Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 133, Decatur, Adams County, 6 June 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE —Second hand Ice boxes at bargain prl-ces. August Walter, Frigidaire dealer, 254 No. Second St. 109-ts FOR SALE —Select Seed Potatoes, grown from certified seed.. Dale Cowan, Willshire, Ohio, Telephone 59. ' 131-3tx FOR SALE — Russett Rural Seed potatoes. Victor Mcßarnes, 4 miles west of Decatur. 132k-3tx FOR SALE or RENT—Property at 1015 Monroe street, Mondern home. See O. P. Mills 127 No. Tenth street. 132FOR SALE—Cabbage, tomato, mango, cauliflower and yam plants. Henry Haugh, 204 S. 10th st. Phone 677, 133-3tx FOR SALE — 100 bushel Golden Russet Seed Potatoes. Phone 5424. Willard Steel. 133t3x FOR SALE —Baby chicks will grow if fed on Beco Chictk starter with | cod liver oil or Burk's Big Chick Starter. $2.00 per 100 pounds. Burk ’ Elevator Company, telephone 25. I 109-ts o WANTED WANTED Canners, cutters and fat ca; Springer and cows. Anybody having cattle to sell, call phone 274. Wm. Butler. 109a30t6-12 Wanted to Re-sharpen your old safety razor blades. The only way to sharpen a hard steel razor blade is to use something harder than the steel itself. I hone and strop them both; then they are like new. 2c for singles and 4c for doubles. Leave your old blades at Vance & Linn Clothing store, Decatur, Ind, 133a2tx FOR RENT FOR RENT — 2 furnished light housekeeping rooms. Private entrance, first floor. 310 North Third St. 131-g3tx FORTRENT —Large modern house at 642 N. 2nd street. Rent reasonable. H. J. Teeple. Pho.te 1202, 131a 3tx FOR RENT—Rooms at 215 North ] First Street Mrs. Belle Phillips. ' 131-12tx FOR RENT—Room with bath; home privileges; good location; I-nqufte 423 North sth St. 132-3 t FOR RENT—S room modern apartment, furnace and hardwood floors. South First street. Phone 79 or inquire at 413 Mercer ave. ’ 132t3 LOST AND FOUND LOST —Pocketbook containing sum of money and driver’s license. Contained three S2O bills, one $5 and several ones. Liberal reward. Lost on Fourth street between Catholic school building and Jefferson street. B. F. Breiner, Phone 875-0 131-3tx LOST —Pair of white gold glasses in a green case. Finder please return to Lose Bros. Pool Room. Reward. 132a3tx ■ ; o Large Newspaper Collection What is said to be the largest collection of newspapers in the world has been opened to the public in a newspaper museum at Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany. Among its collection if 150,000 newspapers are curiosities from all over the world, including an Eskimo paper from the middle of last century. o 1 Hebrew Money The monetary system of the Hebrews was based upon the Babylonian system of weights. The ratio of the value of fold to silver was 1:13 1-3 and prevailed over all western Asia. o Ml I *vonhleal Belief Fhrjplrielsm is the philosophical view that experience Is tho aource ind the criterion of all knowledge the theory that alt knowledge l» derived from material or data existing In the form nf particular States of consHmisness 0 — The Thunderstorm During an electric storm recently, late at night, our little four-year-old daughter awoke and entne Into my room, and when snuggling down Mid. "I don’t like to hear the cloutla talking to each other like that—they get angry.”—Chlcagc TrihuM, — oAmethytt Onc*> B*4lv« JB Uhsrm Warn as tin amulet or charm, as amethyst for centuries was held tr ward off the evil of witchcraft. “If the name of the sua or tnoon were engraved on it,” Bays a recent writer, “and the stona hung about the neck from the hair of a babooa o,r the feather of a swallow, it’s wearer would be s.-y* from hall storms st well as In temper, nee.”Ix»crl* For Sale Naw and used Fordton tractor parts. Dierkes Auto Wrecking W. Nuttman Phone 383

