Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 112, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE —1 used Frigidaire, 2 last year models, at Bargain Prices. August Walter, Frigidaire dealer, 254 No. Second st. 109tf FOR SALE —Model T. Ford truck in A-l condition. Ruxel axle. Good tires. Cheap. W. A. Wherry, 3 miles north* ot Bleeke church. Monroeville. 110k-3tx FOR SALE —3 year old bay mare. 1 mile north of Schnepp schoolhouse. Phone 845-C, 110G3t FOR SALE—Work horse. S. D. Zimmerman, 1 mile north and 1% mile west of Monroe. Illa3tx FOR SALE —Baby chicks will grow if fed on- Beco Chick starter with cod liver oil or Burk's Big Chick Starter. $1.85 per 100 pounds. Burk Elevator Company, telephone 25. 109-ts FOR SALE or TRADE—Good cab buggy. Good as new. J. N. Burkhead, Monroe, phone J-7. 112g-2tx FOR SALE —A 40 acre farm, the safest of all investments, will be sold to the highest bidder st Honduras, May 15th at 2:00 P. M. to settle the Sam Hocker estate. Easy terms, small cash payment. Buy now’ as farmlands are advancing in price. 112-alt FOR SALE — Garden and flower plants 5 cents per dozen, Ethel C Teeter, Route 2. Geneva. Ind., May 11-18-25 FOR SALE — 50 choice yearling Hereford Steers, all or half. Terms if desired. Address I’ox R-3. % Democrat office. 112-g3tx WANTED WE WANT—Rags. Paper. Metal. Scrap Iron and Wool. The Maier Hide & Fur Co., 710 W. Monroe st., phone 442. Illt3 WANTED TO BUY Extra well improved farm in Adams or Wells County. State location :rnd price. Address box A. B. "> Democrat. 112-a2t

WANTED Canners. cutters and fat cattle. Springer and fresh cows. Anybody having cattle to sell, call phone 274, Wm. Butler. 109a30t6 12 WANTED—Agents to sell Stewarts Extract. A special we are tunning. 8 ounce bottle of vanilla and 4 ounce bottle of ’Derpeneless lemon for 50 cents with money back guarantee to your customers to give satisfaction. Can make from $6 to $7 a day. Address 1120 East North St. Lima. Ohio. UO-g-3tx WANTED — Reliable farmer to take sows and pigs on shares. See Roy Johnson, phone 265 or 114 or 1022. 110a3t o FOR RENT FOR RENT 7 room bungalo, motor plumbing, open fireplace, laundry basement. Other modern conveniences. A. D. Suttles, agent. FOR RENT — Strictly modern house on N. 2nd st. Phone 183. Mrs. Rose Clark. llltSx LOST AND FOUND LOST Bunch of keys, cossiidllig of Erie switch key and several others. Finder return to this office. 112g-3tx o— CHURCH REVIVAL Gospel Temple Meetings are progressing in a wonderful way. Many souls nave been saved and sanctified, also a num'bor have been healed Services each evening at 7:30. Come, bring your sick folks. Wo anoint and pray for the sick on Friday nights and Sunday afternoons. Come enjoy th? good music and testimonials, also gospel messages by Rev. Barker and others. — 1>You are assured of the highest possible price for your livestock, farm machinery, household goods, etc., at the Decatur Community Sale. Saturday, May 13. It

N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyaa Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 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 coat. Dignified But Not Costly. SOO—Phones—727 Lady Aaat Ambulance Service

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL | AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 11 No commission and no yardage, 160 to 240 lbs $4.00 240 to 300 lbs $3.90 300 to 350 lbs. $3.80 140 to 160 lbs $3.75 100 to 140 lbs. $3.30 Roughs .. $3.00 Stags $1.50 Vealers $5.00 Spring Lambs _ $5.75

EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y„ May 11.— (U.R) —Livestock: Hogs: on sale, 800: active, mostly 5c over Wednesdays average; bulk desirable, 160 to 260 lbs.. $4.65; weights below 150 lbs.. $4.25$4.50. Cattle: Receipts. 75: fairly active. fully steady: medium to good mixed yearlings. $5.50-$5.75; medium steers. $5.25; cutter grade cows. >1.60-$2.35. • Calves: Receipts, 200; vealers strong to mostly 50c higher: good to choice. $5.50-$6; common and medium. $3.50-34.75. Sheep: Receipts, 1.000; lambs 10c higher; good to choice shorn lambs. 73 lbs., average. $6.35; others unsold;'no springers. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. Wheat .74 .75 .76% .77% Corn . 44% .46% .48% .49% Oats .26’., .26’4 .26% .28% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., May 11.—(U.R) —Livestock: Hog market, 10-15 c higher; 160-1 190 lbs.. $4.20; 190-250 lbs.. $4.35; , 250-300 lbs.. $4.20; 300-350 lbs.. I $4.15; 140-160 lbs.. $3.60; roughs.’ $3.25; stags. $2: calves. $5.50; clip--ped lambs. $5.25; spring lambs,i $6.50. Cattle market: Steers, good to choice. $5-35.50; medium to good. $4.50-$5: common to medium, $3.50$5; heifers, good to choice. $4.50$5; medium to good. $4-$4.50; common to medium. $3 34; cows, good to choice. $3-33.50; medium to good $2.50-$3; cutter cows. $1.75-32.25; canner cows. sl-31.50; bulls, good to choice. $3-$3.25; medium to good. $2.50-33; common to medium I $2-32.50; butcher bulls. $3.25-32.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 11 No. 1 New Wheat, 50 lbs. or 'better . 70c j No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 69c 1 Oats 21c i Soy Beans 35c to 75c White or mixew corn 43c ’ Good Yellow corn 48c ’ Rye 25c o—■ — BARGAINS — Bargains m Living Room. Dining Room Suites, Mat- ■ tresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our phone number is 44 ct o Decatur Community Sale. Saturday. May 13. where the sellers and buyers get together It

THE CORT , - Last Time Tonight - “ CENTRAL PARK ” 10c Peep into tin- shadows i and secrets of Central Park with .loan Blondell-Wallace Ford Thrills-( hi I Is-Romance Added - - Broadway Brevity and Cartoon. THE ADAMS - Tonight, Fri. & Sat - “ FAST WORKERS ” with John Gilhert. Roh't. Armstrong, Mae Clarke The roar of a rivet gun was their love song In the fast-moving romance packed with breath-tak-ing thrills on top of the world's : tallest building. Added - - “The Devil Horse" and The Mills Brothers. 10-15 c SUNDAY. MON.. TUES —Maurice i Chevalier in "A Bed Time Story.”

The People’s Voice I This column for the rise of our readers who wish to make suggestions for the general good I or discuss questions ot intepest. Please sign your name to show authenticity. It will not be used it you prefer that It not be. 1 I • « Liquid Bread (By Helen B. Montgomery) I am often reminded, when I hear the plea advanced for the retu’wof light vines and beer, of an ar *.le that 1 read in an Eng-

