Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 29 May 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

SPoRTSe

COMPLETE LIST OF DRIVERS IN 500-MILERACE 45 Cars Make Qualifying Test; Three Dropped; Two Killed Sunday Indianapolis. May 29—(U.R)—The I field of 42 cars to start the annnal 500-mile race at the Indian-1 apolis motor speedway was coni ■ pteted today when Phil Shafer of j Indianapolis qualified at 107.972 1 miles an hour. As soon as the last run was I completed shortly after 7:30 a. m. i more than 100 workmen swarmed j onto the two and one-half mile! brick track with brushes and ' buckets of soapy water. Every one of the 3,000,000 bricks I will be cleased of dirt and oil l before the Gar Wood of boat rac-! ing fame waves the starting flag i at 10 a. m.. central standard time tomorrow. Speedway officials prepared to handle a crowd of more than 100.000. many of them attracted by four spectacular accidents which marked the qualifying I trials. Os the eight men figuring in these accidents, two were killed. They were Bill Denver. Audubon. I Pa., and his riding mechanic. Boh 1 Hurst, Indianapilis. Lost Control Their little Brady Special j hwlled ovt-r the retaining wall 1 yesterday wflien Denver lost con trul on the northeast turn The car turned three end over end loops and burst into flames be i fore coming to rest against a tree. Denver and Hurst were thrown , clear of the wreckage, but not 1 u ’til their clothing had caught on I fire. Shafer beat out Gene Haustein. Detroit, Mich., for a place in the I starting lineup. Haustein had qualified earlier in the trials at i 107.603. The Indianapolis driver was ' among five given a chance to ■ qualify this morning because of rain which cut the trials short yesterday, the original deadline. FortyYive cars fulfilled the, qualifying requirement of more than ion miles an hour for 25 miles, but only the 42 fastest will

B F 77/ / Bl ? «l i IT ■**■ fe Wa’WB | B From the temple of Jehol, the B patron saint of Tibet smiles on those who pass before |K him. When you come to see him, at the Chicago World's B Fair, stay at the Morrison B and smile right back. I Bright, Inviting Rooms Quick, Cheerful Service In the Heart of the l oop Fine Garage Facilities Only $2.50 up with Bath ijlß iJiapitiditu II / Ziwß' mikMiißL " hah; - 9 Miiik! ML,

be allowed to start. Haustein, Merrill Williams. Franklin. Ind., aud Sam Palmer. Los Angeles'. Cal., will act as alter- • nates in case any of the others | aro unable to start. Williams I qualified at 104.538 miles an hour and Palmer at 105.995. I Danny Day, Tipton, Ind., Leon! I Dehart. Indianapolis, and Mauri Rose, Dayton. O„ failed to qualify ' this morning. Raoul Riganti. South American , ' racing champion, barely won a place in the starting lineup with his qualifying speed of 108.081. He, I will be in the 10th row. Fred Frame, winner of the 1932 I race, Louis Schneider, winner in ■ 1931. Louis Meyer, victor in 1925,! I and L. L. Corum, the 1924 winner, i’ i are the only previous 500-mfle ‘ ; champions in the race this year, j Only one driver, Tommy Milton. , I won the Indianapolis classic, twice. j j STANDINGS ! AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. ; I New York 23 12 .657 I Washington 23 16 .590 Philadelphia 19 16 .513 i Cleveland ... 21 18 .539 IChicago 19 17 .528 ! Detroit 15 22 .405 j' St. Ixniis 15 24 .385: I Boston 13 23 .361 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. (Pittsburgh 23 13 .639 ( I St. Louis 23 16 .590 , iNew York 20 15 .571 , Cincinnati 20 19 .513 IChicago 20 19 .513 ( I Brooklyn 15 19 .4411 | Boston 17 23 .425 , IPhiladelphi t 13 27 .325 | 11 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION $ W. L. Pct. i Columbus 21 12 .636 St. Paul 22 16 .579 Minneapolis 20 16 .553 j i Milwaukee 18 17 .514 ( I Indianapolis 16 17 .485 . I Louisville 17 19 .472 . ! Toledo 16 21 .432 ! i Kansas City it; 27 .357 , YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American League [ St. Louis. 5: Detroit. 3. Washington, 7: Philadelphia. 4. Boston, 5-2: Cleveland, 2-11. ] New York. 2-9: Chicago, 1-7. National League Brooklyn. 5; New York. 4. \ Chicago. 5-3: Boston. 1-2. , Pittsburgh. 4-0; Cincinnati. 2 4. < i St. Louis, 8-5: Philadelphia. 7-3. . ■American Association i Louisville. 4-3: Indianapolis. 2-1 £ | (second game called in eighth inning. rain). i Milwaukee, 4>3- Kansas City, 2-8. r i Columbus. 8-5: Toledo. 3-1. , < I St. Paul at Minneapolis, rain. o ' j Notice to Breeders The full-blooded Belgian stallion. < ; 6 years eld. strawberry roan, will 1 I stand the season at rev farm 5 .« ■ miles west of Monroe. Insure colt I |to stand and suck. Service fees I $12.50. ELI BEER. I 29-31 J. 2-6-9 i o Get the Habit — Tracre ar Home