MARKETREPORTS — DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected June 5 No commission and no yardage. 170 to 250 lbs $4.60 250 to 325 lbs $4.50 1140 to 160 lbs. $4.20 100 to 140 lbs $3.50 Roughs $3.50 ; Stags $1.50 ] 1 Vealers $5.25 Spring Lambs $6.25 ■ FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind.. June 6. —(U.R) — Livestock: Hogs, 10c off; 250-350 lbs.. $4.85; ; ] 200-250 lbs., $3.75; 170-200 lbs., i $4.65; 140-170 lbs., $4.45; 100-1401 lbs., $4.10; roughs, $4; stags. $2.75. j Calves, $5.50. Clipped lambs, $5.25; spring! lambs, $7. Cattle, steers, good to choice, $5-1 $5.50; medium to good. $4.50-$5; 1 common to medium. $3.50-$4; heif-j I era, good to choice, $4.50-$5; men-■ iium to good, $4-$4.50; common to I ! medium, $3-$4; cows, good to choice ] !$3-$3.50; medium to good. $2.50-$3; I ‘cutter cows, $1.75-$2.21>; canner I cows. sl-$1.50; bulls, good to choice] medium to good. $2.50-$3; I common to medium, $2-$2.50; butcher bulls, $3.25-$3.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., June 6. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, on sale. 200; few medium j quality mixed weights, $5.15-$5.25; 1 steady with Monday’s average; de-i sirable 180 to 250 lbs., nominallyl unchanged at $5.35. Cattle: Receipts, 25; cutter grade ■ cows, steady, $1.90-$2.50. Calves: Receipts, 100; vealers I unchanged; good to choice mostly, $6; common and medium, $4.50$5,25. Sheep: Receipts, 300; open market lambs supply practically nill, few decks direct to killers, all classes and grades quoted steady. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. | I Wheat .73 .74% .77% Corn 44% .46% .49% Oats 25 .25% .27% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected June 5 No. 1 NeW Wheat, 50 lbs. or • 66c 1 No. Wheat 58 lbs 65c I Oats 21c | Soy Beans 35c to 75c ■ White or mixed corn 45c Good Yellow com 50c Ry e .... 25c ——_o ♦ - * Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these j test questions? Turn’ to page j Four for the answers. i< 4 . i 1. What do s Akaryot i mean? . 2. What is the population of the earth ? 3. Which. National Park is the s largest? 4. Define the word “dour.'’ t- 5. Where is U. S. paper money 'printed? 6. Which is the largest city in ar.a in the United States? 7. Name the capital of Australia. 8. What constitutes a “baker's dozen ? 9. Mho was the author of; “There’s something rotten in Denmark?” 10. What is the plural of cheese? —. 0 _ BeneS 1 Morning Drink The Jniee of half a lemon in s glass of hot water taken befort breakfast every morning aids health The Juice acts as a stlmyiiant for the entlrfe body. o Antony M* Etymologically the words “friend" and “fiend” are antonyms. They come from Anglo-Saxon verb* meaning “to love” and “to hate,“ i respectively, and are related to words of the same meaning in other Teutonic Isngtjsge*. Fred “Pette” Mylott is home from Detroit where h? has been attending Detroit, University. 5. 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 i N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. I * Telephone 136.

CLUB LEADERS I MEET THURSDAY — Clothing Specialist Will Re In Charge Os Monroe Meeting p Meta Martin, extension clothing; specialist from Purdue University, I (will be in Adams county Thursday! at a meeting to be held in the Monroe high school auditorium. The' I meeting will start at 9:30 a. m., | I with a basket lunch during the' i noon hour. Miss Martin will give ' instructions to the home economics and 4-H club leaders on dress re- ! vue. The home economies clubs will

. - - - ("STOLEN LOVE' Z Ay HAZEL LIVINGSTON . COPYRIGHT BY Kt HO FEAT HRBS SYHOtCATS, IFC. Lmwmw- ————rw—-a— m a n —w—M-'i: u. ■ jwj -

WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hastings, seventeen and beautiful, lives with two old maiden aunts. Evvie and Babe Van Fleet, in a house long run to seed. She falls in love with Bill Martin, a penniless young mechanic. Bill is sent to jail, the innocent victim of a gang of bootleggers, and Joan in desperation, seeking to get him out, confesses to her aunts the truth of her love for him. Shocked and scandalized, they send her away to school. She escapes from the train and rushes to Bill’s home, only to find that he has been set free and has gone, leaving no address. Unknown to Joan, he has tried to see her, and Aunt Evvie, denouncing him, has persuaded him | that the kindest thing he can do is ' to forget Joan. In despair, not daring to go home, Joan goes to San Francisco. Not knowing where to turn she telephones Walter Dunne, the kindly motorist who drove her home when she left the train. She goes to his hotel. He arranges for her to spend the night with a friend named Maisie. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XVI. He struggled into a big brown ; overcoat, set his hat on the back of his head, carefully cut and lit a i cigar. At the door he stopped and looked down at her quizzically. “Kiss Papa?” His little blue eyes were laughing into hers, his gold teeth gleamed. Os course he didn’t mean it He was just fooling! But her face flamed, her heart began to pound. She looked at him appealingly, and i tried to smile, as if she appreciated the joke. He roared again, and patted her : on the back. “Come on—you’ll be the death of me yet. Come on—step on it—l’ve got a date!” ’ In the elevator she was too shy to speak, and when they were alone again, there wasn’t time. A checkered cab drew up to the curb. “But I think—l really think I should go to a hotel,” she floundered. ' “Now you let Uncle Walt fix it. See you tomorrow!” And to the driver he said, “Grand View—- ■! Apartment 7, Mrs. Kimmer. See she gets there. No—keep the change.” So Juan came to live with Maisie : Kimmer. There were the first moments of something like terror, while she waited, awed and timid, in the red- , I carpeted and potted palm magnificence of the hall. And then Maisie, pink and plushy, with big. old fash- ' ioned diamonds in her ears, and a ;I little sprigged muslin apron over I her georgette dress, was warmly welcoming her at the door. Every--1 thing about Maisie was warm, her big. capable hands, her heart, ner temper, and her rooms in the Grand 1 View Apartments. At first Joan, accustomed to the big. bare rooms in the old Van Fleet place, and the ehill silences of the Misses Van Fleet, thought she could never get used to it. But the strange, new days slipped by, and soon they weren't strange and new any more. She was punching a time-clock in the basement of Mcßride’s Department Store, eating her luncn at soda-fountain counters, comingv home to Maisie’s as if she had lived j there all her life. Maisie wouldn’t hear of Joan l calling her Mrs. Kimmer. “I can , ; stand Gerald's kid—Gerald’s my ‘ oldest boy, you know, the one I told ; you I nearly lost with whooping cough when he was a little shaver— I can stand him calling me Gramma | .—but blessesd if I can stand my lady friend* calling me Mis’ Kimmer Not while I got a little life in 1 me yet.” Nor would she listen to Joan’s

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“LIVE BAIT” BY < TRfX'SfX FHEkX "7(THESE GMS I kTHROW H KISS) GENERM. SKITEH.W.E THIS (VJHfXT • HO’ I THEV'S (X TRIBE OF ) (Vl UJEP.RS I TO THE BOVS r> ORDER TO EVERT BOMMfXN J ’ ~. V , IV r 7 PERTV UJILDUJOMEN ) X \ GRfxSS OVER IN IN KfKZIL\F\-”ALkOW NO > I jT/7vF*. X V HERE IN PQPILfrNIfX •) - \ £A \ SKIRTS- VBOMS (ARRVING MEN ' I \ , 4HIW iB n 4LtI bA - • Z) 112 J frL 2£—tl i I) -■—

* DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY,'.JUNE 6, 1933.

(hold their achievement day pro-1 gram in connection with the 4-H I club fair and will use the dress revue as their achievement program. jin this revue the dresses made this year will be modeled by their makers. Plans are also under way for an exhibit for the home economics ‘club. 4-H clothing clubs will hold a dress revue, with the winning contestant competing in the district I meet, which will likely be held in I Fort Wayne. The district winner , Swill compete for state honors at] i the Purdue roundup next May. o Homicide Record Is Low SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (U.R)— | The homicide record for Salt Lake j i City is less than half the record for the nation’s cities. The national record is 10.5 per 100.000 population. The local mark for j 1932 was 4.8 per 100,000.