lish f apt • ’.indez the caption. "Liquid Bread.'* "lie phrase was used in the advertisement of a wellknown brewing company in England. and one day a man saw a sign . ever a public-house door which read: "Good Ale is Liquid Bread." , His story follows: I went into the house and said, "Get me a quart of liquid bread." The landlord said, "Ah, first-rate ; I sign, isn’t it?” . I "Yes.” said 1, "it it’s true.” • "Oh, it's true enough, my beer is .all right.” i' "Well, give me a bottle to take home." He gave me a bottle of ithis liquid bread. 1 took it to Dr. [Samuelson. an analytical chemist, and I said to him, "I want you to tell me how much bread there is in this bottle.” He smelled it and exclaimed. "It's beer!’’ "Well,” he said, “if you come ; again in a week. 1 11 tell you all .about it." He charged me three , guineas. In a week's time I went; to know all about the liquid bread.; 'The first thing about it was that i there was 93 per cent of water. ' "It's liquid, anyhow,” 1 said, I “we ll pass that. Now let's get 'onto the bread." "Alcohol, 5 per cent." “What's alcohol?'* 1 asked. "There's a dictionary, you can hunt it up for yourself." I hunted it up and found alcohol described as a "powerful poison. Then he gave me a number of I J small percentages of curious things. I which he had put carefully down ‘ on each corner of a of w aite paper and which amounted to about a quarter of a thimbleful of dirty looking powder. That was the bread —2 per cent. "And there would not be so much as that.” said Doctor Samuelson, |"if it were Bass's or Allsops. This i is bad beer.” ■ This is the simple, scientific [truth with regard to beer, and the! case is stronger with regard to> wines and spirits. There is practically no nourishment in them at all. I think he has a rather low percentage of alcohol in his ale. but I let it go at that—the point is that ale or beer is not a food, but a! ["powerful narcotic poison.” To hear people talk, you would think) 'that wine and beer were harmless! beverages, hardly to lie called in- j i toxicating liquors. Have people I forgotten so soon thjt 90 per cent ;;of all the liquid sold over the bar; before the coming of the Eighteenth Amendment was beer? As you begin to study into thematter you find that all the drunkenness of the ancient world was beer and wine drunkenness. It was i wine that destroyed Greece and Rome. All the horrid accounts of the drunken banquets of the Ro-: I man emperors are written about: ithe use of wine. The same is true of Babylon and Assyria. All these I nations were destroyed not by dis-! 'tilled alcoholic liquors like gin and' rum. whisky and brandy, but by! wine and beer. For it must never! 'be forgotten that the process of distillation was not known for a! [thousand years after Christ. All! [the drunkards of the ancient world) from Father Noali down were wine! or beer drunkards. How terrible [was the curse of fermented liquor I in this ancient world, may be seen ■ from the fact Buddha forbade drink | tn his followers in the Sixth cen-1 tury B. C„ and .Mohammed to those I i who embraced his new religion in' [the Sixth century of the present jerik. The liquor of Mexico and South [America is fermented: so is the! i liquor of Japan and Siam. In al) (those countries there is rising a* 'strong movement against their own form of strong drink I feel that people should be in-' ■ [formed so that they may withstand; ithe real menace of Hie plea that! [America allow these "innocent I beverages" hack agaiu. There

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“RUNTS ON THE RUN” BY SEGI OU9N6SOFJ VOONT SUPPOSE VOU ' lSok• T ° /OuR OCATS - S 3 ‘ W SPOONIAH i THCT/ . sE.e\ BEtNfa UJIPEO >OUJERS r z THERE ARE > v —ARMY WICHiS 001 POWERFUL. GIAHTS AROUND . ? A i?2.l —\r— SSKSofY ! JSqmeviheres HOV7 filin' his BOATS LOM)eSJ .-R GOOD HE.FWEHSJ i J JU- - r - — 7/ ,i <4; ) —_s f . 1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1933.

never was a truer word said in the Bible than that which declares, “Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging ami whoso is deceived thereby is not wise.” —Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat and Chronicle. South Bend, Apr. 11. —Dr. R. M. Kaczmarek, professor of biology at the University of Notre Dame, told the Catholic Forum club here that six bottles of the new 3.2 per cent beer will intoxicate the average drinker. Although condemning prohibition as a failure. Dr. Kaczmarek called the beer recently legalized a “poison” and denied its value as a food. —Contributed by “Dry Friend.” o f MAGLEY NEWS * S -» Mr. asd Mrs. Edward Kolter. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Schbrry, visited at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Worthman and family Sunday Mr. Worthman is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hildebrand and family. Vernon Bracht, Henry Hildebrand and Grandma Hildebrand entertained for dinner Simday, Mr. and Mrs. August Bracht ot' Huntertown, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bracht. Miss Carrie Bracht, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Diller and family of Fort Wayne Mr. and Mrs. William Bracht. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warden and family, and also Mr. and Mrs. Walter Peck Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dettinger ent-rtained over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Kiel and family and Mr. and Mrs. Alton Hower. They also entertained Sunday afternoon -Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Foreman of Fort Wayne and Mr. and Mrs. David Sheller of Huntington. Mr. and Mrs. George Gerber and son Loren visited Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb Gerber of Berne Sunday. Miss Hazel Helmrich went to Detroit, Michigan. Saturday to spend a couple weeks with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Nichols, the litter being under the doctor's care. COURTHOUSE New Case Frances Murphy vs Clara I. Jolly and Leonard F. Jolly, suit on note Hubert R. MeClenahan, attorney. Marriage Licenses Oscar Lehrman, farmer of Adams County and Gladys Row of Adams County. William Schroder, truck driver of Oak Harbor Ohio and Frances Sabroske of Elmore. Ohio. L ' — O— Bi? Penny Dance Sunday Sunset. Don't miss it!

