Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 56, Decatur, Adams County, 5 March 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

F CLASSIFIED I ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, | AND NOTICES FORSALE FOR SALE — Timothy and clover hay mixed: and clover hay. %• mile went Kirkland high school. Jacob t£. Henschen. a-53-3t FOR WALE — Decatur quality chielS in al! leading breeds. Book yuur orders now Decaturj Hatchery. Monroe St., Phono 4'»7. 5313' ■i .■■■■■■— . i FOR irAtLE One one-sixth H. P. General Electric motor, >A-1 ion 1 dition. Phone 1138 or inquir* at 738 Mercer Ave. Decatur. 55-a3t:: FOR SALE Pekingese puppies, eligible A. K. C. Phone 773 or call at 610 Mercer are. 55:3 FOR SALE TODAY—Day old and started Chicks. Penedale Hatchery. Second and Jackson Sts. Decatur. 56-a 2tx — FOR SALE—Dun field soy .beans , and sacrified yellow sweet clover , seed.’ L. A. Ripley, .Monroe. Ind.. ' .March 6-8-13-lox I WANTED WANTED —Work on farm by single ' man by month. Joe P. Brookhart, ' Rockford. Ohio. 53-3 WANTED—Washings to do at 833 I Winchester street. 53-4tx 1 FOR RENT FOR RENT — Twelve acre farm near Salem with gsod small home ; and barn. Possession at once. Henry Bowman, Route 8, Decatur. 54-K3tx o LOST AND FOUND LOST —1934 Indiana license plate No. 429685. Finder please return to this office. 53t3x LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN— Grey angora kitten. Reward. Call SO. 56-3 t COURTHOUSE Marriage License Dale Palmer, Napoleon. 0.. waiter to Mildred Morehead. Napoleon. O. Earl’Welke, Van Wert. Ohio., operator to Wanekla Reed. Van Wert O. Mildred Sprunger, Berne, upholsterer to Florine lAugsburger, Berne. Real Estate Transfers John Fruechte, 120 acres in Preble township to Edward Frttechte for JI.OO. Emmanuel Gerber et ux. 40 acres in French township to Willis .A. Prcsdorf et ux for 33,000. Arthur Koenemann et ux. 80 acres in Preble township to Marquerite Gladden for 31.00. Marguerite Gladden, 80 acres in | Preble township to Arthur Koene-1 matin et ux for SI.OO. — 1 11 ■- '» 111 l Aired Man Cleared Os Murder Charge —•— Paoli. Ind.. Mar. (U.R) Exon- j erated from blame by a jury which found that he was temporarily inBade. John Simpson, 75, was free today on charges of murdering Amos Wingler during a tight over a woman at Orleans last fall. The jury deliberated 24 hours before finding that Sintlson was insane at the time of the slaying and whs not responsible for his action. Judge Wilbur W. Hottell of Orange circuit court accepted the jury's rei-ommendatio nthat Simp- I son be freed. ■ o Beeswax for Cracks Fitly cracks in furniture will dis- | appear if they are filed with bees wax rind then varnished over.

Roy s. f 1 Johnson *? * 7 Auctioneer I4r * Now boo ki ng I -winter and spring 1 aSale dales. My "dates are filling your alate early. March 6 —Orval High, 14 mile *jsi>iith of Ohio City. » March 7—Mrs. Mina Reppert, -114 mile north of Magley. March 9 -George Mellott at the U.eorge Crieger residence. 1 mile edlith, V 2 mile east of Ohio City. 3torne sale. March BHerman Rultemeier. S miles north of Decatur, just off of 'state road 27. Closing out salt. March 10 — Decatur Community eale. March 12—Henry Sauer. 114 mi. ..west of Decattir on the Archbol'l Toad. Closing nut sale. March 14 — C. J. Dodagn. 2'4 miles north of I’reblo. Closing out eale. March 20-MaOk Davis, and Ad--XMfc 11 < 7 miles west Os Celina. Stock ■ Office in Peoples Lean 4 Trust Bldg. me, Office 104, Res. 102* ■■ &

