Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 28 April 1933 — Page 7
I PROGRAM h MEETING I] 000 Boys And Girls || Attend Annual 4K Club Roundup lette. Ind • lApril V - (Spcfc.tween 12't' and 1500 out ‘ I members of the younger Kou of Hoosier farmers and [onieniakers will gather at ■ University from May 3 to 5 I fifteenth annual Boys' and I.H Club Round-Up which Eviile a busy three days of lion, judging contests, and ■ament, according to the Ke program announced to■teodance is limited to not Km five l>er cent of the club Jem in a county. Kties wiii get underway on ■day. May 3, with the day ■ to the start of the annual ■contest for both boys and Illicit will lead to the crown|uw state health champions
ANTED nil Lawn Mowers I to sharpen. he welding and blackhg. Plow shares ground. bDERN BODY and FENDER SHOP FRANK SCHMITZ I Jefferson st. Phone 509
I NOTICE more we bring you—- ■ I Indiana's Greatest Evergreen and Shrub Sale Hr State grown stock, dug yesterday. Ka Roses. Raspberries. Asparagus, Shade and Fruit Trees. ■E If it's Quality and Price, we have it, and will be at your service today and tomorrow. ■st door South of Morris 5 & 10c store. II SUNDAY - MON DAY - TUESDAY I I Fredric March - Claudette Colbert K in Noel Coward’s ■onighf Is Ours ■ with Alison Skipworth. Arthur Byron. Brilliance In Its Cast — Passion In Its Story. Coward, who gave you “Private Lives" could write its M ,veet ecsta sy of love! Only its superb cast could give it such 1 reality! I Added—Charley Chese in “Mister Bride” I and Musical Subject. I 10c -25 c || Tonight and Saturday IHpISTEK KEATON - - “SCHNOZZLE" DURANTE I in “WHAT! NO BEER?’’ Keaton and Jimmy L’urante have never been so funny. ADDED !^M Devil Horse” and Burns and Allen Comedy. lOlsc. I i ORT THEATRE I I SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY Matinee. .2:00 Evening. .6:30 ■ 10c ■ 25c I CLARA HOW “CALL HER SAVAGE" I A NEW PERSONALITY NEVER I BEFORE REVEALED. ■ Klara Bow is back, displaying new genius as a draRHiilic actress, vivid, fascinating, a woman of a moods. ■ with Gilbert Roland, Monroe Owsley, I Thelma Todd, Estelle Taylor. jMjyLSO — Fo X News and Educational Comedy. I * Friday - - Saturday - IBTaka Chance Nite Action! Danger! T hrills! M, BUCK JONES ■"' taS 'S “TREASON" fun o f de’i’ightful * h " ly ( ’ rCV ur l>rises. Robt. Ellis I ... Also-Comedy and | ' On,y * Cartoon. I ioc ioc
demonstration ami judging contests in corn, poultry and eggs, beef cattle, swine and sheep for the boys ar.3 the demonstration contest for the girls. The youngsters will be the guests of the athletic department at the Purdue-Chicago baseball game in the afternoon. Thursday will be a big day with a continuation of the various judging contests and "open house" at the poultry, home economics, and agricultural buildings and horticultural green houses, with the forestry department co-operating, in addition to a general session. Following an -address of welcome by Dr. Z. M. Smith, of Purdue, state club leader, and a response by Demon Catron, of Howard county, the club leaders will be addressed by President E. C. Elliott, of Purdue. Later in the afternoon the Purdue Glee Club will entertain, and in the evening the youngsters will attend the annual Purdue Livestock Revue sponsored by the Animal Husbandry Club. Addresses by Director J. h. Skinner and Dean Mary L. Matthews, will feature Friday morning’s general session. The new health champions will be presented at the afternoon session. Separate banquets for the boys and girls will be held Friday evening, with the annual "open house" of the schools of engineering and pharmacy and the chemistry department providing the evening's entertainment feature. During the day the boys will tour the soils and crops experimental fields, and witness a demonstration b.v the high scoring teams, while the girls will compete in the dress revue contest, a.nd listen to an address on "Attractive Low Cost Dishes." Gst the Habit—Trane at Homa
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 19.33,
"MARY FAITH" 1 I b y Beatrice Burton COPYRIGHT, 1931, BY rtHG FEATURES SYNDICATE, tNC.