JUST RECEIVED! THE OLD FASHIONED BEAN POTS Nothing makes Baked Beans taste so delicious as the Old Fashioned Boston Crockery Bean Pots. Small, medium and large sizes 45c to 60c Fancy Flower Pots 35c to 85c The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME FI KNISHINGS

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these test questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. «. . » 1. How many eggs does the average hen lay in a year? 2. What is cinnamon? 3. Who .wrote the play "Street Scene?” 4. Where is the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research? 5. How old was Calvin Coolidge at the time of his death? 6. Who commanded the Americans at the battle of Tippecanoe? 7. What is the religous affiliation of President Franklin D. Roosevelt? 8. What is tho name for the locus of all points in a plane at an equal finite distance from a fixed point in that plane? 9. Name the first Ixird Protector of the Commonwealth of England. 10. Ln what sea is the island of | Melos? MONROE NEWS Miss Delores Longenberger of i Muncie spent the week-end with I her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto I Longenberger. I Mr. a:d Mrs. John Floyd’ motor'ed to Huntsville, Ohio, Thursday ■ and spent the day with Mr. Floyd s : parents and attended the commonI <«mont exercises of their nephew, ’ Howard Floyd. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Macy of Decatur and Mr J. J. Hoffer visited

For Sale 1 1 z h. p. Gas Engine ami pump jack. MclCormickDeerin? tractor disc; Oliver tractor plow; Detroit gas cook stove, like new; 3-burn-er hot plate, like new; 85 lb. Refrigerator; Corn Planters and corn plows; good Studebaker wagon; Letz 8 in. feed grinder; 2 good 50 ft. belts; New Turnbull Wagon; Harness; 1-6 h. p. General Electric motor, and many other articles. PEOPLES SUPPLY COMPANY 203 South First Street Phone 111

Mr. Hoffer's brother Add Hoffer who is ill at Bluffton, Sunday. Mrs. Cecil Franklin of Decatur spent the week-end with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J Rayl. Mr. and Mrs. Milo IL’llet and family of Zanesville, Ind., visited Mr. and Mrs. Philip Heffner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Smith and son Terry of Fremont, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith of Prebic, visited Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith Sunday. Miss Florence Jones and niece of Lynn Ind., visited Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Busche Sunday. Miss Katy Diggs of Fort Wayne

"MARY FA IT ff 1 I b y Beatrice Burton copvfitaHT, i93i, er king re^rtrees swd’catb, ihc. 41 (