leaving, and going elsewhere to live after she got a job. “Don’t we get along all right? Haven’t I got plenty of room? Now, you let well enough be—■” Before she had been there a week Joan knew Maisie’s life history from the time she married her fitst husband at sixteen, to the time she buried her third, a year ago last June. Walter Dunne, it seems, had been in partnership with the late Mr. Kimmer. They had made money together—Maisie didn’t say just how. It was the one thing she didn’t talk by the hour about. “Oh. Kimmer had his faults," she said. “He was a great hand to have his little drink. I’ve always been prohibition, myself. My folks were very strict. Oh, well—Walt’s mighty fine, too, in his way—say what you like.” “He was wonderful to me!” A dozen times Joan tried to tell Vie story of just how wonderful Walter Dunne had been, but Maisie wasn't a listener. She preferred to do all the talking herself, and eventually Joan gave up. If Maisie didn’t want an explanation, why give it? The hardest part was to get away from the loquacious Maisie long enough to write to Bill at night. It was only then, writing to Bill, that Maisie was a stranger, and her house was alien and new. Sometimes, sitting across the table from her in the evenings, in the bright, warm comfort of the garish apartment, listening to the click, click, click of her tongue, Joan wondered if she had ever lived anywhere else. The big old house across the bay with its yellow turrets, its wide, wind-swept lawns, and the high hedge in which she had hidden from Aunt Evvie when she was a little girl, were all part of a dim, unreal past. Aunt Ewie, Aunt Babe, and the hatchet faced Heeley were grim, gray figures out of a dream. A dream of long, lonely days that ended in one great flash of light, and love, and poignant agonizing pain. It was always there—the pain of her parting from Bill. Sometimes it was just a dull ache, that throbbed and rose and fell like the pain of an aching tooth. And then it would flare into sudden, twisting agony, tearing her heart, making her hold out her empty arms in the dark and cry, “Bill—oh, my very dear—come back—come back to me!” She wrote her very heart out to him. All the foolish endearments that she had been too shy to write before. All the funny little happenings of the days selling lingerie in Mcßride's bargain basement. All her pride in the job that she had got herself, without a bit of help from anyone. Letter after letter, addressed in her round schoolgirl hand to “Mr. William Martin, c/o Mrs. Alma Martin, Sausalito. Cal Please forward.” He was always there, in back of her thoughts His image was always back of her eyes, a wistful boyish figure for her across the miles. Selling sleazy finery, spreading orchid.pajamas enticingly on her counter, smiling at customers, making out charge tags, calling shrilly. “Sign, please. Mr. Buchanan!" her heart was still with him. “Yes. they wash beautifully, Madatn.” (Where are you oh Bill—why don’t you write—why don’t you?) “No. we haven’t had any com plaints, Madam. Yes, I’m sure you’ll like them. (Maybe there's a letter—there must be—tonight—l’ll 1 find one waiting—tonight—) Then the jninutes till closing time would drag, and drag, and refuse to move on at all. Every late customer was an enemy—threatening to keep her from her letter At last the closing bell, grabbing her hat, pushing through the evening crowds. When her latchkey clicked in the door, Maisie, getting dinner in the kitchen wedd begin to talk—- “ That you. dear? I’m a little late.

COURTHOUSE New Case ' C. L. Walters, as executor of the Hattie Sells estate, vs. C. W. R. Schwartz and David Schwartz, suit on note. Estate Cases In the Thomas Elzey estate, inventory filed as cf estate x>f less than SSOO value. j In the estate or Samuel T. S. I Dongles, estate opened for finding of inheritance tax. Real Estate Transfers John Frauhiger et ux. 40 acres in ■ French township to Levi Frauhiger for SI.OO. Richard ft. Graber, et al in lot 191. Decatur to Walter J. Elzey et ux for $630.00 I o — Get the Habit — Trade at Home