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. She refuses to accede to Kim's request for a divorce and asks him to wait six months before carrying out his desire. CHAPTER XXVII It snowed all day on Tuesday, the last of December. The ground was covered with a blanket several inches thick, and there were powder-puffs of feathery snow on the electric light globes that hung on either side of the entrance to the apartment house. All day Mary Faith bad felt tired ■nd drowsy. All day, in obedience to some blind law of nature, she had taken little naps, sitting in her chair beside the dining-room table, as if she were preparing herself for some great ordeal. “Well, everything is in order now for the baby,” Mrs. Farrell said to I her late that afternoon when the ! street lamps were beginning to flash their light out into the pearly winter dusk. “Even the little bed’s all made up, isn’t it?” “A year ago today Kim and 1 were down in Garrettsville,” Mary Faith murmured. “I remember we took a walk, in the afternoon and there were a lot of little kids coasting down the hill near Aunt Ella’s house. 1 didn’t dream then that I’d be having a little baby of my cwn so soon. . . She stopped, and a look of amazement and pain swept across her face. Hanging on to the edge of the table she pulled herself to her feet. She was halfway to the door of the room when another pain ran over her body like a sheet of flame. . . . She heard Mrs. Farrell’s voice behind her, “Where are you going, Mary Faith?” She tried to answer her but she couldn't make a sound. . . . Shf knew where she was going. She was going to the telephone to call up Kim and tell him that he must come to her just as soon as he could. . . . Then she saw the marks on the wall of the hallway where the telephone box had been. The black twisted wires still stuck out from the plaster, like the toots of burnt trees. . . . She had forgotten that the telephone had been taken away. “You’re in pain, Mary Faith, aren't you?” she heard Mrs. Farrell’s voice above the sound in her ears that was like a great flood of waters rushing past her. "I’ll run in next door and call Dr. Thatcher—Oh, my dear Lordl ’’ Darkness closed over Mary Faith. She knew vaguely that someone lifted her to a bed presently. And later on she heard a voice, hoarse with agony, shrieking for Kim—and GROSS INCOME TAX IN EFFECT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) first payments will be made only on incomes for two months. May and June. After July 15, the law provides 15 flays grace for paying the taxes - persons whose lax is more than ■slo a year will pay quarterly. Persons whose tax amounts to less than slo a year will be permitted to pay annually. No deductions are allowed for dependents and all income, includ ] lug sale of property, is taxable. | Big business may use the same bookkeeping system employed for computing federal income taxes. Smaller merchants need only a daily record of their sales to compute their taxes. Persons believing themselves overassessed will have 30 days in which to appeal to the gross income tax department. The department has authority either to grant or deny the appeal. The department's decisions may be appealed to circuit courts. The penalty for delinquencies will be 10 per cent of the amount delinquent plus one per cent a month interest. The penalty for fraud will be 50 1 per cent of the deficiency plus cue! per cent interest per mouth. All Indianapolis, Apr. 28.—(U.R) —The]
never knew that it was her own voice. She only knew that the woman who was calling was in terrible agony. Then a sweetish, sickening smell was in her nostrils and she knew nothing more. . . . A light was shining in her eyes when she opened them. At first she thought she was looking straight into the sun, and then she saw that it was her own little yellow-shaded bed lamp. She was in her own room, in her own bed. She could feel the pillow, soft and cool, against her cheek. She ached all over and she was too tired to move or speak. She closed her eyes again. Then ail at once, someone was bending over her. A man's deep voice was saying, "Are you awake, Mrs. Farrell?" She looked up. Dr. Thatcher was bending over her and beside him stood Kim's mother. She was holding a small white bundle in her arms, and as Mary Faith tried to lift herself from her pillows, Mrs. Farrell laid it down beside her. Turning her head, Mary Faith looked at the baby. Here was her love for Kim in the flesh—the little soft body, tender as flower petals