THE CORT Tonight - Tomorrow “WARRIORS j HUSBAND” A hot-cha romance of the j early davs when lhe wo- ! I men ruled and the men j ; *nok orders. J Elissa Landi. Marjorie Rambeau. and a great cast. ADDED—Comedv and News. 10-15 c ADAMS THEATRE Tonight and Tuesday 10-15 c RICHARD DIN in “THE GREAT JASPER” ; with Edna May Oliver. ' Wera Engels. Bruce Cabot, i -ADDED--A Charley Chase Comedy and Motorcycle Mania. r WED. & THURS. — John Barrymore in "TOPAYE." COMING—‘‘RASPUTIN’.”

DECATUR A.C.’S I BEATINDIANS Scoring four runs in the seventh . inning, the Decatur A. C.'s defeatI od the strong Shipshewana IndiansSunday afternoon at the high school diamond on West Adams I street, 6 to 4. Decatur scored twice in the third game. Hits were delivered in this frame by Cochran, Engle. Deti terer, Christman and Hoopengardi ner. Shipshewana scored once in tlh<e first inning, twice in the fourth and j once in the seventh. Hoopengardner and Schneider pitched for the locals, holding the Indians to nine hits.. Hoopengardner fanned three and Schneider ' one - The A. C.'s will play the entertaining Canadian Clowns of Pauld- ' i g. Ohio, at tllie Adams street dia- ■ mond at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday, Decoration Day. Tli Clowns form one of the most interesting and entertaining baseball teams on the road. Usual admission; prices will preI vail for this game. SNEDEKER NINE WINS VICTORY M th Stauffer holding the An- ' thony Chicks to two hits, the Snedeker State A. C.’s defeated the Fort Wane team at the South Ward diamond Sunday afternoon. 6 to 1.1 Stauffer fanned rjne barters. He i was relieved in the ninth inning by Heffler. w o fanned two and allow-1 rd one hit in the inning he worked. Snedeker’s team will play two games Decoration Day. both morning and afternoon. The Smith Coal Camp teamm, members of the Federation League at Fort Wayne, will furnish the opposition. The morning game is scheduled to start at 10 o'clock, with the afternoon game called at 2:30. These gam s will be played at Niblickfield. Two new play;ers will be in I the Snedeker lineup tomorrow. South Side Wins Conference Golf South Side high school won its fifth consecutive conference gold championship Saturday, turning in an aggregate team score of 319. Scores of other teams competing wer Bluffton 366. Central 373, Central 373 and Decatur 413. The Decatur team's individaul scores are as follows: Baumann, 48-55—103: Manders, 51-52 —103; Myers. 52-51—103; Elinger, 49-55— IM ’ KIDNAPED GIRL RETURNED HOME (CONTTNI'ED FROM PAesK ONE) ed-off shotguns trained on hfrn. Fudge McElroy handed pver tfce unmarked and unrecorded money a: il the two abductors sped away. Almost immediately Miss McElroy was released from an automobile in front of the Milburn country club, and a few- minutes ’ater she was home gushi:g a ro manti: tale of her “great experituce with the kidnapers who chained her to the wall of their hideaway but treated her with snr-h consideration she came to know them as "old friends.” BREWERIES ARE BUSINESS AIDS FROM PAGE ONE) to 2.5 cents of the state property tax rate. Fry said. The federal 'government would receive $2,935.450 yearly from the output with its $5 a barrel tax. Total output of the eight brewis planned to reach 1.418.100

