Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 100, Decatur, Adams County, 27 April 1933 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE —Baby chicks will grow if fed on Beco Chick starter with cod liver oil or Burk's Big Chick Starter. $1.75 per 100 pounds. Burk Elevator Company, telephone 25. 96-g-12t FoII'SALE — A Jersey-Guernsey heifer. A good one. Bred. Phone M-870. 99-3tx FOR SALE—Apple, Peach, Pear. Plum and Cherry trees. Big 6 foot, strong, sturdy trees guaranteed to grow. While they last. 4 for SI.OO. Schafer Hardware Co. 9812 FOR SALE— Used Furniture. Used leather living room suite. $lO. Dining room table and 6 chairs, sls. Round table $2. 3 piece bed room suite, sls. Sprague Furniture Co., 134 West Monroe st. Phone 199. 100G3t FOR SALE —B. B. Ointment, the old reliable skin and scain standby. 50c jar. At all druggists. FOR SALE —Fresh cow and calf High test and an extra good one. Ray Smith, phone 5621. 99t3x FOR SALE — Strawberry plants, "Delicious Dunlap.” Big. solid, dark red berries. Grow in all soils and climates. While they last, 60c per 100. Schafer Hardware Co. 99t2x Real Estate Bargains We are closing the Home Build-1 ers Corporation and offer for sale: The double house at the corner! of Elm and Winchester streets, ; for SI,OOO. Also have number of lots in’ Hanna addition, just west of G. E.' plant that will be closed out at I very low figures. Payment must be in cash or equivalent, so busi-1 ness of company can be closed. If! interested see W. A. Lower or Leo I (Dutch) Ehinger in People's Loan & Trust Co. building. 98t3 ' FOR SALE — All modern extra welt located residence, property. Corner lot. garage, brick street. Will sacrifice for quick sale. Deal can be handled with small amount of cash. Address box T. J. 8.. care of Itemocrat. 98a4tx j WANTED WANTED —Curtains to wash and i stretch. Mrs. Hal ve Koos. I phone 968. 98t3 > WANTED—LADIES! Look! — $6 j permanents for $2.50 now at the i HUagland Beauty Shop. 210 South Eighth street. Phone 859. 98g-3t WANTED —To build cement cisterns. Inquire 1122 West Eim street 99g-3 WANTED —Ladies to Know! that 1 Mr. Liggett will be giving guaran- I teed permanents for $1 75 and $2.50 for one day only May 2 at j Becker's Beauty Shop. Call 1280 for appointments. 98g-5t 1 WANTED TO BUY—Small farm. Will pay cash. Desire location close to town. Address Box A. B„ care Democrat. 98t3x i WANTED TO BUY or Rent. 6 or 7 room house, good location. Give description in letter addressed toi G.E.J. care Democrat. 98t3x | LOST AND FOUND STRAYED —Yellow male Angora cat. Answers to name "Fluffy.” Finder please call 958. 98G3tx FOUND Pair glasses. Owner may have same by calling at this office and paying for this ad. lOOta FOR RENT FOR RENT —Six room modern house on N. Sixth street. Poeses-J slou May 1. B. J. Rice 237 N. Fifth St. Phone 184. 99-3 t FOR RENT —■ Strictly mod er n house ou N. 2nd st. Phone 183. Mrs. Rose Clark. 98t3x FOR RENT — Modern residence, near business section. Rent reasonable, inquire A. D. Suttles.' 99GJI Signs Beer Bill Lansing. Mich.. April 27—(UP) Gov. Wm. ~\. Comstock today sign ed the be nr bill legalizing manufacture and sale of 3.2 per cent beer in Michigan. JUST RECEIVED Shipment of BEAUTIFUL DRESSES and COATS MRS. M. MOYER 128 North Fourth Street
' MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected April 26 No commission and no yardage. 160 to 240 lbs. $3.60 240 to 300 lbs $3.45 300 to 350 lbs. $3.30 140 to 160 lbs. $3.40 100 to 14A lbs $3.10 Rough's $2.60 Stags $1.25 Vealers ..... $4.50 Spring Lambs $5.50 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Apr. 27. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, steady; 160-200 lbs.. $3.85; 200-225 lbs.. $3.80; 250-275 lbs., $3.75; 275-350 lbs., $3.75; 140-160 lbs., $3.55; 100-140 lbs., $3.25; roughs. $2.75; stags, $1.75. Calves. 