Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 106, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1933 — Page 5
Mltr YOUTH |fW\.\MED EDITOR FROM PAGE, ONE) ' B*“*T*’jT*The old staff i:i. a , Hl .1 w»t issue ■K...., News said in part: ®’3l • I I 11 ''" 1 Progress MK,,. to . 1 ' .. . i S^K.. IwLATION ■ IS DISCUSSED rva: ■£9|, , ■•, , ,1.1 four point pr >- Miln Legion's attitude to-
Advice • IT v mother ' I -* knows those anxs ic yuir< wh< n her IsQL * : f .a’it-i i.- '". comim; ■■ ' >. i woman. 'I he wise **i'.stther advices her mm girl to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite i Prescription. Read ' what Mrs. Jessie, I ln<l .has to say: "\\h<n vu>iii.tnhoo«i. 1 caught a ; : . inv <i« velopmcnt ami to hooiuc in a weakened, ncr- , state. I developed a EaJ had my mother thought I was J- . She gaw me Dr. Piene s 1 Hitl my oimhnon soon stronger, developed into m<l from that tunc more Double.” | >.. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y’»
|| Coat Sale Hl M si f1.1.Y LARGE SELECTION I OF SPRING (OATS Oil $8.95 1 '* JMBSI Nome are tor trimmed, others unirimmed. AI I 3 s lined . Sec these coats sIhBhI before bin! Quality .M i h\RsEB Coats at a remarkable low W ~-aIjHMM price. Newest colors in ■ Tan. Blue and Black. ; All sizes. \ i \\ 1/ Also all regular $15.0(1 and || Hjk “■*. y 1, I s $25.00 Coats at Special H B/y * y jj reduced prices! sale of Junior Wool Suits, sizes 11 to size 11 to 17, at 20. at ■ $4.95 $4-95 „ nd $7-50 111 NEW SILK DRESSES R II anv ne " numbers have just been unpacked for |l I Diday and Saturday selling. You'll like these at ■ $2.98, $3.98, $5.95 II I Special close-out sale of Silk Dresses d* 1 fir || I in dark colors, at vl . / ») pry Goods Specials ||H LL SILK CREPE, 40 inch 36 in. UNBLEACHED MUSvery good quality, all LIN. a fine weave, durable ||^ff e ncw shades of J-Q grade for many uses. (Limit lj^B r<:en ' blue, etc., yard OvC 10 yds. to QI/ z. » Sier customer). Yard O/ 2v COLOR VOILE, 700 ■^■ ar ds on sale. 30 new pat- MONK'S CLOTH, natural ||^fr rrl s. Guaranteed -| Zk tan color in 4x4 weave. Very wide 39c yard; .)Q DIAPERS, made of 36 in. wide, yard 2ue/V birdeye cloth, site Hemmed, 1 dozen in PLAIN COLOR BROADf7fl CLOTH, 36 inch wide. A I dozen /«*C good selection of O > ■ e colors: yard OL 'VING THREAD, best sixtMord grade, 150 yard spools, BLEACHED PILLOW CASE 40 and 50 black, or 60 size 42x36. Never again at I only, . n such a low price j O [ fly spools . l UC Pe> P ail lOt|^J tr ictly sanitary bed marquisette panels, I '-LOWS, filled with all I 39 inch wide, cremel em- I I rw sterilized feathers and broidery trimmed, >)(| I with fancy (kO 2J4 yd. long, each ’J«7V I pair “oC !■ ALL LINEN TOWELING, |^B CH ENILLE RUGS, Heavy Unbleached, with blue or I size 25x46. All new green border, Q j tfkO 16 inch wide, yard OV ■ each [H UNBLEACHED SHEETING, [^■ F,g URED OILCLOTH; all 76 in. wide, tine even weave, i |Bnew patterns, 54 inch Q(i z , suitable for many uses. ■ width, yard O.*C Regular 15c grade, t n 111 46 inch width, yard 20c yard IVV INiblickS Co
I ward veterans legislation. Its ad- , option by the committee is expectI It provides for et-vd treatment lof veterans, widows and ornhans of all wars; a permanent clissificatlon of benefits; -sufficient provisions for war service connected cases regardless of financial status, recognition that dependent disabled veterans are wards of the feder|ai government instead of state or i local. I Despite his criticism of Douglas I the commander stood by his first • statement urging Legion support ;of President Roosevelt's campaign to end the depression. —o DECATUR POST LEASES LOCAL COUNTRY CLUB I FROM PAGE ONE) who purchased tlm*hmme *fron7*C. J. Lutz and adjacent land from Conrad Gillig, John Snow and | I DynoLs Schmitt. A banquet hall 'and rooms for men and women were! erected later. , I Legionnaires announced that! green fees and membership dues I . would be within the reach of every- ■; one ami that they wanted the peoi; pie of this community to take ad-1 vantage of the privileges offered i them. REGULATIONS OF RAILROADS ARE OPPOSED I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | >1 nited States," present traffic "is! not sufficient profitably' to utilize! existing railway facilities and the supplementary facilities provided
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY I, 1933.
