Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1933 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE — Barred and White Rock pullets. 35c and 50c. Shropshire buck. Lynn Stewart. Wren. Ohio, 2 miles north. 228a3tx FOR SAI.E .-One H. H. Air Compressor. Fine condition and priced right. Telephone 8721. 227-g4tx FOR SALE—Truck load of Michigan Concord grapes Wednesday morning. Applemans grocery. FOR SALE— Potatoes, and pop corn both yellow and white. Oscar Koenemann. 2bj miles north of Preble. 228-g3tx FOR SALE — Cook stoves. $lB. Laundry stoves, $5 to $7. Kitchen heaters, SB. Dining room chairs $3 each. Rugs 15c to $35. Bridge lamps $1.50. Table lamps,* $1.50. Mattresses $7 to S3O. Bed springs, $4 to $18.50. This is all . new merchandise. Sprague Fur-, nitufe Company. 152 south Second street. Phone 199. 227G3t, FOR SALE—Two 3 year old Hol-1 stein springer cows. Victor Byer-1 ly, % mile east of the Kirkland' high school. 228g2tx! ■ ■ - ——— FOR SALE—New Idea Ail Steel Wagons. A. M: Mauller Pleasant | Mills. 228-a3txl FOR KALE — Cornet. Cheap. 1414 West Madison street. Phone 747. j FOR SALE—IO tube Crosley radio' and one 8 tube Crosley Clock: model. Also 2 baby carriages; j occassional tables; smokers and! lamps. All below cost. Beavers • & Fryback. 228a3tx j FOR SALE — Ice cream stand, I corner Monroe and Seventh.! Phone 46. 227t3x I FOR SALE —Michigan Apples. Me-1 Intosh, Maiden Blush, and Wolt| Rivers, 55c and up. Bring Contain-; ers Pure Sider Vinegar, 20 cents a I gallon. S. E. Haggard, 1 mile north I 3% miles east of Monroe. 225-g6tx l WANTED WANTED—Canner and cutter cows Also fresh cows and springers. Have horses and mules for sale or trade. L. W. Murphy. Phono 22. WANTED TO RENT:—Small mod-j ern house in city or county. For j occupancy in next ten days. 'lnquire at 1509 West Monroe St. Vio-[ let Millfeor. 228-k3tx ! WANTED —Two used glass doors Phone 625. 228t3x WANTED —We are now booking i soy bean jobs in combine. Stef-' fen Bros.. Decatur route, Craigviile phone. , 227t6x ■ ■■ — WANTED —To rent five or six j room house located in Decatur, j Telephone 8721. 227-g3tx FOR RENT FOR RENT —6 room house, large chicken park and fruit, on West ! Madison street, inquire of R. A. Dennel, 816 North Second street. Phone 1219. 227-g3t FOR RENT Five room apartment near Elberson Service Station, semi-modern. Forty acre farm near Monroe. 178 acre farm adjoining Decatur near Monroe Street River Bridge. « A. D. SUTTLES Agt. 227-3 t FOR RENT —House and acre ofggpund at south edge of city, be- j yond Winchester street. Phone 22(Cor inquire at 322 N. 11th st. I 228t31 " 0 — LOST AND FOUND LOST or STRAYED—Pure white kttten, Saturday evening or SundayZ morning. Had brass bells arownd its neck. Finder return to Harry Fuhrman at Decatur ceme- j tery or call 5142 228-g2t ■ LOST —Oblong pin. Montana Agate. l Pinder please return to this of- j tied! Reward. 229-g3t I ** — — o — Atlantic Fish Found In Waters of Pacific Fjrtland. Ore.— (U.R) —A lancet fish, denizen of the Atlantic Ocean, waff found swimming in the surf along the Oregon coast and captured bare-handed by Charles W. FafTlsworth. file fish was feet long and hate-a dorsal sail-like fin three feet | long. It has large eyes and exceed-; ingiy long, sharp teeth. How it found its way into northern Pacific I waters is a mystery, as it is rarely found in the Pacific, except oft the Mexican and Japanese coasts. * • 1,—..-. 0 - .111.,. May Lose Fees Hertford, Conn. —(UP)—An effort to abolish the fee system under which constables in small towns work will be made at the next session of the legislature, according to Benjamin Borkas, counsel for the New 'England Motorists’ Associa-1 ♦ion. because the practice is ‘‘breed- [ ing a rotten system of motor traps.”