450; lambs, $5.25;. steers, good to choice, $5-$5.50: medium to good, $4.50-$5; common to good, $4.50-$5; common to medium. $3.50$4; heifers, good to choice, $4.50-1 $5; medium to good. $4-$4.50; com-1 mon to medium. $3-$4; cows, good | to choice. $3r53.50; medium to good, I $2.50-$3; cutter cows, $1.75-$2.25; canner cows, sl-$1.50; bulls, good I Ito choice, $3-$3.25; medium to good $2.50-$3; common to medium, $2$2.50; butcher bulls, $3.25-$3.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., April 27.— (U.R) —Livestock: Hogs: on sale, 800; fairly active, steady with Wednesday's average; 1 I desirable, 170 to 240 lbs., $4,35-1 $4.40; plainer kinds, $4.15; weights I around 150 lbs., $4: pigs downward: ,to $3.65. Cattle: Receipts, 100: common | to medium mixed steers and yearlings, strong to higher. $4.75; cows 1 firm, low cutter to medium grades, $1.40-$2.50. Calves: Receipts. 150; vealers, jactive, fully steady; good to choice,l i 54,50-$5; few selections held to-1 ward $5.50; common and medium. $3-$4. Sheep: Receipts, 800: lambs 10 to 20c higher; bulk good to choice clippers. $5.65-15.75; few, $5.85: medium to good woolskins, $5.85. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. I ■ Wheat .67% .67% .68% .71 j ■Corn .34% .36% .38% .40% ' (Oats . .23% .23% .24 LOCAL GRAIN MARKeT Corrected April 26 No. 1 New Wheat, $0 lbs. or better _ g7 c I No. 2 New Wheat 581bs . 66c I Oats 21c i ; Soy Beans 3 5c t 0 75c | 1 White or mixed corn 41<-1 | Good Yellow coni . 4t><- : R - ve -25 c VOTICK OF l-IVM SE'l-ri.EMKXT OF ESTt l’F. Xo. 1M.5 I Nntiee is hereby Kiven to the ere-I niters heirs and legatees of Elsie June .Miller deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at l»e<-a-tur. Indiana. on the 20 day of I May, 1933, and show cause, if anv 1 ,! ’V -. 1 ’ ’ X A L s TTI.E M ENT | AO <)l Ms with the estate of slid decedent should not be approved: and said heirs are notified to then and there inaike proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares.' Ed Tricker, Administrator Decatur, Indiana April 27 1933. I C. 1.. Halters, Attorney April 27 May 4 NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS Notice is hereby Riven that Monday. May 1, 19.33 will be me last day to pay your Spring installment of taxes. The county treasurer's office will be open from 8 A. M. to 4 P. M. during the tax paying season. All taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and a 3% penalty will be added plus interest at the rate of from date of delinquency. • Those who have bought or sold pro-i perty and wish a division of taxes are asked to come in at once. Call on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ommlsslon I of tax-payers to state definitely on what property, they desire to pay, in whose name it may be found, in [what township or corporation it isi , | situated. i Persons owing delinquent taxes Should pay them ;it once, the law Is , such that there is no option left for the Treasurer hut enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. County orders will nut be paid to > anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons are warned against them. Pai Uvular attention. It you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer also see that your receipts 'all for • all your real estate and personal jproperty. I In making inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do not fail to include return postage, JOHN WB.’H i’EJt Treasurer Adam? County Indiana April 12 to M-l 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 | S. E. BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR ' Because of our wide experience in conducting funerals we are able to give perfect service at a , very • reasonable cost. Dignified But Not Costly. 500—Phones—727 ■ I Lady Asst. Ambulance Service
[ THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“QUIT YA TICKLING!” RY SfrJ , PST- WHILE HE 5 TAKING) THE IROUBLE WITH VOO.X YA GETS IN SULKED TO 6 I COURSE,I DON'T] ZAVn/- CUT) Tl I I TO ME, SLIP UP BEHIND > RING CfcBOOSO IS - Y£R ) ) EASY-YER. ONE OF GiUE (DHOOP- \it / /T\ ' T N w HIM AND GIVE HIM .TOO BLASTEDSENSHTIFF? k THEM HOT-HEADED AiNT NO KlKa /[> kJJ UU t-y II ' THHT-i l . . I < THE WORKS - THE (’) ' Z.ANO (WW ■ WWI A. 1 w . k.Yc ms s t s 1 C'f»t R'.Uin - I ——" ’ S >- A a w 1 ! \ D .V 1 "" Features -x. -4 ST |sl_ .. —MM MH R' CT ''