CHAPTER XXXVIII Wilton Stre-t was dark and silent when Mary Faith left it that night, but the windows of the Maldons’ apartment were brightly lighted and there was a long black glittering row of parked automobiles at the curb. The taxicab drew up beside them and Mary Faith felt three or four drops of icy rain on her face as she stepped out and paid the driver. Inside, the tall building was like a modern Tower of Babel, filled with the murmur of many voices and of radio music that seeped into the halls from behind the closed doors of the two and three-room "housekeeping” suites. Mary Faith never had seen a child, or heard the voice of a child, in the building. The colored woman who helped out whenever the Maldons had parties was just emerging from their suite when Mary Faith arrived. She held the door open, and Mary Faith stepped inside. No one saw her for a moment as she stood in the tiny foyer, taking in the scene in the living room. Everything was just as she had known it would be. Four or five people were gathered around the tea-wagon at the far end of the room. Three or four others knelt on the rug beside a backgammon board. One couple danced slowly and dreamily in the middle of the floor. Kim and Claire. Claire's yellow head was tilted ■ back in the crook of Kim’s arrn, and she was saying something to him that made him smile. There was something in his face—a look of tender absorption—that made Mary Faith feel as if someone had taken tight hold of her heart and was squeezing it And then in an instant that look was gone. Kim had caught sight of her. He said something to Claire, wb- turned and called out, "Hello, Mary Faith!” Then the two of them came forward. “Hello, wife!” Kim said. “I had an idea you'd be along pretty soon, if I just waited for you.” “Yes, he’s been fairly pacing the floor, waiting for you,” Claire put in, and the group around the tea-wagon burst into a roar of laughter. Jack Maldon had come up behind Mary Faith. “Let me take your coat." he said. “Thanks, Jack.” They*confronted each other gravely in the midst of the confusion and the crazy din, exactly as two people who spoke the same language might have faced each other in a crowd of foreigners. “Do you want to come out to the kitchen while I wash glasses?” he asked. “That’s a great idea,” said Kim raucously. “You and Mary Faith go out and do your ‘hewers of wood and carriers of water’ act. and while you’re doing that. I’ll dance with your wife.” “Oh, come on and dance then and don’t talk so much, Handsomel” Claire interrupted. With troubled eyes Mary Faith watched them dance across the room. She felt just dicn that she would cheerfully surrender a year of her life to be able to do what Claire was doing to dance Kim away from everybody else, and make him like it For there was no doubt that Kim did likf it. He followed Claire around the set like her shadow all the rest of the night. Mary Faith watched iltem thoughtfully. Jealously, and with a kind of .sick despair, wheni ever she emerged from the hot ! kitchen where she and Jack wete cooking the breakfast that everybody demanded along towa-d four o’clock. “Gosh. I m tired!” he said, opening a can of tomatoes for the omelette that Mary Faith was preparing. > He sounded tired. Tired and discouraged. “1 wish this crowd would ' clear out and let me get some sleep.

spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Jim A. Hendricks and son McGee. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beitler and son Bobby of Montpelier spent tbe weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Forest! Ray. Mr. and Mrs. Loe Wynn Is spending the week at Dunkirk, the guest of relatives Mr. and Mrs. Janies V. Hendricks and son Lewis, Ruby Hendricks and Russell Peabody visited Mr. and Mrs. Ora Ifendricks and family at Fort Wayne Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Moore and son Jack of Hartford City spent the i week-end with Mrs. Moore's par-1

Claire can do this sort of thing every night in the week. I don't know how she gets away with it.” “She doesn't work all day the way you do,” Mary Faith reminded him. “Sandy works all day,” Jack said, “and he’s as fresh as a daisy right now.” He nodded his head in the direction of the living room, "Listen to him.” Mary Faith had been listening to Kim for the past five minutes. He had been singing "Frankie and Johnnie” for the crowd, and he'was on the last verse now: "This story has no morals— This story has no end, This story only goes to show That there ain’t no good in men—” “The whole place smells like a brewery, too,” Jack went on, and then suddenly he laughed. “I’m not a very good host, am I, Mary Faith?” Mary Faith turned from the stove and faced him. "The trouble with you and me. Jack, is that we aren’t 'good sports.’ The only difference is that you try to be one, and I don't. 1 know there’s a side of Kim that likes this sort of a good time, and I don’t even pretend to understand that side of him.” It was a side of him that she had never known until long after she married him, she reflected a little later, watching him and Claire feed each other bits of toast and omelette. He was almost like a stranger to her, this loud-talking, laughing man, with his bloodshot eyes and rumpled blond hair. • He scowled when she begged him to start home as soon as breakfast had been eaten and the crowd was beginning to and drink again. And it came over her suddenly that he had always treated her with something between dislike and indifference when he was with Claire Maldon and her crowd. “No, I’m not going home,” he , told her. “I'm having a good time. If you want to leave, it’s more than okay with me... . You sure do know how to put the graveyard touch to a party.” Mary Faith wondered how he could find this one of Claire’s so entertaining. It was so like all the other gatherings in the Maldon flat. ; The same drinks and games and dance-music. The same people—the red-haired woman who always wore pink, the one named Sally who always did a solo dance called "the mes S-around” that she had learned, so she invariably explained, on a plantation in the South when she had wintered there, the little black-mustached man who could sit on a stone jufr and light a match stuck in the toe of his shoes without falling off the jug. To Mary Faith it was all very dull and very silly. Mary Faith finally telephoned for a cab and went home. It wa« broad daylight when she was awakened by thd sound of coughing.. She opened her eyes to find Kim standing beside the bed, trying to get out of his coat and vest. When site tried to help him, she found that his clothes were damp and that there were drops of moisture on his hair. "What happened, Kim? You're wet.” He had to think for a minute befuie he answered her. "Raining, outside,” he said finally. "Raining and snowing. My car stopped on the way home. Couldn’t get it stalled again.” He refused to take the hot bath that she got ready for him. and by the time she had made him a cup of hot coffee he was sound asleep, breatning in an uneven, rapid way that made her remember the wav he had breathed a few weeks before when he had bronchitis. He slept all day Even the cough