BELL’S GROCERY and Martin’s Meat Market I OPEN Tuesday until 12 o’clock noon.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE LAST LAP” BY SEGAR QUICK'. Somf’of THE 1/ I RUNS FROCK HO \ UOHERE YA A (OH ISN'T HE COTE! j I LA-Lt •L > WILD-VJonEN SPEAK ENGLISH, MAN, BE ASK OR i <TAKiN'ME 7 2 ‘ L LET ME HOLD HIM / WbCi- H LF LA IaSO EMBARRV>K [N Aho I’ve LEARNED THAT ONE AMIHAUSU UDHY J Ut , J ALL ME LlFtb OF THEM 16 COMING TO RUN FROM x / X ZXIA / SURE.-X J LA IE STEAL TOO ANOjt—-< xUjOMAN”j-r X /SHE'S \ /' WUO \ YA KIN \ > gs .E> 5 , A w Al // ,< CARRy yoAjj-fl ( RIGHT (caofS 7 1 HOLD ME-\ X EJ aujay r?—U ™at arfw? P I yw \behiho \c . tha's okay/ a « / LWS ’ w h L 11 Al! Fl 1 I 4 Um (fl € lv **- ***** * c,<uir » Syudiitc li<. Grw Bourn <yh»»

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 29, 1933.

barrels annually. That would mean $2,198,055 or a 5.5 cent tax rate to the state and $7,090,000 to the federal government. Citing stimulus to the Indiana coal industry. Fry said that five breweries use 5.640 tons of Indi ana coal monthly, another uses two carloads weekly, another has contracted for 60 cars yearly and the eighth has Ixmght 400 cars for its annual use. As to truck company and rail-1 road benefits, four breweries ship ‘

"STOLEN LOVE" by HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIOHT BY Kt NO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC.

WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hastings, seventeen, and beautiful, lives a secluded life with her two old maiden aunts in s rundown house. She falls in love with Bill Martin, a garage worker. Meanwhile, the aunts plan to send Joan away to school. Bill tells the girl that he's very poor and it may be years before he can think of marrying, but she vows she will wait for him. Joan is overjoyed when news arrives that she is to go away to school, and writes a note to Bill asking him to meet her. Through a series of unforeseen circumstances she is unable to keep the appointment, and later that night they meet in the rose garden. Overcome at the thought of parting, they ardently pledge their love for each other. Next day. Bill has another opportunity to see Joan when Evvie sends for a mechanic to repair her car. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER IX. They walked on silently, still holding hands like children. And now they were almost at the hedge. Another moment, and they would have to part again. _ “I’ll be here at ten. If you’re late I’ll wait Gerwin said I could borrow the roadster. He cracked some jokes about me and my girl . . . Oh. Johnnie—Johnnie—” “You’re worrying!” she cried sharply. “Why, Bill? You shouldn’t —we should be very happy. What’s a year when we have each other—to wait for?” “It’s because—” He hung his head, and scuffed up the dirt with a nervous heel. “I’m so desperately afraid I’ll lose you— ’’ He stopped suddenly. Someone was coming. Joan scuttled for the hole in the hedge, like a big blue gingham rabbit, but before she ran she put her two hands on his shoulders for a fraction of a second, and kissed him swiftly—- “ Goodbye!” she whispered. “Goodbye till tonight! And Bill—l want you to remember all the days and days that I’m gone—so far away —that I'll always love you—always—” As he turned, half blinded by the sun and the crazy tears that started to his eyes, he felt rather than saw, that he knew the woman coming up the road. When he was explaining the carburetor trouble to Evvie Van Fleet a few moments later the vision of the red-faced woman toiling up the hill came wandering into his mind again. “Why,” he thought, “that must have been Dolores . . . but what the dickens did she want up here?” His heart thumped painfully . . . Joan , . . Dolores might have seen her diving into the hedge. Well, what of it? Nothing wrong in a girl going into her own yard through the hedge 1 * * • The last light was out fn the old Van Fleet house. In the small pink-papered room over the kitchen, Heeley slept in a sagging weary heap, the covers pulled over her neuralgic head. In the big front bedroom facing the hedge. Aunt Babe lay with all the windows closed. Through the crack in the adjoining door came toe sound of Evvie’s snores—heavy—regular —untiring. Only Joan was wakeful. Still wearing the faded gingham she had worn all day. with Babe's pink shawl about her shoulders, she knelt in the window waiting for Bill. It was still early—half an hour before he would come. The night was very quiet, quiet and peaceful, and somehow sad. “It is because I am going away,” she thoughL Down on the lawn. Major, the iron deer, waited too, just as he always had. There was something pathetic in the droop of his rusty antlered head. “Poor old Major ... I wonder if he’ll miss me? And the rose garden. .. The thought of the rose garden made her heart beat crazily. She got up and tiptoed into the hall. Ten o’clock. Bill was late. “How’ll I ever stand it all that year without him?” she thought