and warm as life itself. One hand was curled up tight against the little face, like a tiny pink seashell. "Well, there's your son, Mrs. Farrell—born just as the bells were ringing in the New Year. What do you think of him?” Dr. Thatcher asked in his brisk hearty way. He backed away from the bed, and beyond him in the shadowy doorway Mary Faith saw Kim. Kim! ... He came toward her and there was a white stony look on his face. He stood beside the bed and suddenly she saw tears spring into his eyes. “Don’t, Kim.” She held her hand out to him. “Don’t, dearest. . . . Everything’s all right.” He knelt down beside her, burying his face in the pillows close to hers. So close that she could smell the faint dry scent of his blond hair. “Your hair—it always smells like birch bark,” she murmured weakly and foolishly, and began to <;ry because she was so happy. • * • By the middle of February Mary Faith was on her feet again—and not only on her feet but on the very tips of her toes, more eager for life and work and happiness than she had ever been before. The days were all too short now although she got up at six o’clock every morning when the baby stirred in his little bed and began to shout for his bottle in a voice that to her was the most beautiful sound that was ever heard. “Listen to our son and his little hunger-song,” she would say to Kim as she slipped out of bed and hurried into the kitchen to warm the first little six-ounce bottle of the day. "He's going to be a grand opera singer some day, and don't I know it!” "Or a radio announcer, at least,” Kim would answer drowsily and good-naturedly. He was as proud of the baby as Mary Faith was. Sometimes when she came back from the kitchen she would find him bending over the iittie bed, touching the baby’s cheeks with one of his big fingers and talking to him in a gruff man-to-man way. “Shut up or I’ll bust you one on the beezer—hear me?" he would say. “You make as much noise as a fire whistle. Cut it out.” Every night Kim came home between five and six so that he could see Mary Faith bathe the boy and tuck him into the warm blankets of his bed ’ ■» On Easter Saturday he brought home a chocolate rabbit for him. to the enormous amusement of Mary entire income of Indiana manufac turers will be taxable under the new gross income tax law, Clarence A. Jackson, administrator, an ”The Phantom Wife” J*" I I JI >-■ IB Kathleen Smythe, New York vaudeville dancer, who has been identified a» the mysterious “Mrs. Garfield Leon” who brought the s>oo,ooo •lienation of affections suit against Mrs. Fay Webb Vallee, wife of Rudy Vallee. Although Garfield Leon denies he is married, Mrs, L«on’» attorney asuarts the suit will be pushed in earnest.
Faith and the horror of Mrs. Farrell. And he bundled him up and took him for an airing on the seat of his car. "Oui life is just the way I always pictured it," Mary Faith said to him ! that night as they sat in the living room waiting for the Maldons to come over and play bridge with them. “Long before we were married I used to dream of the time when we’d have a home and a baby and friends to come in to spend the evening with us once in a while—and now it’s all come true ” “You’d better rap on wood,” Mrs. Farrell spoke up from her chair beside the window. “I always think it’s tempting Providence to tell yourself how lucky you are.” Mary Faith laughed. “You’re worse than a rainy day, Mother Far- j rell,” she said cheerfully. “Kim and I have had all our bad luck.” She got up and sat on the arm of ! his chair, rumpling up his hair and twisting it somehow so that he looked utterly unlike himself for a second. “Haven’t we had all our bad luck and all our bad times?” she asked him, her arms around him. “Haven't we come out on the sunny side, and aren't we most —terribly—frightfully happy?” She kissed him between each word and he looked as if he liked it They were as much in love with each other these days as they had been during the first year of their engagement, when Kim had wanted no one but her. He wanted n,o one but her now. Sometimes the Maldons called up and said that they were coming over to play a few hands of bridge and he I would frown and look gloomy when Mary Faith announced the news to ' him. “Why don't they stay at home once in a while?” he would ask. “Gosh, 1 never saw such a pair as those two birds!