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Sept. 28 No commission ana no yardage. • 179 to 230 lbs '..... $5.00 I 230 to 260 lbs $4.80 260 to lbs. $4.50 I 300 to 250 lbs. $4.10 140 to 17" Ihs. . . $4.70 I 100 to 140 lbs $3.70 | Roughs $2.75 I Stags $1.75 Vealers .... $6.75 Lambs $6.00 Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1 dozen ._ 23e No. 2. dozen 16c No. 3. dozen 12c FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Sept. 28 —(UP) ! Livestock: Hogs 10c off; 200-225 lbs i $520; 225-250 lbs. $5.05; 250-275 lbs. j $4.95; 275-300 lbs. $4.80; 300-350 lbs. i $4 80; 300-250 Iba. $4.55; 160-200 lbs. ! ■ $5.10; 150-160 lbs $4.75; 140-150 lbs. $4.55; 130-140 lbs. $4.20; 100-130 lbs. , I $3.75; Roughs $3.50 down: stags ! i $2.25 down. Calves $7; Lambs $6.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y. Sept. 28 — : Livestock. Hogs, on sale 4.800, including 4,9 w on government orders market active, mostly 5c over Wednesday's average; bulk desirablej 170 to 225 lbs. $5.70-35.75; tew mix- 1 ed weights $5.40-35.65: 155 lbs. $5.50 110 to 150 lbs. $4.75-35.40. Cattle: Reeipts 350; plain grass steers and heifers predominating; ■ market slow, weak to 5c lower scat-; tered sales $3.75-34.00; bulk eligible, $3.5e54.50; fleshy steers held around $5.00; cows, barely steady, cutter grades $1 60-32.35. Calves: Receipts 150; vealers active. steady; good to choice largely SB.OO. Sheep: Receipts 100; dependable lamb trade, steady; good to choice ewe and wethers $7.50; mixes! offerings $7.00; medium kinds and; fat bucks $6 50; throwouts $5.50; j handy weight ewes $3.00; most ewes $1.50-32.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May i [ Wheat 86% ,8»% .94 1 I Corn .46 .50 .56% ! ! OMB 36% .39% .42%' LOCAL GRAIN MARKET s. 1 Corrected Sept. 28 No. 1 New Wheat, SO lbs. or better 75c I No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. . . 74< ' Old Oats 32c ■ New Oats _ 30c I White or mixed corn 52c Good Yellow Corn 58c o Vermouth Shipped to Coast San Francisco —(UP) —Now San ' Franciscans know how close “re-1 peal ' is. The Italian steamer Cali- i fornia docked the other day. In her! hold were 500 cases of Italian ver- ! mouth —the first shipment to be! brought here since pre-war days. San Francisco—-(UP)—The local I _______ * blanch of the government hydro-) graphic service is checking a new ■ freak of the ocean. The Mexican j steamship Gorigan El reported I passing a floating island about 20 , miles south of Cape Corrientes. M i <•» » ix \ i hi: ii i i:mi:\ r OF IM’VI'E \O. Notk e is hereby given to the ere.-I ditors, heirs and legatees of Adam* Bailey, deeeased, to appear in the I Adams Circuit Court, held at Deca-1 tur, Indiana, on the 16th day of October, 1H33, and show cause if any why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, ana receive their distributive shares. George Bailey, Administrator Decatur, Indiana Sept. 21. 1933. Utcrnry Lenhart Heller A Hchuricrr,
Your Car REDUCED • Are your present car pay- \ meets big and burdensome? Then drive down and see us. Let us pay what you owe on your car and fit you out with new, low, easy-un-meet amounts. Extra money loaned if needed. See us. Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone' 237 Decatur. Ind. , gggggBg—BSIBHF N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: 8:30 tfi 11:36 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.
Sought Throughout the Middle West ■f; 'f* i * ' <, ’ w*'' f k dp - * \ MF, W ▼ W ¥ T ' SBEBLS IMEBHkJMBH & KilnKKfll Ten of the most dangerous criminals in the country are sought by police throughout the Middle West following their spectacular escape from the Indiana State Prison at Michigan /’ity. Tuesday. I pper row left to right: John Hamilton, auto bandit; Harry Pierpont, robber; James Jeukius, murderer; James Clark auto bandit; Russell Clark, bank robber; lower row: Joseph Buras, murderer; Charles Makley, robber; Walter Detrich, bank robber; Joseph Fox, bank robber, and Edward Shouse, auto bandit.