'MARY FAITH" 1 I b y Beatrice Burton
CHAPTER XXXII In the morning he was so sick that after she had taken one look at him she Dr. Thatcher. “Pleurisy,’’ he said gravely when he arrived. “Bad case of it, too. 1 thought 1 told you to keep this fellow in the house for a few days, Mrs. Farrell.” Mary Faith wrung her hands. “He would go out yesterday. He started out for the office after lunch when the sun was shining—no one would have dreamed that it was going to rain." “He was out half the night,” Aunt Ella s voice came from the doorway of the room. “1 heard him come in, and it was long after twelve o’clock. 1 suppose he’d been out eating and j drinking with some of his cronies.” "J 11 bet it was some woman he was with," she said sharply to Mary j Faith when the doctor had left. “He’s his beautiful father all over again!—This is just the sort of thing Amelia was up against all the years she lived with that beautiful duck! —’Like father, like son,’ as they say ’’ Ihrough the open door of the j little room across the hall Mary I Faith could sec the baby, perched up in his bed like a little bird, watchI ing het with jiis bright blue eyes. He laughed when he saw her look i at him and waved his small hands. She waved back at him. “If I never teach him anything else,” she : promised herself solemnly, “I’ll ■ teach him to be honest and to be square.” For ten days Kim lay in bed. And day after day Mary Faith sat by i the window of his room, sewing or reading, hovering over him with medicine or the thermometer. One 1 night when his fever was very high he had a touch of delirium and called for her even when she was sitting on ! the bed beside him. “No—no —I want to talk to Mary Faith.” he said thickly, beating back ! the hands with which she tried to quiet him. “I must talk to Mary Faith ” “So after all I’m the person he thinks of and wants ’way down deep in his mind,” she told herself, “no | matter how many times he goes to j the Golden pheasant or up to j Claire’s flat ” And the thought j comforted her and sustained her | through the anxiety of the next few days. I Then Mrs. Farrell caught a little - cold. She insisted that it was a bad attack of hay fever and announced, after seeing Dr. Thatcher, that she needed a change of air. “1 thought fust of going down to Garrettsville for a few weeks,” Mary Faith heard her tell Kim. “But I ■ decided that the dust in the country I roads and the hay fields would be I bad for me, so I’m going to visit Cousin Lucy Starke.” Lucy Starke was Mrs. Farrell’s second cousin, an elderly spinster i who taught school in Hampden Ledges, a little town among the hills in the southern part of the state. ! Mary Faith had never seen her, but she had sent a hand-made dress and a friendly little note when the bab-, j came. After reading the note. Mary Faith felt that she knew Lucy. Such neat, cramped handwriting could be- | long only to aper r on whose life was I calm and well-ordered She .knc v | that Cousin Lucy lived alone, an! 1 she pictured her as occupying a ' small house or. a si ,e street Sh- ! wondered, as she helped Mrs. Farj by new forms of transportation." “Our broad prohlnm,” he said, “is Iso to coordinate all agencies of | tiansporation as to maintain adeiquate service.’’ - I' The message said the experience | gained during the balance of this I year will assist in preparation “for la more rermanent and a more coinprehe ist’.-e national transporation
THE ADAMS - Last Time Tonight - CONSTANCE BENNETT in “OUR BETTERS” Added - - Clark atid McCullough Comedy and Musical Number. 10-15 c - Friday & Saturday - “Men Must Fight” with Diana VV’ynward, !’hillips Holmes, Lewis Stone, , May Robson, Robert Young. ! llie play that every woman 'will want everv man Io see! 10-l.Yc ; SUN., MON., TUES.—“PICK UP" with Sylvia Sidney, Geo. Raft. Story by Vina Delmar. j PLEASE NOTE; Until further notice the following prices will he in effect at this Theatre: 1 Sundays, 20c; balance of the • week, 15c. You will see the rime high grade attractions J that have always been shown at I The Adams. Children, always 10c.