1 thought I’d go down town with Mis’ Harvey. We saw. a fine picture, but kind of sad. Where she ! dies I said to Miss Harvey. I said—” Joan might have been deaf, for I all she heard. Her fingers would be busy going through the little sheaf I of letters on the hall table. Bills I Advertisements. Lodge notices. All for Maisie. “Maisie—no letter for me? No- ; body telephoned—not a thing?" Maisie tried to comfort her. “How old did you say he was? Nineteen? ■ Well .. . mmm . . now I wouldn’t | take it so hard if I was you. Boys I are changeable They aren't like women. But never you mind, you’ll forget, too. Now suppose you and I just go over to Mis’ Harvey’s whist tournament tonight. I wouldn't be surprised if her nephew was there. ! He’s real good looking.” Then Joan's gray-green eyes would darken with pain, and there would come the little trembling, pa-, | thetic smile that went straight to i Maisie’s warm heart. “You don’t understand. I can’t ; ever forget. How can I, when I love > him?” “Well, all you can do is leave her | alone, poor kid,” Maisie told her bosom friend, Agnes Harvey. “She has that sweet, yielding way, bat it’s only a look—you can’t change her—” • » • In the big house in Sausalito Evvie Van Fleet was saying the same thing—without sympathy. “1 did my best. My conscience is clear. Now I wash my hands of her.” “But people will find out—they’ll talk. We’ll have her back here in , trouble yet— I know. You wait., you’ll see—” Aunt Babe whimpered, dabbling at her pink nose. It had been a bitter pill for them to swallow. No sooner was the garage man who had had the impudence to ring the front door bell and ask for Joan, out of the house than the bell rang again, and Evvie had to answer it, because Heeley was washing in the basement. A telegram this time. Nick Ditweller, the messenger, whom Evvie had known all her life, and who | certainly knew what was in the message, watched her avidly while she read it. It was fifty words, and it came ■ collect by Western Union. Joan wasn’t on the train. Mrs. Marden was distracted. The conductor feared a tragedy. They would make every effort to get news. The conductor was wiring back along the line. And would Miss Van Fleet wire instructions at once. Ewie read it through twice. She knew. She was no fool, Ewie. She w-ent into the library and wrote her answer. On the way back to the office Ditweller read it. It was quite short, and it was to the effect that Mrs Marden and the conductor could stop worrying. Joan got off the train in the early morning to post a letter, and the train went on without her. Joan had wired her ! aunt Postal Telegraph, and she was 1 going on with the next section. The i cousin would meet Joan in Philadelphia. “You should be ashamed to spend all that money to telegraph a lie,” Babe cried when she heard. “Besides she’ll come back to—to find that boy—and then—” “I can’t help it—l wash my j . hands—” , “But they’ll live here. Evvie. i He’ll marry her—we’ll have to see them every day." “Hell never marry her. She'll , never see him again!" “Evvie—you think you’re always i right. You can't tell. I tell you he’ll . be waiting for her.” Evvie smiled. "Think as you like But I’m telling you—he gave' her , up. I—l talked him into it.” Her . lip curled. “It wasn’t hard. He’s big—but he’s only a boy.” . (To Be Continued Tomorrow)

Kansas Jailbreak the Result of Loopholes in State Laws r l *" "" L.*; “ ; ‘ : ■ ' " L s bm e scapcp !■ ■>.- I KOT'/ x: Wilbur. Underhiul Varden Kirk Prather. The desperate bid for freedom made by eleven convicts of the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing focuses attention on the divergence of State laws that made it possible. Wilbur Underhill, the leader of the break, had committed two murders in Oklahoma, whence he broke jail while serving a life sentence, when he killed Merle Colver, a Wichita, Kan., policeman. Rather than go back to Oklahoma, where there is capital punishment, to face trial for murder, Underhill chose to plead guilty to murder in Kansas, where there is no capital punhhment, thus drawing a life sentence. In making their break, Underhill and his companions were well aware that they had all to gain and nothing to lose, for all were lifers. So also, had they slain Warden Kirk Prather and the two guards they had taken as hostages, the law could do no more to them —they already were serving the maximum sentence in Kansas. —