en t s and Hubert Meyers ana o Fort Wayne zpem Mr. and he J and Mrs. Mr and Mrs. Ral h roevilie were th? Ph Mrs. Alfred Hahn”n Mr. and Mrs Ran . daughter Evelyn and Mrs. W. f Mrs. Clarence ters LuciM pX*’ [aerviees at th e Sunday I

that shook his body evervf utes d>d not rouse him. X night Mary Faith sent (o J tor, who sa:<l th a , K i m another s.ege of lhe next morning he and on the third day his hundred and four d tgl S Faith called the doctor time he arrived, Kim was 4 •Tneumoma." Dr. U-t-L gravely. "I've been \ou see, he never properly from the first attack of Day alter day M ary Kim, hovcrinc liver him with. ’Cine or the httle clinical tho, etcr that told the story of S that was torturing him. when his ten: ? -rat llre ran rJ he began to call for her sitting beside him an d s h t y hand on his arm and asked bin, he wanted. •“! wa , nl , Mar - v Fa 'th.” i.emmtm m the thick voice of delirium “So, 'way down deep in feu Im the person he thinks of. wants,” she told herself as she' there through the long hoursai night. He might flirt with in girl, might go out to places Golden Pheasant Tavern fora, ning s pleasure, or wander op fe Maldons' flat for a Dutch suppa, a highball. But all those things, simply cheap excursions away n her. she mused. She and the g and this little home of theme the important things in his Hi] was tranquilly certain of it ; On the ninth day the fewhl and Kim was "out of the wd A week later he was well sit up, and Mary Faith hmgj him, her face tender and radaitg the happiness of being near hint taking care of him. The baby, who adored Kim.:y half his time in the room, trt about on his small unsteady Iqti rolling his red crochet ball bi down the counterpane of Kitn'sH “It’s so wonderful—yourtgfe well and the three of us anta together, safe and happy’ 80 Faith said one bright snowy®* ing as she put Kim’s roomiisiz She leaned over him and feu rosy cheek again.-t his white wk a second. But in that secondszq him draw away trom her. "If you’re through in here. I'd like to lie down alb quiet,” he said Icvelly. "Take 4 baby with you when you gw' j He could not have hurt best —or surprised her more-if kJ struck her. He had seemed so hers during the past week orb But she knew now that that wista because he had been weak and p sive in his illness. Mary Faith had been sktpiisti the eouch in the sitting room w since New Year's night, and nil Kim was well enough tocobidl work she made no change in ■ arrangement. February warmtil to March, and at the end of M things were just ="■ they had k in the autumn before KimsdlJ He stayed out iate two or ■ times a week, makrng noe«W his absences. In fact, he hadlj little to say to Mary Faith * anything. When he did talk to it was of ordinary things. "Has my suit come back ir«sl cleaner. Mary Faith ” , | "It's in your closet. Kim J “If you'll add up your g’««g I’ll give you the money for d“Thanks. Kim " No kiss now when he left Isl office. No more j lea-ant <■'- before the sitting room little jaunts to the moving-picture theater. (To Be Continued | CepyrisM. IWI. »r r>i«trlh»<’ | l br Klnr Festwrw