rell pack, just what Cousin Lucy's state of mind would be when her guest began to throw burnt matches on the floor of the neat little kitchen, when she began to leave empty coffee cups around the house, when she asked foolish questions and made endless small talk. Mary Faith had a shamed feeling of relief when she saw that Mrs. Farrell intended to stay at Hampden Ledges for a long time. Four suitcases, a big leather hatbox, and a little brown, valise were packed. “I’d have taken my trunk, instead of all these bags,” she said to Mary Faith the night before her departure, “but 1 thought that it would be almost impossible to get it into the back of the doctor’s car. These can be arranged without any trouble.” Having said that, she stood back to watch the effect of her words on Mary Faith. “The doctor’s car?” Mary Faith repeated, a puzzled look coming into her wide, serene eyes. “You mean Dr. Thatcher’s car?” “Yes. I forgot to tell you that he’s going to drive me down to Hampden Ledges. It’s only eight miles, and it’s a beautiful drive, through the hills. . . , Don’t stare so, Mary Faith. 1 know that I'm just an old grandmother to you, but it seems that I’m still an attractive woman to men of my own age!” That night Mrs. Fan ell went to bed with an extra layer of cold cream on her face and kid curlers in her gray-blonde hair; and the next morning—a hot, rainy Sunday—she drove away with the doctor, looking gqy and almost young, her eyes shining happily from under the brim of her new hat. “It’d be funny if the two of them got married, wouldn't it?” Kim mused, as the doctor’s car purred rhythmically out of sight. “They’ve known each other for years and—well, stranger things have happened, you know.” The mere thought that stranger things had happened lifted Mary Faith’s spirits wonderfully. She had a certain affection for Kim's mother, but there was no doubt that she was a very irritating person to have around. She insisted upon handling the housekeeping money, and she had no idea of economy. She bought veal steak at sixty cents a pound when veal chops at forty-two would have done just as well. She ordered alligator pears when they were out iof season and she bought pink perfumed soap that cost a quarter a bar, when she knew that both Mary Faith and Kim preferred scentless white soap for less than half the money. And she was forever bringing home some nonsensical —and unnecessary—toy to the baby. "But she loves Kim and she's loyal to him,” Mary’Faith would remind herself. For the next few weeks Kim came home early every afternoon. Mary Faith would make a cup of tea for him. and then he would lie on the •Id sofa and read or sleep until dinner was ready He seemed to enjoy the peace and quiet of the flat, the uneventful hours that he spent listening to the radio or sitting on die front steps with Maty Fiith. He i»wld 'ell her that she was the love-lr-t thing :nd much, much too good €• him. Maty Faith was very gratemi Ur >'l her happiness. She told hcrsell that it had always been written in the stars that her life with Kim should turn out 10 be juat like this.