COURTHOUSE New Case Lloyd A. Baumgartner vs. Maud I Baumgartner, divorce, Lenhart, Heller and Schurger. attorneys. Cases Dismissed Howard L. Chambers viF First 1 Bank of Berne, services, cause dis- ' missed and costs paid. Albert Baumann and Jennie Baumann vs. iantha Huffman aud |' William Huffman, possession of I' real estate and damages, cause die- j' missed and costs paid. Judgment Granted Stephen Buchanan and Claude i ' Buchanan vs estate of Matilda Durr I ) claim, evidence heard and plaintiffs j awarded judgment of $325. Motion Overruled Old First National Bank and | 1 Trust Company of Fort Wayne vs. i 1 Cassius M. Andrews et al, note and 1 foreclosure of mortgage, motion to 1 make complaint more specific filed 1 1 by Caesius M. Andrews, motion ’ overruled. ’ Answer Filed Charles D. Nolan vs Harry A.' 1 Swanson, note, third paragraph of ’ answer filed by defendant. Marriage License Dale Myers, meat market, Deca-' tur and Isabel Death, route 8, De-;' catur. 1 1 Armond Waymire, clerk, Englewood, Ohio and Blanch Colley. Englewood. Ohio. » Ira Wagoner, retired Monroe, and Jessie M. Kail, Columbus. O. Paul Edward Hohenberger, manMargaret English, bookkeeper De-1 fiance, Ohio. Hugh L. Smith, farmer, Ohio 1 City. Ohio and Grace L. Dibert, * Ralph W. Hueted, electrician, Ak- ■ ron, Ohio. a LABOR TROUBLE I, GROWS AS MORE STRIKES START (CONTINUED FROit PAGE ONE) I persuade them to quit. Officials: chimed none of the-workers left: their jobs. Strikers claimed they nad persuaded 6UO to join. Philadelphia's troubled labor; front reached a danger point when 1 several hunderd pickets at a leather j factory became riotous; several! thousand were on strike at the | Pennsylvania Sugar Company, and bakery wagon drivers were seeking to prevent deliveries of bread. In Brockton, Mass., 6,00 b shoe workers still were on strike over a union dispute, aud 3,000 employes of the Westinghouse Electric Company were out in Springfield, Mass. Detroit reported negotiations pro- i ceeding hopefully for a settlement I of the strike of 10,000 tool and die 1 workers in automobile plants of Detroit, Flint and Pontiac. The strikers are asking union recognitio nand wage raises. Riot Threatens Princeton. Ind., Sept. 28.—(U.R) — NOTICE My office will be closed from, October 2 to October 7, inclusive. 1 DR. J. G. NEPTUNE
THLMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“STANDING ROOM ONLY” BY IF VA’LL LEtAbAE KtsOCKj |(oQoP'') / I (T)ROP l 1 BOLLS /1 - —-X A I <UJITtAOUT HURTIHJ fl i \ ft\ k V i \ V M ■ abb B'W f VW) ■Pfe. r x...... 6a_ Wf- k k L ) laX ■fe'V k gj b\ L
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1933.
I Mobilization of national guard, ; troops demanded for duty at two I Oakland City coal mines was halt-; I ed today while Gibson county of-! ticials sought amicable settlement; lof a riot between union and non-! union miners. Gov. Paul V. McNutt, at the request of Judge Dale Eby of Gibson circuit court, had ordered a detachment of national guardsmen to: the scene if they were needed. Judge Eby made his request after 500 union men raided homes of non union employes of the coop-1 erative Somerville and Francisol mines. Employes were driven from their { homes and ordered out of town. | Windows in several houses were broken aud several men were beaten. The riot was halted by Sheriff' i George Hitch, Prosecutor Clarence ' Rumer and Marshall William i Brown of Oakland City. Upon their arrival at the mine, however. I they reported to Judge Eby that! the situation was beyond their control.. The three officials fileaded with • the rioters to disperse, threatening ' to call out the militia A conference of Gibson county! officials and mine representatives; was called for 11 a m Outcome! of the meeting will be reported tA Governor McNutt who then will' decide whether to carry out his intention of ordering troops to the; scene. o Test Your Knowledge ——— Can you answer seven of these | test questions? Turn to page ] Four for the answers, 1. Where is Westminister Abbey? 2. What is a telemeter? 3. Name th apital of Finland? 4. Who was called ‘‘The Little Corporal?” 5. Where is Lick Observatory? 6. Is coal mineral or vegetable? 1 7. Where is Governor’s Lslaud? 8. Os what British possession is Georgetown the capital? 9. How many gills in a gallon?) 10. Which state is the smallest! in area?
