Stouff, 81, and his brother, Theo- j dore, 78i, who had not seen or ! heard from each other for 55 years ' werg, it eunited here recently. A newspaiper item in au Archbold, ! Ohio paper led to the reunion. ! They came to Wisconsin together 56 years ago, but Theodore return [ ed to Archbold and later moved to • Illinois. VOTK E OF FOKRCI.OSI ltl<: lu the liliniiM Circuit Court Srptrinber Term, 111,32 8 1>. 143M1 STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF ADAMS, SS: The Union Central Life Insurance I Company, an Ohio corporation. VS William it. Vanderkar, Isabella Van- ! derkar, Emma 1,. Vanderkar. Pontiac' Loan ami Trust Company of Pontiac Illinois, Walter Cable. Samuel S. h-| It appearing by affidavit that the above entitled action is in relation to Hie following described real estate in Adams c ounty, Indiana, to-i wii Commencing at the South East' Corner of Section Four <4). in Township Twenty-six ,26) North, Range Fourteen till East, theme North I about 162 rods to the Half Section! Line, theme West along the Half Section Line to the center of the Right of Way of the Grand Rapidsand Indiana Railroad, thence South along said Railroad to the Section Line, thence Blast to said Section corner the place of beginning, con-,' taining Fifty-six (56> acres, moror demur thereto at the calling of mortgage thereon; and it further appearing. that the defendants. William G. Vanderkar, Isabella Vanderkar, and Pontia. Loan an.l Trdst I Company of Pontiac Illinois, are I non-residents of the state of Indi, ana; now therefore, said defendants' la.Ht above named are hereby notifled of the filing and pendanev of I said complaint against them, and that, unless they appear and answer or demur thereto at the eating of said cause on the Sth dav of Sep-1 tember 1932. the same being the 2nd Judicial Day of the term of said court begun and held at the Court House in ih-- city of Decatur Indiana on the first Monday In September 1 Hl3_’, said complaint and the mat. I tors and tilings therein contained and alleged will be heard and deter-I mined in their absence. Witness my name and the seal of said court hereto affixed this 11th : day of .lull 1'43? MILTON C. WEItLING Clerk of Adams Circuit Court of j Adams County Indiana. Lenhart, Holler and Schurger Attorneys for Plaintiff.
.lllly It-IH-.T, OTHO LOBENSTEIN FUNERAL PARLOR Monroe, Ind. Mrs. Lobenstein, Lady Attendant? Business phone 90—Residence 81. Free Ambulance Service 24 hour service. .DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases,! of cattle and poultry. Office and Res. 508 No. 3rd st. | PHONE 102.
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS — BERNE MARKET Corrected July 19) No commission and uo yardage. Hogs 100-15(1 pounda *4.40 150-200 pounds *4.80 220-250 pounds *4.60 150-300 pounds *4.40 Roughs *3.00 | Stags *1.50. Vealers *6.00. Spring lambs *5.00. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland July 19 —(UP) — Produce. Butter market steady; extras 22U standards 22%. Eggs: Market steady; firsts 15; * current reefs 14. Poultry market steady; heavy fowls 14-15; medium towels 14-15; Leghorn fowls 11-13; heavy broilers 16-19; leghorn broilers 13-14; Ducks 10-12; old cocks 9-10; geese i I 7 ' B ’ Potatoes; Ohio bushel bisket 1.00 ' FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., July 19 —(UP) I—Livestock market: Hog market steady to 5c lower; pigs *4.50-*4.65 Light lights *4.65 *4.75; lights *4.75 *4.80; mediums *4.65-*4.75; Heavies Roughs *[3.004*3.751; Stags *2.00-*2.50. Calves *5.50; Ewe and Wether lambs *5.75; Bucks *4.