policy at the regular session of congress in 1934.'' CONVENTION IN TWO TOWNSHIPS (.CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Benediction. Evening 7:30 o’clock Union Chapel U. B. ChV’Ch Song—Congregation I’r.iyer. Special music I’leasai *. Grove Sunday School Bibi. Story Tclliig and Memory Contest. Special number Mt. Pleasant Sunday School. Talk - Itev. Frank Engle. Report of the judges Sone t 'ongregatlon. Bi nedietion. o EXPECT STRIKE ANNOUNCEMENT THIS EVENING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) farmers join with the authorities in frustrating the embargo. Duration of tin strike probably will be left to the national directorate now headed by Milo Reno, Farmers Union Insurance company official, and national president who may be re-elected today. Assembling in Machinery Hall of the lowa state fair grounds when the cattle judging arena proved too small, tho farmers today were orderly. The rebellious spirit of their affiliates in northwest lowa, 100 of whom are under military arrest was lacking. A gesture toward strike support from organized labor and war veterans also was to be introduced in the foiiu of a resolution this
And then, during tin last two or three days of that extraordinarily hot dry month of July, she noticed, with growing concern, a certain restlessness in Kim. One evening Kim did not come home for his dinner until half past seven. .He offered no excuses for his tardiness and he hardly touched the fried chicken and hot biscuit that Mary Faith had had ready to serve at six o'clock. He soon went to bed, and Mary Faith found herself thinking of something Mrs. Farrell had said about him long ago. Her bitter words seemed to fill the hot little kitchen. “This is the sort of thing you'll have to learn to expect if you marry Kimberley,” Mrs. Farrell had said. “Meals spoiled because he’s not here to eat them on timet Whole dinners put away untouched sometimes because he doesn’t show up at all!” Kim was asleep when Mary Faith turned out the kitchen light and went into the bedroom. The light above the bed gleamed on his blond hair, and he looked as innocent as a child when Mary Faith bent to kiss him.
He had been drinking. She knew it as she leaned close to him and felt his warm breath on her face, and she drew back without touching him. She went out to the back porch to think. If Kim had begun to drink again, it must mean—well, what did it mean? Did it mean that he was | bored once more with tin- quiet de- | cent life he had been leading? Or | did it mean nothing except that he ; had met some friends and had taken a drink with them? “That’s probably all there was to it," she comforted herself, "and after all he didn't stay out all evening.” Presently she got up, locked the doors of the flat, and crept quietly into the big walnut bed beside Kim. Through all the gray veils of sleep he must have known that she was there, for he murmured drowsily and stretched out his arm toward her. And at his touch, sheer love for him—for his weaknesses and his faults as well as his virtues—welled up in Mary Faith’s heart. She would rather be here, she told herself, in this hot little room than in the most magnificent house in the world. . . . And then she found herself thinking of the most magnificent i house she had ever been in — Mark Nesbit’s bouse in Blue Valley. It would be lovely at this time of the year, with the trees rustling around I it and the green gardens and or- | chards and fields stretching out like magic patchwork on every side She | had never regretted that house any j more than she had regretted Mark Nesbit. She did not regret it now. Kim stirred in his sleep and awoke, | "It's stifling in this room." he mur- | mured. ”1 sure did envy Jack Mai- I don tonight, living at the Athletic ; Club with an clcctrit fan in his i room and a waiter bringing him [ ' cracked ice every third drink." “What's Jack doing at the Ath- ' letic Chib, Kim?" • “Oh, he’s been there for a week. : Didn’t you know it? Claire went to 1 Detroit to visit some friends, and ' he's living at the chib until she ■ comes home, so he says. I gather ' that they've had some kind of a row. I wouldn’t be surprised if she didn’t I come home at all.” ITo Be Continued) * ! Cons right. 1931. bs Beatrice Burton Dlatribuled b> King Features Syndicate. Inc.
■ afternoon. Strike leaders learned i i in lowa last summer that without , some outside support, their cm i bargo cannot be made even 50 I per cent effective. The holiday leaders hope to en- j force their strike -peacefully, j Speakers decried forcible rebel- | lion except in cases of extreme] emergency and Reno has said he is not in favor of picketing. o 4. CONTINUE HUNT FOR KIDNAPERS OF YOUNG GIRL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) that the child will come to harm. This is not a case of revenge or spite. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. McMatli both had five or six houri;' sleep last night Mis. MeMath is working with us , in every possible way and has at no time broken down There lias I been no weeping, no giving away.” RHEUM A TISm! Pain—Agony Starts To Leave In 24 Hours Happy Days Ahead for You! •Think of it—h -w Ibis old world j do's make progress-- no w c onies a ■ prescription which Is known to I pharmacists as Allenru and within I4S hours after you start to tak l ' | tins swift acting - formula pain, agony and inflammation caused by excess uric acid has started to depart. Alknru does just what this notice! says it will do it is guaranteed by) 1 Holthousc Drug Co and leadingl druffgutb to do it— Ou c<n get one! generous bottle ter 35 cents and is l it doesn’t bring the joyous results! you expect—your money whole heartedly returned.