WHAT IS HOME -V BOISgARDEN? Grow ing Giant Dahlia Flowers

Giant dahlias of the type which have become the outstanding attraction in late summer gardens 1 and autumn flower show’s make I heavy demands on soil moisture i and plant food. They must be given plenty of I room, and well prepared soil. Four ! feet each way between plants : should be given if possible. The 1 tubers, or plants from nxited < utI tings, may be set out at any time ; from the time the soil first warms up until July 1. As the finest flowers conte late, late planting is most favored, but in regions where frost comes early planting should he done by July 1. Prepare a place which enjoys I the full sun to a depth of at least ten inches. Apply a complete' 1 plant food at the rate of around l I one tablespoonful to the square ; foot of siuice, working It into I the soil. Set the tvben. about six ! inches deep. Until the sprouts appear the soil | should be cultivated to maintain a | good mulch. Afterythe top growth Ix'gins care should be taken to give only shallow and light cultivation, lest the roots be disturbed. To obtain large blooms the fol- | lowing method of disbudding may i be followed: Select the most vigj orous stem and remove all others, i When the selected stem has made ' four pairs of leaves, pinch off its ] growing end. This will divert all the growth to the side branches which will soon appear. Leave the end bud on each side branch but remove all others, diverting all the. energy of the plant to the flowers which grow at the end of the branches. This method may be modified, if one prefers to grow more flowers, by allowing a larger number of buds to ma-

| ture. Six to eight weeks after planti ing. make another application of plant food at the same rate as mentioned above, working lightly ■ into the soil around the plant, j Dig the tubers in the fall before the ground freezes and store them | in shallow boxes of sand in a ! cool place where the temperature . remains above freexing,o _ Ca-d of Thanks I wish in this manner to express •my sincere appreciation to the j ! neighbors and friends forth? beau-' ; tiful flowers, to Rev. S. hultz for

I CARMEL CRISP Baby Contest! Six Big Prizes will be given to 6 babies taking the most natural pictures. The Carmel Crisp photographer will call at .'*' home within two weeks to take your baby's pictur* FREE! Pictures ol babies entered in this contest "ill I* on show in our window. NAMES OF WINNERS AND PHIZES WILL® LN OCR WINDOW JUNE 24. Prizes will be awarded June 26. One sack of Carmel Crisp will be given io " tr? home represented in the contest.

' Ms inspiring ‘ Werling f„ r his J ( death ,>f my wite . M H-nry Matilda i Mr. 'and" M^ 0 | years. •> n ,on tlls | S , h( ' united h ] Willard B. s,'? " I 31. 157.;, Sh . 1 IXVT "r pii, “ r *4 pears, to this union „ ’ i sh P r n - six ° f I , She leav es to mourn * J band. Willard B. gum * . bion Pa., her ( . hil(1 * « I Suttles of Decatur ’’Grace ei !lrk nf npnTw - > p.“ of wj Pa. Mrs. Marguerite s a ~ ■ w>th het husband c ha ’u I are Foreign Mi ss i IKingu Koreai. Hamid L of E U rte, S.'”’ aDd ! Vive children prec^. I death, four n f ti leni in | Charles o. Suttles t J dp 1 at ; May. 1900. He left a Emma Um 1,.,, f HnniinJ i a>»d a daughter Mrs « , Smith of (hneva. Ind. | She also leaves twentr I children ami five sr ,. at ' j dren. a full s i s t er M rs ] I Eley of Berne. Ind.. a j er. Aaron Luker, and thn : sisters. Mrs. \v m . : Frank Allen and Mrs. fr-t Also a host of f riep( ]i anJ ■. bora to mourn her depart*, ; Mrs. Suttles was i her youth and lived i g ; conscientious Christian lift!; was n member of the | Episcopal church at Decat»J I 1905 when the family Pennsylvania. She was ug member of the Methodist | at Albion. Pa., a member* Adult Bible Sunday a worker in the Ladies .U| ety and a faithful member! Women’s Foreign MissioJ : ciety of the Albion ehurjl She retained her meaid incite Decatur Order of M of Ben Hur and was a ! the Eastern Star at Albtaal Mrs. Suttles was in poor! the last few years and duna last months was unable 1 sick andil str,lS» to minister to j visiting two sick neightaM Week before she died. Mrs. Suttli • lived up todj j plication of the words. US Mother". Her life was emptied dj I and filled with others. Her children and her AM j children will rise up in tbei I years to call her hiesset] j Christians w. believe that 1 i new clothed with immortali | erhood and waits to wekflj I reunited family in her « heavenly home. Dance Wednesday Sa«( V ' WHEN ORDERING ICE p !7 Lawrence (Jreen t