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK | East Buffalo, N. Y. July 19 —(UP) ■ Livestock market: Hogs on sale 900 ! slow; generally 25c below Mondays! average; good to choice 160-210 lbs. *5.25; Plainer kinds *5.15; pigs *5; ; bidding *4.50 on 290 lbs. Cattle: Receipts *1.50; mostly steady; pastured fed steers *7.25; grassers $6.35; common kinds *5.25 cutter cows *1.50-*1.75. Calves: Receipts 100; vealers f steady at Monday's full decline; I better lots *7; common and medium *5-*6.25. Lambbs steady; quality and sorts considered: Good to choice leniently sorted *6.65; throwouts *4.-*5. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dee. i Wheat, old .15% -57% .51 i Wheat, new .15% .57% I Corn .31% .32% .32% | Date .18 .18% .21 CHICAGO FRUIT MARKET («.' Dept. of Agriculture) Chicago, July 19.— (U.R) —Fruit ! quotations ou the South Water ' Market: Apples: Illinois, Yellow Transparents, bu., 40c *1; Illinois Duchi ess, 35c-*l; Michigan Yellow Trans-1 | parents, 75c-*l. Canteloups: California Jumbo ■ rates: Arkansas and Indiana. *1- ' $1.50; Arizona. *1.85 *2.50. ; Mellons: California Honey Dews, ! $1.15 *1.50; Honey Balls, *2 *2.50. I Raspberries: Michigan Reds, $l- - Blackberries. Michigan, 75c-90c. 1 Cherries, Michigan, 16-qt. sour, [7sc-*l; Michigan, sweet, *1.50 *1.75. Blueberries, Michigan, 16-qt. *l.Ol- - Peaches, Georgia Hyles, bu., *1.50-*1.90. - 1 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected July 19) No. 1 New Wheat 60 lbs or I better 34c ‘ No. 2 New Wheit 58 lbs 33c ! Old or New Oats 13c New Oats 13c I Soy Beans 30c New No. 3. White Corn 32c No. 3 Yellow corn 37c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 12c
S. E. BLACK Funeral Director Efficient, courteous, capable service. Calls answered day aud night. Ambulance service. 500—Phones—727 — ’ J. M. DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTOR Modern, Dependable 24 hour service. MRS. DOAN, '.ady Attendant. Ambulance Service anywhere. Phone 1041 I”or Better Health Sec DR. 11. FROHNAPFEL 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. 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
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— A - 6 I Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these j , | test questions? Turn to Page . Four for the answers. ——— -■ ■ -—■ $ 1. Where is the Yangtze River? 2. Wb.it are the technical names | for hard and soft coal? 3. How many rounds in a long ton? 4. For what is Albert Einstein particularly noted ? 5. What animal Brays? 6. What causes the moon to .-hine? 7. Where is the United States Leper Colony? 8. What name did Admiral Byrd give his supply bise in Antarctica? I 9. What are the two largest cities j I in the world in population? | 10. Who was the first Chief Justice ' t the United States? 0 NO RELIEF IN NEXT 48 HOURS IS PREDICTION CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE today, the 10th of a general heat wave, and its death toll mounted to at least 154). From the Rockies to the Atlantic seaboard and from the Gulf of Mexico almost to the Canadian bolder, the populace suffered. Temperatures soared toward the 100-dcgree mark, witii prospects! that they would go beyond 100 in! many places. Little prospect of relief was offered by Weather Forecaster C. . A. Donnel of the Chicago office.' He said thunder showers tomorrow night might Ueak the oppressive heat. Suffering, intensified by the cumulative effect of the long cycle of equatorial weather, was widespread. While the death toll I assumed proportions of a national catastrophe, there was no accurate means of calculating the misery nor the damage to crops and livestock.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 19.1932.
-rrTTTTT.Mi I n il rniii iiirnriv»irr~i 1 —r»na“»"nrwi I n-> 'Murder t!NiGtiTCiUBLADX' THE NEW THATCHER COLT DETECTIVE MYSTERY zO •by ANTHONY ABBOT O 8 J' coPYUKtfr.tan bycovtu-fiueocitrc.Di&rnißura:SYKiNenATuH£iSYNDicAXL,uJe.