Freshening Up For Fall And Winter Now is the time when every housewife is engaged in rearranging the house, getting out the fall and winter draperies and freshening up for the coming season. And General Johnson is urging prudent housewives to “buy now" to aid national recovery. Our Washington Bureau lias ready for you its bulletin on INTERIOR DECORATING, containing valuable hints and information on re-decorating, re-furnishing, and replacing old furniture and furnishings and draperies, to make the homo "look like new,” if you want to re-do the living room, or the dining room or the bedroom, and want suggestions for harmonizing colors and materials. this bulletin will tell you how. Fill out the coupon below and send for it: CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. 253, Washington Bureau. Daily Democrat, 1322 New York Ave. Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin INTERIOR DECORATING and enclose herewith five cents in coin (carefully wrapped), to cover return postage and handling costs. NA M E STREET & No CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur, Ind., Daily Democrat.
Rev. Gibbs Comments On Sunday Lecture Rev. C. P. Gibbs, commenting on his lecture at the Sunday night i services at the First Methodist I church, states; "The mountaineers of’ eastern ; Kentucky are in many ways the ; mosi interesting people in the I United States. The people of the ' mountains have kept, in a large 1 degree, that spirit of liberty and; Americanism which characterized i the Colonists. It was from such : people as these that Clay, John- I son. Jackson and Lincoln sprang. ! Woodrow Wilson said. ‘They are a | part of the original stuff out of I which America was made.’ Their J peculiarities of speech are honest ' survivals of their Saxon ancestry. ' Their blood is the blnest in Amer- i ica. Charles E. Hughes said. I ‘T have wanted to see the Ken-! tucky Mountaineers, where I am sure we can look, if anywhere, for stalwart Americanism.’ No! one needs a friendly interpreter | more than the mountaineer of; eastern Kentucky. “Rev. Gibbs is such an interpre- j ter. His people are Kentucky ' mountaineers for six generations. * His lecture on My Old Kentucky Home’ will thrill you from start | to finish. He knows the mountain life in every detail. Rev. Gibbs extends a cordial invitation to |he people of Decatur and Adams ' county to hear his lecture ‘My Old Kentm-ky Heme' at the Methodist church Sunday evening, October 1.” o AGENT’S * COLUMN * Milk Production Records of dairy farms in Adams county for the last five years provide some very interesting data in the production of milk. The cost of feed is the largest single item in production. The more feed required to produce a hundred pounds of milk, the lower the price received for the feeds. Duri ing the period in question, feed prices have fluctuated considerably, The best measure, therefore.