xtrrui: or final settlement 4 OF ES TATE NO. SMft Notice is hereby given to th* ere-1 diters, heirs and legatees of Delia! Miller. deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at I Decatur. Indiana, on the 20 day of! May. 1933, and show cause, if anv. wh> th FINAL Sh'L’TLEM LN Tj < AjCCOUJCTS with the estate us said decedent should not be approved; and siiid heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, 1 j and receive their distributive shares. JEd Tricker. Administrator Decatur. Indiana April 27 1933. I 1 C. L. alter**. Attorney April 27 May 4 ! xoritE of FINAL m: tii i :mi:x i OF ESTATE NO. 2M4 Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of William Miller, deceased to ' appeal in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, ui¥ the 20 day of May, 1933, ami show cause, if any, why the FINAL SETTLEMENT AWOWDS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, j and receive their distributive shares. Ed Tricker, Administrator I Decatur. Indiana April 27 1933, <.b. W alter**. Mtoruey April 27 May i XOTHF. OF FIX VI SETTLEMEX ! j OF ES I VTE XO. 2M« Notice is hereby given to the ere- 1 ditors. heirs and legatees of Dorutay I 1 Miller. deceased t • appear in I the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 20 day of 1 May, 1933, and show cause, if any. ( win the FINAL SI-fTTLEMENT AQCOUMIiS with the estate of saul 1 ! decedent should not be approved i land said heirs are notified to then • and there make proof of heirwhip. l and receive their distributive shares. ' Ed Tricker. Administrator ( Decatur. Indiana April 27 1933. ( . L. Wiilterw, Vttorne* April 27 May 4 | 1 XOI HE OF FIX VI. **ETTLEMEXT OF EVTVTE XO. 29M j Notice is hereby given to the < re- , i diturs, heirs and legatees of Ben ! Schrank, deceased, to appear in i the Adams Circuit Court, held at! I Decatur. Indiana on the 22 clay of: 1 Mav 1933. and show cause, if anv,' j whv the FINAL SEfTTLEMENTI ' A<i'HUNTS with the estate oi said: • decedent should not be approved;] land said heirs are notified to thenj I and there ma-k*- proof of heirshiUx and receive their distributive shar*Al Amelia Schrank Administratiix I Decatur. April 27. 1933. ( Xatlian C. Xelaon, Attorney. April 27 May 4 i Beer Investigators Start Work May 1 — Indianapolis April 27 —(UP) —dni vestigators to check holders of beer permits for law violations will start * [ May 1, Paul Fry, stJte excise direc- ; tor, announced today. NOTICE TO BIDDERS In the Mutter of Bituminous «•<>»!rd tggrrgate top afreet improvement ' Notice is hereby given that the , Common Council in and for the City of Decatur, Indiana, will v n Tuesday, the 2nd day of May, 1933 at 7:00 o'clock I’. M. at their council room 1 in said City receive sealed bids for! BITUMINOUS and BITL’MINOUSI MATERIAL for coated top street im-| provement as per plans and specifi-i cations now on file in the office ofi the City Clerk us Decatur, Indiana,! Each bidder will be required to deposit with his bid a certified or' cashier check, made payable to thei City Clerk, for the sum of $500.00;! on failure of the successful bidder! to enter into a contract and file ap- • proved surety bond will forefelt the amount deposited us liquidated da-1 mages. Each bidder will be required to state spec ifically the price per galI lon applied and the price i>er toil applied to be charged for all material furnished. All bids to be submitted on form number 95 authorized by the State Board of Accounts which blanks will be furnished the bidder by the Citv Clerk. Successful bidder will be required to furnish an approved surety bond' in the sum of >5,000.00 □ tie Common Council reserves the i| right to reject any and all bids. I Witness my hand and official seal! this 20th day of April, 1933. ALIAL' CH I U.s 14. N City 4 lerk April 20-27 SHERIFF s VI E In the VdnniK* < irrult Court, of Indiana; vnunr number 1453*1 