lj 88 truck loads of beer daily and two others estimate they will re- ' ceive and discharge 700 railroad cars annually. Fry said olher allied businesses are affected to the following extent. Four breweries have ordered 901,000 bushels of malt and ani other has contracted for 10 car- ‘ loads; ■ 40.000,000 bottles and ; 85.000.000 caps have been ordered. ; nearly all from Indiana manufacturers; four breweries have con-

miserably. “When just a few minutes seem lik" forever—” The moonlight struggled palely through the trees. The garden was black in the shadows, white and ghostly in the light. The leaves rustled, the small night noises were magnified a hundred-fold. “Why doesn’t he come? Oh Bill —don’t be late!” There was so much to say on this, their last night. They had such little time together, had just found each other, when it was time to part. Cautiously she picked her way down the stairs, avoiding the creaky spots. She would wait in the garden, it would save time when he came. It was so lonely there, in the dark and the quiet. The roses were drenched in dew. Fat white moths with powdery wings fluttered around them stupidly. The romance of yesterday was gone, only the loneliness and the sadness was left. When the dew had wet her uncovered hair, and the chill breeze from the bay had penetrated her light wrap she knew that she had been waiting a long time. Fear,

W'ViillD fe* -f“Goodbye!” she whispered, “Goodbye—till tonight.”

jagged and sharp, tore at her heart. Panic, taking her breath, making her want to run wildly back and forth in anguished, aimless circles. .. . “There’s been an accident . . . something happened to him driving up in the car. , . . Oh, why didn't I think of it before. .. And now she was flying down the road in the dusty moonlight, trying to see ahead in the shadows, afraid to look, hearing little moaning, crying noises in the bushes. “Oh Bill—Bill— Please God, don’t let anything happen to Bill. . . . Bill! It’s Joan—where are you?” Once she called out loud, and her voice came echoing eerily back from the hillside. She was down on the low road now, near the bay. The wind whistled, and she covered her ears with her hands, and stumbled on. The houses were all dark, not a light in one of them. No sign of a wrecked car on the road. Nothing—nothing but darkness, and loneliness and pain. • • * When the morning came, and there was nothing left to wait for, Joan came quietly into the house. But she did not tiptoe, nor did she step over the squeaky spots on the stairs. It didn’t matter whether she woke Aunt Evvie or not—nothing mattered except Bill, and Bill was dead. Nothing but death could have kept Bill from her, 011 their last night. . . . Carefully, quietly, ehe washed her face and hands, pulled a comb through her tangled hair. There was a great gaping hole in her stocking, stiff with mud and congealed blood. She must have hurt her knee that time she fell in the dark on the rocks. Strange that it didn’t hurt. There were no clean stockings in the lower bureau drawer. That was strange too. . . . No—they had all been packed in Grandfather Van Fleet’s little leather trunk . . . she

I traded for 488.000 wood cases - and another has bought 27 carI loads of the cases most of which will be made in Indiana; four l brewers have bought 4 35.04)0 ; pounds of hops and another has ordered two carloads. I Night aud day shifts in glass factories at Evansville, Terre ■ Haute, Gas City, Anderson. IndiI anapolis, Muncie and Marion are | turning out botllcs. Fry said. o__ 0 __ Get the Habit — Trade at Home

had forgotten that she was going away. She looked at herself anxiously in the mirror, for she didn’t want to frighten Bill’s mother. That was why she had matde herself neat, because she was going to Bill's house, to see his mother. The house was still asleep when she started but old Captain Horner was up, working on a boat when she got down to the hollow. He looked very ruddy and happy, whistling as he worked. Quite as if this were a regular day, and not the end of the world. “Hello, Johnnie—up before breakfast!” he shouted when he saw her coming. She noticed that there was a little egg on his bushy white whiskers. Imagine noticing a thing like that, when you’re on the way to see Bill’s mother, and Sill deqd. . . . “Is there anything the matter?” he called anxiously. “Your Aunt Babe ain’t taken bad again, is she?” “No, I don’t think so,” she said politely, and went on toward the hollow, toward the ramshackle cottages.