In determining the cost of producing milk, is the amount of feed required. These records show that ft required 62 pound* of silage. 30 pounds <|f hay, and 20 pounds of grain to produce 100; pounds of milk. Herds producing , less than 800 pounds butterfat per i year require considerably larger quantities of feed On this basis dairymen are able to market home grown feeds at market price and still have some income left over. Those who are likely to be I
My Boy! bu FRANCIS WALLACE •> AUTHOR. OF “HUDDLE 1
SYNOPSIS “Big Jes” Randolph, now in his second year on the great Thorndyke Varsity team, is the talk of the football world—“he’ll be an slltime back before he’s through”, etc. But to the folks back home in Athens, a tiny midwest factory town . . . particularly to his Mom and Pop . . . the great “Jel” was always little Tommy who was such a sensation on the local high school team that many colleges sought his favor until finally he picked swanky Thorndyke, a far-famed eastern university. On vacations, in college-cut clothes. Tommy is the social and sartorial sensation back home much to the neighbors’ scorn and the delight of local debutantes excepting Dorothy Whitney, daughter of the town's biggest citizen who owns the glassworks where Pop and his other son. Pete, work. Dorothy dnesn't like the crude and cruel high-hat inluenre of Thorndyke on Tommy. She twits him about this nntil the ego of the young giant reaches the exploding point. . . . Neighbors drop in on .Mom and Pop to hear the broadcast of the long awaited game between Indiana State and Thorndyke in which the latter scores first on a remarkable forward pass by Tommy (“The Great Jeff” of the headlines and the announcer's voice). Mom’s boy is about to try for the point after touchdown. ... CHAPTER TWENTY ■ —Big Jeff is getting ready to kiek the goal now — that was a smart play he just pulled; Indiana was up close to stop him at the line, around the ends and his short passes bnt Jeff foxed them by throwing a long pass over their heads. ... Ready. . . . He’s kicking—it’s good—right over the middle .. . his teammates are cheering him—and Thorndyke is away to a 7-0 lead over Indiana and Big Jeff Randolph is showing the boys from home just how it's done.” Mom looked at the two of them. “Well,” she said, “it sure looks like Tommy is taking pretty good care of himself.” Mrs. Johnson smiled. “Yes,” she said, “especially considerin’ all the things State was supposed to be going to do to him.” Mrs. Flannigan nodded and inclined her head meaningly across the street; but Mom caught the look which passed between them and she saw they weren’t so pleased as they made out; which didn’t surpria* her. Then Mrs. Johnson proved it. She said: “But why do they call Tommy Jeff all the time, Mis’ Randolph?” “Because that’s his name,” Pop said. “But I thought his name was Tommy,” Mrs. Flannigan said, “you know yourself, Mr. Randolph, that you always called him that.” ”His name is Thomas Jefferson Randolph,” Pop said, as if that settled everything. “Sure,” Uncle Louie backed him up. “I named him that” Pop glared at Uncle Louie but Mom gave him a look and he knew what she meant for she knew the two of them were only hoping to hear something they could carry all over town and they were disappointed when Pop didn’t say anything. “Os course,” said Mrs. Johnson, “it don’t make no difference and yon understand I wasn’t the one that said anything. Take my Florrie—her middle name is Agnes and some people calls her Aggie.” “The same way with my Buddy,” said Mrs. Flannigan, “land sakes alive, half the time I didn’t know what name he was going under.” Mom pul her finger to her lips again as Pop and Uncle Louie were both Ynaking faces, trying to hear
short of feed during the coming winter should dispose of their low- i est producing cows at the earliest possible date. Peed supplies should be budgeted, saving the better grades of; roughage for the fresh cows ami | those producing the most milk, i Feuding of grades should be baaed entirely upon the production of ( milk aud butterfat. Cows near. the end of their lactation should receive little, if any, grain. The ! use of protein like
what was going on and Mom was afraid one of them would insult them—and if they did it would be all over town in no time and Mom would never hear the last of iL They kept Mom nervous all the time they were there. It was easy to see they weren't intended in the football game but just to see what they could carry and Mom was glad Pop had told them without it getting any worse; although Mom was on edge all the time becausq every little bit they would start talking about something. It wasn't in them to keep still very long and Pop and Uncle Louie and Mom wanted to hear about the football and not about Pat Flannigan*s barber's itch or the hard time Mrs. Johnson had to get her man to stop eating onions before he went to bed or the best way to keep tomatoes from spoiling when the cellar got too damp. Mom was glad when they left because they had been more disorderly than children because at least you could tell children to keep still—but if yon told them to keep still it wonld be like putting it on the front page of the paper. As