The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance > Company, a Corporation, vs. John L. Hays, Clara J. Hays his wife, 11. K. • ■ Walters, whose true Christian name I to plaintiff, unknown. By virtue of An Order of sale to ■ me directed and delivered from the • Ulerk of the Adams Circuit Court,’ in the above entitled cause I have I levied upon and will expose to «al«by Public Auction at the Court House Door, east entrance first flour t in sHhl County between the hours of 10 o’rlock A. M. and 4 o'clot k P. M. on Saturday the 6th day of May A. D 1933, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate. TO-WIT; <’oinmem*ing 60 rods west of the northeast corner of the west half i of the southeast quarter of section :•», township 27 north, range 15 east, thence south (160) rods; thence we«t 50 rods; thence north 160 rods; thence east 50, rods, to the pla< e of beginning, containing 50 Hires mure or lees; Situate in Adams County, State of Indiana; i And on failure to realize the full ’ amount of the judgment and interest thereon and c<mts, I will at the same time and in the manner aforesaid offer for sale the feo simple of the above deacri’be*! real estate. Taken mm the property us John L. Hays. Clara J. Hayu, his wife, R. K. Walters, whose true Christian nauir Is to the plaintiff unknown, at the suit of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, a Corporation, Said Sale will be made without any relief wliatever from valuation or Approvement Lewi. BURL JOHNSON, flreriff Adams County. Indiana i Xatbati L. .Xclmou, Attorney ’’ April 13-30-27
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1933.
« * > TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File Jesso Niblick is spending the , week end in Duyton witn relatives. Dr. Anna Shaw and Mrs. Robert : ' LaFollette pleaded with senate for i
"MARY FAITH" 1 Beatrice Burton I COPYRIGHT, 1931, BY KWG fMATURES SYNDICATE, INC.
SYNOPSIS Mary Faith, comely young orphan, is secretary to Mark Nesbit, wealthy business man. She gives up her position to marry Kimberley Farrell, shiftless young lawyer. Mary Faith believes that loving a man hard enough will make everything come out all right in the end. It was this confidence that enabled her to marry Kim after he had once broken their engagement She realizes he has an eye for every girl, but hopes that married life will sober him and make him successful in his profession. Instead, Kim is annoyed at Mary Faith’s “Puritanism,” and his jazzy friends, Claire and Jack Maldon, find her a dull companion. Learning that she is to become a mother, Mary Faith, for the first time, visits Kim’s office. Kim is furious when Mary Faith finds him flirting with his blond secretary. That night, he informs his mother and Mary Faith that he is leaving. Mary Faith, heartbroken at this turn of affairs, decides not to tell Kim of her coming motherhood. She and Mrs. Farrell decide to struggle to keep the home for the coming baby. Mary Faith obtains a position as typist. Due to Mary Faith making good Kim’s debt to his former employers, Kim is reinstated. CHAPTER XXVI “And are you going to stay here now, Kimberley?” his mother asked him. "No.” His lips came together with a snap. “No—l’m more sure than ever that it was a mistake for Mary Faith and me to be married. I came here tonight because I wanted to talk to her about divorcing me. It's not right for us to be tied up to each other when we’ve stopped caring for each other. You feel that way about it yourself, don’t you, Mary Faith?” Mary Faith sat in rigid agony on the very edge of her chair, her hands clasped tightly in her lap. Her dark blue eyes were very big in her white face and there were faint shadows under them. Her lips scarcely moved as she spoke. "I don’t know, Kim.” “You don’t know?” He was exasperated. “What do you mean, you don’t know?” “Well, I don't believe in divorce, Kim. And don’t you remember what we promised each other the day we were married?