SV NOPSIS Lola Carewe, “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 Guj Everett, the last person to see Christine alive. Lola had blackmailed Everett. He, however, claims that Christine discovered a plot to kill Lola 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. Carewe, Lola's mother, became hysterical at the mention of Basil, calling her daughter a beast and saying Lola never loted him. Edgar 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 bitel Mrs. Baldwin reveals that she knew her husband was involved with Lola. Detectives report Baldwin met a man who gave him a box. In Baldwin's desk the Commissioner finds a statement in which the doctor explains he accidentally poisoned Gaylord Gifford. Lola's husband. Lola’s know ledge of this placed Baldwin in her power. She forced him to supplynarcotics which she used to victimize her friends and later blackmailed them. CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR "f | THIS is the woman to whom I I have been shackled in an unholy pact for the last several years. Will it seem to be strange if I confess that she has exercised over me a horrible and fantastic influence? How can we desire that which has made us suffer torment? No psychoanalytical theory has made that mystery clear to me, for they answer me only in words and I suffer in my nerves and tissues. I am a home-loving man. I dearly love my wife and children. I could be happy and content, making a modest living for them and living out my life in the quiet paths of my profession. It is Lola who has broken my wife’s heart. It is she who has brought a cloud of suspicion, a plague of unhappiness into my home. How, then, is it that when I am alone with her I try to hold her in my arms? It is this, as much as anything else, that has made me so hate my own life that I am quitting it. 1 feel unclean. Yet—for whatever value it may be to the psychologist—let me record it here and now that I did passionately desire this woman, who has held me in bondage and has treated me with contumely, with studied and continued insolence. "It was a queer relationship. 1 furnished drugs to many strange people. But even this was not the full extent of my operations. “All of this has been going on, ever since my friend died—my friend, Gaylord Gifford, whom, unintentionally, I killed. In those years of what I may call my serfdom to Lola Carewe I believed that I knew the full extent of her wickedness. But recently my eyes were opened. I learned then what I had not before even dreamed of—that in the range of this beautiful creature’s crimes not even murder was excluded. “Specifically, what brought me to this realization was a demand that she made upon me. It was an order that could have only one meaning. I was told that she wished me to obtain, through some laboratory supply agency, an insect whose bite would be instant death. She confessed to me that someone very imMiller Will Not Sell Ranch To Capone Marland, Akla., July 19— (UP)—; Col. Zach I. Miller, sole survivor of the famous Miller Bi others, is not negt Gating with Al Capone or other hoodlums for sale ot his 101 ranch. Neither does he plan to revitalize with Gangland spoils his fa- i J>
portant to her meant to commit a murder—l tell you, she brazenly I confessed this to me. j | “I was horror-stricken at this deI mand. I looked at her, as she sat ( [before the fireplace in her living--room, as if she were a fiend from hell. The devil. I thought, must be / a woman; I had always believed ” him' a man. What reason could . Lola have for a poisonous insect—r l unless murder were stirring in her r i own heart, her own head, yes, and [her shapely white hands? She was ’ the one who meant to kill! “I uttered a postive protest. I ‘ told her I would not do what she j asked. It was the first time that I ; had refused to do anything for her, ’ since she had me in her power. But J she did not take my rebellion se- * I riously. The very calmness with ! which she heard me revolt against '. her demands caused me to feel the ' r weakness of my stand. Since I had Ji been taking orders from Lola Ca- _ ; rewe, I had been wading deeper in J crime all the time. Now she could 1 [denounce me to the police, not only I for the death of her husband, from I j which 1 could have extricated myself, disgraced it is true, but at [ j least free—but now I was guilty [ of half a thousand offenses that [ would send me to the Federal prison in Atlanta. She told me not to -be silly. I finally told myself that [ j she was right. I believed then that [ a freedom bought by a murder ’ would be better than to go to prison ' and fasten on my family the penal- ' ties of my crimes. i "I did not stop to reason, then, that I would be only opening the door to further enormities. Once i Lola had been enmeshed in a murder plot, I would, indeed, be owned by that woman. She could order me to kill as often as she liked. “But this I did not realize, then. ! I suppose I did realize it, to tell the truth, but overriding all such saner calculations was the one de- ! sire to protect myself. I was afraid of Lola Carewe. Besides, what danger was I running to provide her with the little thing she asked—an 1 insect whose bite was positively deadly? How was I to know what she would use it for? “It was with such base and specious reasoning that I persuaded myself. I went to a Spanish youth whom I know—Ricardo Villafranca is his name — and talked to him about my quest. Ricardo is the proprietor of one of the laboratory supply houses with which I have dealt, in the past. He specializes in Central and South