soon as they had gone, Pop did what he seldom did in the house and started swearing a blue streak; and finished up with: “And if she’d hear some of the names I hear her Florrie called —” “And what about that Flannigan brat—he joined the Navy because—” “Now, now,” Mom said, “now they’re gone. Listen to the game. Has anything more happened? Did Tommy do any more 7” “He did plenty,’’ Pop said, “but the line is lousy and they ain't scored anymore.” “Don’t blame it on the line,” Uncle Louie said. Pop turned on him. “I said the line—and what’s the idea telling everybody you named him?” Mom went to the window and left them arguing. She wanted to see something — just as she suspected—the two of them went in Mrs. Farrell’s. Mom started getting things ready for supper. She really wasn't interested much in what happened except to know that Tommy was all right—and Pop would let her know anything he did. That was one reason Mom didn't want to take Charlie Whitney up when he offered to take her and Pop over in his machine—Uncle Louie hadn’t really been invited but that made no difference to him — Mom had never seen Tom play the football and, although it would be the proudest moment of her life to sit and listen to everybody praise him, still, as long as she didn’t really see him play, it wasn’t so bad. They said it was a very hard game and what Mom didn’t see* wouldn’t hurt her. She’d be sure to dream at night—-and if anything happened to her Tommy she didn't know— It was awful nice of Charlie and everything but another reason was she and Pop might not look feo swell and although she knew Tom would be proud of them just the same, still and all — And Dorothy would be there from her school over east and that would mean they’d all have to be together and Mom thought maybe that would embarrass them: for Dorothy and Tommy hadn’t been keeping steady company for nearly two years. When Tom was home—which wasn’t much now—he went with the girl at Smithfield and Mom heard Dorothy had a fellow from there, too. They still spoke but there was something between them. In one way Mom was sorry because Charlie Whitney and his pretty little wife and even Dorothy had been nice; but then Tom was too young to be tied down to one girl and Dorothy had too much of her
coltonseeil or l| l)W!wl depend on tbe M the produeticu of a.“M producing I W , th ” '•«y will prohzMy ,7*l if not larger. wt | n ‘ *1 on home grown balanced ration ...” * must be mads io cow enough feed. b „ t ducer* shorn I l euHua, J grades of feed. It „ *J and milk will pror , M in carrying out this
g andmother seemed. ..r with T.■in-:y ,» a! eared, fer v. atl the „ . . . the I a; er .. . . wished th. •. somctin:.' a . .. footbail ha’ , , , . and T rnmv ... . “ Pop and U: ..1.,...,, ing again. .. _ . didn’t harm “I said," P ; -.[jj. give him .- .. . beat the H . “Ain't y< . a Louie asked. Pop looked a- >im q un djH dropped . y see he was ,p . S listened. Pop 0..." rootin’ for Tom?” “I ain’t agamst Um." I-ouie . \p,a. . i going ag:i • “So the state comes first, H it?” Pop was waiting. ■ “When you come right dosH it,” Louie a' » } . K * M Pop jumped up from ha (fl excited lie - .~ ;>ln; fl Louie and then turned to “There you are : j hezrd ■ Lizzie, you hear! what r,e sfl got witnesses.” ■ “Oh," M ini [a. \ u. e fl mean anything.” ■ “I ain’t against Tom," fl Louie said. ■ “You said the state c .mesfl Pop accused, - T fl that is — tha'’s S mA ain’t no Dem .crat a’ ail.” For once Uncle Louie >ag Pop had given him Mont see that. Pop knew it. tow started walking up and don Mom could see he was pl ready for one of r .s tried to stop him before be started. “Now, J m—" But there was no broking now. He waved his hand ud; Uncle Louie a s- :e g:.: r.ce as th he were a pri- :r.< bar.’ been suspecting this for i time,” Pop said, “he ain’t nob crat at all, he's a Bullsheveeld a Mussolini.” “Ah!” Uncle I. uie shewed disgust but he was worried, turned to him, p< inted his Ss "Didn’t you say t: t state wasi Didn’t you?” “That's tricky argyin’,' U Louie complained Pop paid M tention. “You don’t follow the] ciples of Thomas Jefferson Woodrow Wilson,” he sen “you’re a follower of Eugeni Debs and Karl Marx. Thomas ferson said all men are bora and equal—HE didn’t say the I comes first.” Pop was houUngl Mom tried to quiet him. “Jim,” she said, “the gu starting again.” He paid no attention. ‘‘Whjd you go over to Ro .shia with rest of them? No w. nder youd believe in hard w .rk and al» wait for a government job!" “Wait a minute " Uncle b broke in. The puzzling had g from his face and M m knew It Louie had a point row. He »« good arguer and Pop could ne keep him down long ‘ W hat kin a state are you talking aboutMarxian state or the Roman st or Plato’s state’” Pop swung his fist down on table as though he bad beer. av> ing that question. “I mess the st of Indiana!” he shouted. Monte® see that Pop though’ that sett everything and there was no ■ argument; and the way Uncle W hesitated Mom knew Pop had ms some kind of a big point 00 if somebody asked h<>r to swear a stack of bible - she'd »»’e ,0 ' she really didn’t know what were talking about. (To Be FontinuM) Coprrish'. 103-’ hr | l'i«ir,Satr.( •» Kirw- I 1