—To live together all our lives.” "Look here, Mary Faith, I’m not going to sit here and argue the fine points of the marriage service with you,” said Kim, dismissing his marriage vows with a wave of his hand. “I came here to ask you to divorce me. I don’t care about you the way 1 did, and you seem to be getting along fairly well without me. You have my mother on your side . .” “You talk as if I were your enemy, and I’m not,” Mary Faith interrupted him quietly. “I love you, Kim, and I’m not going to give you up to that Janet-woman without a struggle. Last year when you came to me and told me you couldn't live without her I gave you up—and three months later you married me. Now you want to give me up, and marry her, I suppose. . . . But I think you ought to wait a while and find out how you really feel about her and about me. Time can settle a lot of things that nothing else on earth can settle, Kim.’’ He lost his temper then. "You talk like a fool.” he said, furious with anger. “You talk to me as if 1 were a child that didn’t know its own mind. Now see here. I'm going through with this thing “ “All right,” Mary Faith broke in upon him once more. “You'll have to do it. Kitn. I care for you too much to give you up. and besides. 1 know you'll not be happy with thal girl. You don't love her. Yoc just think that you do because she follows yog around and it flatters you to have her do it If you really loved her the way you think you de
suffrage. C. E. Bell joins -wife at Lafontaine for over Sunday visit. • Mrs. George Gay returns from Fort Wayne after visit at Frank Jones home. All vehicles used for delivering mail to be painted red. Mrs. John Steele is called to Fort Wayne where her two grandchildren are ill with typhoid fever.
I»y ft Hb) w IvOI If' Jli l J ’ I IIBw '' p “If you feel like this about her in six months, I’ll listen to you. Kim," she said.
you would have married her ’way last fall when you were as free as air, Kim Farrelll” She got up and started out of the room, and he looked after her, wondering how a creature so yielding and gentle by nature, could be so stubborn and determined all at once. At the door she turned and faced him once more. “If you feel like this about her in six months I’ll listen to you, Kim,” she said. “It's July now. You come to me again in February.” In February the baby would be a month old. The months of the summer dragged ■ by. Heat shimmered above the pave- ' ments of Spring Street every day in 1 a parched August The long days ’ were all alike to Mary Faith except ■ that one day she might have lettuce : and rye bread sandwiches in her lunch and th* next d y there might • be deviled egg and white bread. One I week she might be reading “The Great Gatsby" and the next one she • might have "Joanna Godden” open 1 on her typewriter while she ate her i lunch. t On the first Monday in September • —Labor Day—it rained as it always 1 does on holidays, and Mrs. Farrell r went down to Garrettsville on the ’ bus to spend a week with Aunt Ella, t She came back to town on the - following Monday with yards and 5 yards of white cloth of different -t kinds—flanelette for'the baby's night- - gowns, sheer muslin for the tiny t dresses, and soft cotton for the unit derthings. "1 bought it down there for half what we’d have to pay for it up here b in town," she said as she showed it c to Mary Faith. “We'll make it al! n up by hand, what do you say? I do K like to see dainty little stitches in baby clothes.” n On the first of October Mary e Faith gave up her position with Floro rie Bond. She and Mrs. Farrell I spent the rest of that blue-and-russet it month cleaning house and painting a u small white bed that they found in le 3 second-hand store on River Street, s In November they settled down to y make the elothes for the baby. They olate their meals in the kitchen, and
Licensed to wed: Rollo M. Houck I ! and Edith L. Beery. Lee Reed mgr. of Adams Stave Co. brakes arm. J. D. Wisehaupt Gind son, Howard go to Bluffton tj> be at bed side of' Mrs. Wisehaupt who underwent an , operation Tuesday. Sylvester Johnson is in Columbia City on business.