American specimens. Ricardo told me that he believed a certain scorpion, very frequently found in the Durango region of Mexico, was the most certain in its death-dealing proclivities. He had one which he showed me and upon my paying a fee. he let the scorpion free from its box and attack a dog. The death of the animal from that bite was swift and terrible; in all my experience as a physician I have never seen 'anything quite like it. More than once there has been one of the frightful creatures in a little box on my desk here, close to my ear. I could hear a soft noise that it made in the box. Death within the reach of my hand—and making a soft noise! “But I must not let my morbid state of mind intervene between my purpose and this page. I must write the truth about Lola Carewe down on paper. At any moment I am liable to be killed. For I did not realize that when I went on the errand of buying her deadly insects, she had fully resolved that I was to be one of her victims. “How did I know that? All in due course, my friend—you whom I do not know, but whose eyes now fall upon this manuscript. I gave the orders for the Durango scorpions. I told Lola that delivery was promised within four weeks. I remember that it was on Thanksgiving Day that I made her that promise. mous Wild West sh:w which failed at Washington more than a year ago. “ Unofficial agents” of the ranchman were quoted as saying ! Colonel Miller planned to visit the i dethroned Chicago gang chief at! the Atlanta Penitentiary tomorrow to arrange a sale of the ranch. -o Literary Output The New York public library addi two milpf of hooks a year 1- ' I
i “Then I tried to forget about the : I matter. I tried to plunge into my [practice, which had been suffering ■ because of my other preoccupat tions. I tried to be kinder to my ■ wife and children. I tried to pick i up all the threads of the old lite, ‘ - before this woman had come into I my life. 1 “But even that brief interlude ■ was not to be allowed to me. One ■ night I was summoned to the pentI house by an excited telephone call > i from Lola’s mother. Incidentally, [need I say that my office was in lithe same building with Lula only -[because she had commanded it so? !11 hurried upstairs in the elevator, , I for the call had caught me at the ; office. I found that Christine Quires was ill; it was really a case of simi pie stomach disorder. But Christine [was suffering considerable pain, and at first I wsndered if Lola was about to put her on the drugs. But [ no—that was not it. I was able to I relieve Christine. I was alone in the guest-room, attending to the wailing Christine, when I suddenly became, without any intention to be that, a listener at an incriminating conversation between Lola Carewe and Mr. Vincent Rowland. “I wijl confess this was a terrific shock to me. Ever since my college days I had known of Vincent Rowland. He was one of New York’s most glamorous old gentlemen. He was a patron of young people, struggling in the arts. How many poets and painters, novelists and playwrights could thank Vincent Rowland for a grub-stake while they worked on things they felt were precious! How much the symphony orchestra owed to his large-handed generosity! What a powerful voice he was in all movements for civic progress! True, there were whispered tales of his prodigality with his women friends. I could not condemn him for that. I put him down as a dirty old gentleman and let it go at that. “But what was this I was overhearing? It was unmistakably the voice of Vincent Rowland. He and Lola had been to a night club together. Now he had brought her home. Neither Lola nor Rowland knew that I was in the house. They thought the occupants were asleep. They spoke off guard. “I heard Vincent Rowland say to Lola that he felt she should not take such risks. And I heard Lola impatiently demand what on earth he expected her to do—not squeeze the last ounce of gold ont of these suckers, when it was there for the asking? My hair was standing on end. All along I had thought of Lola Carewe as the head and front of all this offending. Now I was forced to believe the evidence of my own ears—that the brain of her plots lay under the white and innocentseeming old head of Mr. Vincent Rowland. He was the spider in the midst of the web. Row land was the man behind Lola Carewe. “I saw that Christine Quires understood perfectly. She, too, had heard. She motioned to me not to speak. We listened. What more we would have heard I do not know. But perhaps Chung appeared just then—that yellow man was always showing up when you least expected him—so perhaps it was Cliung who told Lola that I was in the next room with Christine. “Distinctly I heard Lola gasp. The next instant the door was flung open. There stood Lola and her aged companion. They were looking in at us with Bluebeard eyes. Christine began to cry. I asked what was the matter. They accused us of eavesdropping. I told them the truth. Then Lola’s mother came and defended us. Lola calmed down. But I saw that gleam in Vincent Rowland’s eyes. I knew he regarded me as a danger. 1 knew that I would now have to watch out for myself. 1 . o R- Co’Ttm ted) Copyright 1 0t l. bv Covici Fiiede. Inc. Distributed by King Feature* Syndicate, Inc. Produces New Fruit | Wichita Kans. — (UP) — By [crossing a Russian cbeiry (ree and an olivet. H. J. Hansen, local resident lias produced a tree that bears i sweet fruit. 'The crossing wns done yea s ago qnd the result is a prolific tree. Most cherry trees in Kansas bear sour fnuit, but the fruit ot Hansen's creation is quite different.