MONROE NEWS Chancey Aurand of Grand Rapids Michigan spent the week end with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones and Miss Creo Crist of Fort Wiiyne wire the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crist on Su: day. Mr. and Mrs. John Floyd entertained at Sunday dinner Mr. and Mrs. \V. O. Dehil and Mr. and Mrs J. L. Berger of Elkhart, Mr. and Mrs. Joh Dehil of Howe, and Mr. is nd Mrs. E. \V. Busche of .'lon roe, Mr. and Mrs. George Harvey and son Richard of Indianapolis spent the week-end with Mr. Harveys parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Harvey. Mr. a. d Mrs. Otho Lobenstein spent Sunday [afternoon in Decatur with relatives., Mr. and Mrs. Roy Runyon of Decatur called on Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Crist Sunday after ooa. Rev. and Mrs. E. M. Dunbar visited relatives in (Anderson for a few days the past week. , Mr. and Mis. A. D. ('list the p 1 rents of a baby girl born Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Crist's parents, Mr. ai d Mrs. Forest Andrews. Mr. iind Mrs. Wilford Ray and family of Gnabrill were the guests of Mrs. Ray's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson. Harold Ray accompanied them to Grabrill for a visit; Dr. Ernest Kohne and Miss Mary
jl I Wwl 111 The new 1933 41 mil I GOODYEAR rwl Ml PATHFINDER wl IllWi I I MBI $J,.65 SII ijfniiKSJrallll " ANO UP || (||| Hl IjihSl Ho MH i 111 I longer average tread wear i I wW 181 j <ll 111 tread Will higher non-skid blocks 4* Full Center Traction * M° re shoulder Non-Skid 1 1 ;ij Handsornel y prismed sidewalls 7 - Full oversize in all dimensions ra B * Tbe smartest looking tire at its ■ If your purse is lean we have FRONT-PAGE NEWS for YOU! - -r- ’ Use W irm Weather IT’S news when anyone builds a better tire tirade Now ■ for the price than the 17 million Pathfinders Let us drain out that which have already made a great name light winter-worn oil be- , fore it does damage. Re- IOT mrill. jjg fill with new clean heavier oil of the grade your j t ’ s d ou bi e news when anyone can give more car manufacturer recoin- z o mends for protection in safety, more style, more mileage than Path" finders ever gave before, and at a lower price! VJe recommend uJcqL 0 Uuak 30cqt. dU But that’s exactly what Goodyear has done in , I the new 1933 Pathfinder —a tire that’s certainly a 1 ' OvYi hcaU’ 0101 built and priced in tune w ith the times. 9 Maybe the fan belt >s w j|| | jf oyer because you’ll us to lift the hood and see f or y OU rself that it has more actual quality see. It tightening it ' J won’t help, we will put than many top priced tires of other makes— ]E and it certainly gives more for your money than ? Goodyear Far. Belt . ... r i * 50c and up -installed any tire selling for less. Corner Madison and Third Streets Road Service ph one 262 Vulcanizing—Battery Rtchar girg—Complete Lubricating
Jones of Grover Hill were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hendricks Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Meyers spent Sunday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Dr. and Mrs. M. F. Parrish of Sturgis, Michigan), called on relatives and attended to business in Monroe Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Kay entertained at Sunday dinner Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beitler amd son Bobby
IM SOLD ON THOSE JMMw ’ll 'COST HER ' ISkS YES IT'S THE W ™ TOBACCO THAT COUNTS I JHbk WFI YOU GET COSTLIER* TOBACCOS IN CAMELS
PAGE FIVE
of Montpelier; Chauncey Aurand of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Miss Ada Davis and Mrs. Rena Joliasun of Monroe. Miss Ruth Bahner of Bluffton spirit the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bahner. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Badders, Mr. and Mrs. William Martz and Mrs. James Laisure motored to Daleville Sunday and spent the day with relatives.