the dining room became a temporary sewing room filled with white garments that made Mary Faith fairly ache with their heart-rending littleness. Little bibs, little jackets, little bibs, little gowns. Aunt Ella sent a pair of crib blankets up from Garrettsville at Christ- I mas—pale blue with white Peter ; Rabbits running all over them. Jean brought a pair of baby-pins and showed Mary Faith a dozen snapshots that her ranchman had sent to her from Arizona—pictures of pep- i per trees on a wide street in Phoenix. - of the camel-back mountains and several views of a big ranch house with wide shady porches. “That’s where little Jeanie is going to live one of these days,” she said as she took them back from Mary Faith. “I'm in love for the first time in my life, and isn't it just my luck to fall for a farmer? That's what a rancher really is. Mary Faith. Can you imagine me living out there in the middle of a thousand acres with nothing to do al! day bin watch alfalfa “You can look at the palm trees ■ and the camel-back mountains," said 1 Mary Faith gravely. “And you'll < I have your husband —that is, if you ' really intend to marry this man I'd • live on a ranch with Kim for thr ' next twenty years, without seeing • I anybody else, if 1 had to, and enjoi t it.” Jean gazed at her, and both pur ’ zlemcnt and awe were in her fair "You are still crazy about that we smack you're married to, aren you?" she asked. "Why you evt : picked him in the first place is nuk ! beyond me. You could have ha, 'most anybody Whatever it tak< 5 to eatch a husband, you've vi: n 1 Mary Faith Looks and braim anr a grand disposition—and if you dor • f divorce Kim Farrell after this babv - arrives I'm going to stop seeing vou 1 I'm disgusted with you. as it is * t And with that she kissed Mary 1 Faith with great affection and went on her way to deliver the rest of hei . Christmas packages 3 'To Be Continued) v Copyright. 1931. by Beatrice Burton □ I Distributed by a King Feature* Syndicate, inc.
Mounds Are Fatal — Terre Haute, Ind., April 27 — ! (UP)—Wounds received after he had slfot and killed J. W. Shldekr, 158, Steel company foreman, were i fatal late yesterday to Charles Wassell. 56. Coroner J O. Carrigus held Was- ; sell's death accid - tai. Testimony showed that the weapon was dis-
-- - - " J ' l ’' fei £2 l • «i ! M > SMILING I THROUGH B I I \ 11 11 Ml ' \ I I You Can Buy With Confidence I These—. Men’s New, I Spring Suits VV'e’re offering Saturday at I sl2-50 t 0 slg.M Hand tailored in fine wcrol patterns and c. at are I new! They're Gold Bond Suits, Tod! In a > h crt I tor you. I BOYS’ NEW I KNEE-PANTSUITS * * I Those jaunty styles the boys all want these I look well and just wear and wear. Heal 80/ »at a ■ big saving to dad. All sizes. I $3.95«, $6.95 NEW HATS . NEW S I New brims—New shapes Neckwear y I New colors. Nifty top- to wear in j - ■ pers in all sues. and P’ tterns I test. I $1.25 to $3.00 • 25c to m. OO \ w il .. I 11 Just Button Up In One Os O*.«» I NEW DRESS SHIRTS — and You-'H Be All Dressed Up ‘I All sizes in the New Colors IQ . L . I and Patterns xOVto ‘ I X-ACT FIT SHIRTS Q , Xq The shirt tnaffl easy on the neck. <u 1 •" ■ —SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY GOOD WORK SHIRTS ' Qf ! In All Size.-. ; You'll Find This A Good Plate to • That Graduation Gift! VANCE & LINN Decatur. Indiana
I charged wh. . , n . '"W : take it a w,;\ :i < • ; •j’ Was,,.!! k,,.. . >r J t the latte) ha,| i bla< k-uuitli a: • ~ , than’two V. a: , I, M I i al Lr-"’ 'I- l )' .1 | turn, d th,- . , p . : Shideler fell. ‘ ' “■ l Ger the ■ T ..,, u I