RELIEF MEASURE SET IN MOTION PRESIDENT i CONTIXI IIP FKOM PAGE ONE 1 ,j,;-, probably will a-k tor *12.900, , ; 000 for dir ct lelief and Kansas *6,000.000. | California would like to gcc more ; 'titan *200.000,900 to help finance - [imp rtant public improvements. Utah ', r poses to borrow for new building projects totaling nearly ) *4,000,000. Wisconsin contemplat :t tusking funds both for direct relief [and construction work. Senator Huey L ng. Dem., 1-a.. i said in New Orleans that his state ' would “get a good slug" of the mon-
wufl A 1 fl Welcome I Yom W//Z < Klwaijs I Reme/nZier/ * j Th? rrwiute you step into the Sewrin you Kwr Atcw that you an? weicome . yoj fed a friendly, KfTwMEn] neiahboriy ctmosphe-e. The eafler service, gjy kLi the unobstructed view from the spaccus rooms the njrr.ing ted water the latest BPffl ’ i (wM Shower bath or tub, » you prefer the !u* *~g| vr,ous beds the flood wvk-someiou n the ;|j| C'.'.fl room and coffee s!<p...no warder tre i Severn s the most popular hotel m hdarupoks AhGbH If you drive too ■ *.? the noy our attendant at the ■ door takes your cor to our fireproof flcraty.- where REDUCED it is cored for according to your wishes, if you RATES come by tram youll like the fact that we are single just a block from the depot... savinfl you taxi rue 1 w snOwS fora. And lost . the appreciation of your noo pavonatte by the management $2” U, L SEVERIN W. H. WELLS Manager awajj AM AP€>t-SS_ Trade Day Special': All Pork Sausage (Bulk)3 lb. for Fresh Ground Hamberger3 lb. for Smoked Jowels (sugar cured). ..3 lb. for Sugar Cure 1 Bacon (chunk)2 lb for Our Best B •con (sliced and rhinelo ••■) - ,l( Meaty Spare Rihs3 lb. for! Good Bologna and Frank forts.. .3 lb. for Large Eyed Swiss C heese (Good) Wisconsin Cream Cheese | Veal, Pork & Beef Meat Loaf (Special) 15c No. 1— Four cans of Big Hit Pork and Bean- and I'* lb. of Tender Beef Steak, all lor. No. 2— Three cans Peas, Corn, Green Beans or Tomatoes; 2 loaves of Miller’s Bread and 1 lb. Sausage for No. 3— Three large cans of Merrit Pea c h es, I eais, Pineapple or Apricots in syiuP No. 1— Ho lbs. of Lean Bacon in chunk, 1 so. Minced I lam, a ICc large loaf Mi H ( “ rS Bread, all for No. 5— 1 f lb. Pork Sausage, 1 lb. Minced Han l and 3 lb. pail Lard for only WEDNESDAY ONLY—IO lb. pail Lard H. P. Schmitt Meat Marfo , I
|ey but had n. t d j '. ( . t to seek. In addition t-> : , ami const! net ion : - apportions Jri states for highway y,, lie deducted fro;. highway grants. The money t ■ . r ! raised by the r. • •'listriictij poration through ..... .;,|„ n ’ [The treasury h.i> I-ought * debentures si la: Corner Stonet ol Lib wt} The Magtni t’liii '.i t|i ( , of Rights and tin- Bill o( nave been calle I i.r •■'i nree ii of the British ■ :