She stopped a minute outside of the house. For the first time she realized fully what she was doing. She was coming to strange people who didn’t know her, who had never even heard of her, to ask about Bill. And suppose there was nothing the matter with Bill. Suppose he had forgotten. . . . Oh, but he couldn’t have forgotten . . . suppose he just didn’t want to come . . . suppose he was tired of her ... tired of her because .. . because ~ . “Oh, but not Bill! How could I even think of such a thing for a minute. . . . Oh, Bill, dearest . . . Bill!” And she cried in her heart, to think the she had doubted him, even for a minute. The front door had a heavy, oldfashioned bell, the kind that you pull out and then release with a clang. Her hand touched it hesitantly. She couldn’t do it, it would make too much noise. She rapped timidly and when no one answered she tried again, a little louder. Then obeying an uncontrollable impulse, she walked down the three little steps, and around to the back, pushing the little gate aside, stooping under the sagging clothesline where a family wash napped grotesquely in the wind. A gray-faced man with a swollen jaw, and little shifty eyes came to the door. His face was unwashed, and his suspenders were hanging. “I came—to ask about Bill Martin,” she said in a small voice. He continued to look at her, holding his jaw, with one hand. “Eunice!” he called at last. “Somebody’s here." A slatternly young woman with two round-eyed little girls peeking from her skirts came and stood beside him inside the screen dour. “What do you want?” she asked sharply. Joan saw that she had been crying, her eyes were puffed and red. From inside the kitchen came the muffled sound of weeping, the low gasping sobs of one whose strength is nearly spent. (To Be Continued Tomorrow)

Answers To Test Questions — Below are th® Answers to tha Test Questlous Printed on Page Two. 4 — v 1. No. 2. On tfie coffee tree. 3. Trenton. 4. No. 5. 1846-1848. 6. Actor. 7. From the town ini France, famous for ILs manufacture. 8. British inventor and engineer, designer of first practical locomotive. 9. Mexico. H>. Yorktown, Pa. 1. Winona Lake, Ind. 2. Portugal. 3. Governor o the Federal Reserve Board. 4. Triangle. 5. Pentateuch. 6. 1859. 7. Coke. 8. Famous German composer. 9. A galley with three banks of oare. It). South Atlantic. MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 27 No comunssiou an; no yardage. 160 to 150 lbs $4.80 250 to 235 lbs $4.75 140 to 160 lbs $4.40 100 to 140 lbs $3.90 Roughs $3.75 Stags $1.50 Vealers $5.00 Spring Lambs $6.00 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., May 29.—(U.R) —Livestock: Hog market, steady; 250-350 lbs.. $5; 200-250 lbs.. $4 90; 170-200 lbs., $4.80; 140-170 lbs., $4.60; 100140 lbs., $4.35; roughs, $4; stags. $2.75; calves, $5; clipper lambs, $5.25; spring lambs. $7. Cattle market: Steers, good to choice. $5-$5.50; medium to good, $4.50-$5; common to medium. $3.50$4; heifers, good to choice, ss.so- - medium to good, $4-$4.50; common to medium. $3-$4; cows, good to choice. $3-$3.50; medium to good. $2.50-$3; cutter cows, $1.75$2.25; canner cows, sl-$1.50; bulls, good to choice, $3-$3.25; medium to good, $2.50-$3; common to medium, $2-$2.50; butcher bulls, $3.2543.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., May 29.—(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, on sale. 4.400; slow; steady to 10c over Friday's average; weights above 220 lbs., up most desirable, 230 to 260 lbs., $5.40 to $5.60 sparingly: hulk. 170 to 230 lbs., $5.3555.40; medium weights and plainer kinds down to $5; averages below 150 lbs.. $4.5044.75. Cattle: Receipts. 2.100; steer and yearling trade fairly active, steady to strong; spots higher; liberal water fills; choice 975-lb.. steers, $7.30; bulk medium to good, $6.00$6,75; few common to medium, $5$5.60; liberal run reactive cows, better grades steady, others weak to 15c lower; medium to good cows, $3.25-$4; cutter grades, $242.60; medium bulls. $3.1543.50. Calves: Receipts, 1,100; vealers rather slow: steady to 50c higher; good to choice. $5-$6; common and medium, $4.25-$5. Sheep: Receipts, 1,700; lambs active. 15 to most 25c higher; good to choice old crop lambs including 92-lb„ averages. $6.75; common and medium. $5.2546.25; good to choice springers, leniently sorted, $8.25 to largely $8.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. Wheat 72% .74% .76% .78% Corn 44 .46% .48% .51% Oats .21% .25% .26% .27% uOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 24 No. 1 New Wheat, 80 Ib». or better 71c No. 2 New Wheat 581bs 70c Oats 22c Soy Beans 35c to 75c White or mixed corn 50c Good Yellow corn 55c Rye 25c

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