—ln all the time I stayed at their house 1 never knew them to spend a quiet evening. They were always calling somebody up to j come over and make ‘hoopla’ with them or getting dressed to go to j somebody’s house for the evening or i to go to some place and dance and I have dinner. ... It was Claire's | fault—Jack’s pretty quiet and steady. [ She drags him around after her ilke i a kid with a Teddy bear." The ?3aldons never made much I “hoopla” when they came to the flat to spend the evening. For one thing the baby was asleep and they had io keep quiet. And for another Mrs. Farrell always sat in the room and looked over the evening paper while the other four played cards, frowning at them every now and then. “I don’t care very much for that I Maldon girl,” she told Mary Faith I the morning after one of the Mai- | dons’ visits. “She gives me the jit- | ters, the way she’s always wriggling I her shoulders and singing under her breath. . . . And 1 wonder if she 1 thinks her face looks pretty, all painted up like a signboard!—No, I I don’t like her.” About a week later Claire popped j in one afternoon on her way home , from downtown. “Popped in” was I the only way to describe the way she came rushing into the flat with her bracelets jingling and the whitetipped tails of her silver fox scarf swaying. “I can't stay two minutes,” she said breathlessly. “1 just wanted to bring the baby in a little present. It’s a cup and I have his name engraved on it. There's been enough argument about naming him so his i Aimt Claire just settled it by having ‘Kim’ put on the cup.” (To Be Continued) Cooyright. I*3l. by Beatrice Burton Distributed by Kins Features Syndicate, Inc. pounced today. I Many persons, ho said, had the' jerroneus impression that sales made to concerns outside the state would be exempt. There appears to have been a general misunderstanding of that I •section of the law relating to in ' terstate commerce, Jackson de-, dared. , “if seems that many .manufac-j Iturers and others have assumed' that any goods produced in Indiana land sold outside the state will not be taxed. This, apparently, was an honest error gained from unofficial interpretations of the law. "From an excise standpoint, there is no exception to the tax on gross receipts merely because the receipts happen to accrue from sources outside the state.” Get The Habit — Trntle nt Home MOCKING BIRDS Fine Singers 10c I This scientific wonder imitates the SONG BIRDS. B. J. Smith Drug Co.
FOUR MEMBERS OF FAMILY DIE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Cl'aiks were Rowland, 10, and Dean. 7. • The suicide of Clarks added another sensational episode to thej spectacular rise and fall of the Fo- j shay enterprises. W. B. Foshay ( began his promotion with a few ] thousand dollars shortly after the I World War. The enterprise was pyramided I into a $80,000,000 system stretching from coast to coast. Peak of Foshay s success came just before the terrific market crash of 1929. He built a 32-story skyscraper in Minneapolis, tallest structure in tha
1 k b Jll 1 k I / I TWO boons to happy / 1 households, inexpensive / \ as never before, more A \ expertly done than the \ costliest service a few /I x. \ years ago. Our expert / I \ will gladly estimate and \ \ advise, without any ob- \ \ ligation. Call us. “/j\ \ B. J. Smith 'SSI / \ \ Drug Co. \ U' I \ \ The Rexall Store 8 V -y / \ \ Phone 82
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city. The shaft, modelled after the Washington monument, was widely publicized. High Washington officials participated in its dedication in August, 1929. Two months later the Foshay enterprise crashed with a loss of millions to investors. Foshay and half a dozen of his aides were indicted on federal mail fraud charges. Mrs. Clark was selected as a juror in the first trial. The jury was unable to agree standing 11 to 1 for conviction with Mrs. Clark's vote the only one registered for acquittal. o Boy Goes to Jail to Sleep Spokane. Wash., —(UP) —Working by day and sleeping in the city fail by night, Is the lot which has
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befallen Howard Marcell, serving 15 days for drivii g while drunk. The concession was made so the lad wouldn’t lose his job. a 0 Pianist Views Amateurs Portland, Ore. —(UP) — Sergei RachmaniuofJ, the pianist, doesn't care how badly amateur players “murder” his pieces—so long as he isn’t around to hear them. "I am perfectly willing to let them play my pieces just as the wish —especially if >1 sin not there,” lie declares. o_ NOTICE After this date I will not be responsible for any debts contracted for by my wife Amelia C. Noll. < ’ Carl T. Noll Itx