MARKET REPORTS I DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL I AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected March 5 No commission nnd no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 16U to 216 lbs. $4,501 210 to 250 Ills. $4.60 | | 250 to 300 lbs. $4.50 I 300 to 350 lbs. $4 *0 140 to 160 lbs. s3.!m ' |3 ( . to 140 lbs $3.00 I 100 to 120 lbs. $2.3(1 Roughs $3.25 Stags • $1.50 Veaiers s''• Lambs SO.OO Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1. doieu I 14c No. 2 dozen 13c ; No. 3 dozen 10c I Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs steady to 10c higher: 2001:50 lbs. S4.SO; 250-300 tbs. >4.65; | I 16(1-20(1 lbs. $4.50; 300-350 lbs. i ! *4.50; 150-160 Jbs. $4; 140-150 lbs. I i $3.75; 130-140 lbs. $3.50; 120-130 j I 'tis. $3: 100-12(1 lbs. $2.5(1; roughs j $3.50; stags $2. Calves $7; western lambs $9.50; native lambs $9.25. — EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y.. Mar. 5. —<U.R) i —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 6.1f1(>: holdo'crs. I 1,000; weights above 160 lbs., active; full steady with Friday': average; lightweights dull; weak t< lower: bulk desirable 10 to 2'm $5.15 to $5.25; 250 (<> lb . •■! to $5.25: 120 to 150 lbs.. ?! (o ■!,. I pigs and underweight . (•■: $4.25; packing sow. . $.5.50 to 1: . Cattle, receipts 1.250. all grad steers and yearlitj. s actin ; ~.ro i.; i to 25c higher; good t<- <!’o 1 “ 1 to $1,300 lb., steers. »i>..>o i<> $7 s fat roughs, 1.350 lbs. *3.50; ium and short fed"-. $5.23 to •1.2. common. $5.4n to i i 25: <:•>■.' a 1 I bulls weak to 25c low er: :;i< $2.35-$3: cuttc' ’■(<■!■ . -' ; medium bulls, $3 $3.25. Calves, receipts, 1,m..t; v<,iibarely steady more rigid sorts ,ii : sidered, good to choice mostly common and medium. $1 'i * ,' Sheep, receipts, 3,800; lamb: mat ket not fully established, scattered sales good to near choice about I steady. $10.25, holding fresh lamb | above $lO 50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 87 % 86% 87% ( orn 51% 53% 55% Oats 35% 35 34% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected March 5 - ; No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or Better 78c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 77e Old Oats . 31c New Oats . 29c | i First Class Yellow CoYn . 55< Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans 5W‘-60c O — - I NORTH END BARBER SHOP St. Marys Ave. off Fifth st. flail cuts, adults 25t. children 20c. 53t *»X Q Get the Habit — Tracre at Home

AUTOS nn-v KKFINANCtt ON SHAI.LU MTMBN’TS EXTRA MONET IE OBSIMBO FRANKLIN SECURITY CO. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 137 Decatnr, Ind. . * H i i i 1 ■ no**!. Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams County National Farm Loan Ass’n., Charter ! No. 5152. office with the I Schurger Abstract Co.. 133 South 2nd street. Decatur. I Fire and windstorm insnrance accepted in any old line or good mutual insurance co. For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 110 So. 3rd st. Neurucalomclcr Service X-Hay Laboratory Office Hours; 10 to 1 2 a. rru ) to sp. ni. f Uto 8 p. m. ; N. A. BIX LEK OPTOMETRIST Eyea Examined. GlAsse* f Hr' HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:011 Saturdays, 8:00 n. hi. Telephon? 135.

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A Cigar Box Garden Indoors

The half-hardy vegetables should 1 not be neglected because they arc difficult to grow. Many of these plants, which have long growing i serfSoiis and arc of a semi-tropical nature, may he raised very easily by setting them out in boxes indoors until all danger of frost has passed, when they may be trans-

w.c., (I, -I'.J (I I 1/ TI -in'r-n II j Allene Corliss COPYRI6HZSYALL£HE COIL.ISS v MST/UBOTB) FSATUHSS SYNtKATE.INC.

CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE “Where’s John Harmon?” Stanley wanted to know half an hour later finding Dennis getting beautifully lit in the pantry with Maurice Flemming, a young and pathetic example of a popular movie critic. “He’s gone home to tear up his novel and write a book. He said to have Perry take you home.” "What happened to him?” Stanley demanded anxiously, her eyes surprised and a little disturbed. “Nothing much, my dear. 1 simply told him a few things he needed to know —about novels, for instance —and he seemed to take it to heart.” “You’re drunk, Dennis!" “I am now but I wasn’t then. Don’t act so tragic.” “Shut up, Dennis,” advised Terry sharply, fakir,g Stanley fnmly by the arm. “Come on, we’ll go home and see what it's all about. ’’ Once in Perry's car, Stanley’s anxious voice hurried on. “But he nevsr w uld have g?ne ofT snd left me lit . that if something serious hadn’t happened. What in heaven's name was Dennis raving about?’’ "I’ve a very good idea she was telling the truth,” replied Perry grimly. “I rathqr think John Harmon went home to tear up his novel.” “But, Perry, he loved it!" “You mean he loved writing it. 1 don’t think he’s ever been completely satisfied with the stuff he’s been turning out.” “But haven’t you been? Isn’t it elever—isn’t it good?” Stanley felt herself go suddenly panic-stricken. She had perfect faith in John Harmon, everything he wrote was magic to her. “No, 1 haven’t been—not entirely. Pm no literary critic, Stanley, I’m just a rather bum lawyer, but 1 read a bit and because 1 know John Hamon and like him I’ve kept rather close to his work. It’s been light, hasn't had the depth, the feeling, the honest emotions that it should have had. He hasn't got . at the heart of things, he’s been con--1 tented with the outside finish.” “Froth,” whispered Stanley huskily, “that’s what he used to call it—froth. But lie said it would keep us going while he was writing his book, that that would be something real and—different.” “Exactly. Put the froth was j popular and it sold well and MayI nard kept wanting more and John | Harmon forgot he had called it i froth and began to think it was ' really good, and if I’m not very i much mistaken he was writing exactly that kind of novel and Maynard would have grabbed it—and so would the public.” "But, Perry,” faltered Stanley, trying desperately to understand, “why did Dennis St. John see all this, while I, who am so close to him, missed it entirely?” “Because, my dear, to you John Harmon is first and always your husband—to Dennis St. John, he is an author, a good author gone wrong.” “You explain it nicely, Perry. I suppose 1 ought to be glad he isn’t a good husband gone wrong.” Stanley tried pathetically to be humorOUS. "Dennis doesn't bother much with husbands- -says they always revert to type, but that's another storv. Shall 1 go in will; you?” “No— I’d rather not. but I don’t

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DECATVR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 5,

lerred to the gulden with little trouble, and there flourish with ordinary care. Tomatoes, eggplants and peppers and three such types, and if yon do not set them out yourself, you will have to depend upon sets bought from commercial establishments at a higher cost to you. anti with

know what to say to him. I feel as though I had failed him somehow, as though 1 should have seen what ■ was happening to him.” “If you had seen and told him, i he would probably never have forI given you for it.—you happen to • be his wife. You ought to thank your lucky stars you can’t be critii cal about him. Heaven help a woman > who can judge her husband impartially—it’s sure to end in disaster.” "You’re always helping me over i situations.” Stanley smiled at him suddenly in tlw glow of an arclight. "You’ve never failed me.” 1 “Except once. Well, that was my i bad luck. Good night, darlin’.” i “Good night, Perry.” John Harmon was sitting before the empty fireplace, the pages of his novel scattered about him on the floor. “She’s right, you know,? he said uuietly, looking up as Stanley came in. "It’s clever and amusing and -.arn’ good writing, but it isn’t life not life with the pulse left in it—and the heart.” Stanl y went to him swiftly, 1 knelt down beside him. A rudden 1 blur of tears hid his face for a second and she was glad that this was so, for what rhe saw there was not good to see. It was John Harmon’s face with all the youth and i the enthusiasm and the courage stricken from it. It was a face left grim and naked and bleak with . disappointment. “You’ll write it over again, John Harmon?” “Yes, I’ll write it over again. I thought at first I couldn’t. I thought I had nothing left to put into anything. I thought I’d have to chuck it ail, get away from it, that I couldn’t bear to go back and write it over again. But things don’t happen that way, Stanley. You have to go on—even when going on means going back. I’m going to write it over again—and this time I’m going to keep my feet on the ground. I’ve got it in me, Stanley. It was there once and I lost it but I can find it again—the beauty, the sympathy, the something that makes a story have a soul and not just a plot. I’ll find it again and this time I'll keep it!” He was holding her hands now, and as he spoke something of the tenseness and pain went out of his face. She crept closer to him, said huskily, “I wish it might have been I, dear, instead of Dennis. I wish I might have been the one to have—shown you.” “No you don’t.” And suddenly John Harmon smiled and ran his fingers through his rumpled brown hair and in his eyes there was a flicker of humor and a lot of illconcealed misery. “No. you don’t. I'm not going to like Dennis for a long time—l doubt if 1 ever love her!” * • * And so it happened that lifj settled down into more or less of a routine for the Northrups. John Harmon spent long hours at desk, creating a new and better Glorn Stanley went back and forth to work, buffeted by the blustering March winds, secure from any discomfort from their chilly embrace, wrapped warmly in a nice sense of contentment. Now that John Harmon was sticking close to his novel and no longer turning out short stories at regular intervals, they found themselves with a stcmlilv diminishing

much less variety of ctiertce. Markets for such commodities usually stock only the standard vegetable varieties, so the gardener who wants u little •individuality must set out his own. In the northerly portions of the country, March is the best time to set out plants for indoor growth; ; this date varies as the latitude I brings earlier or litter spring. For the gardener who depends j upon it sunny window to assist his | early plants, cigar boxes are the | lime honored container. Start; looking for them now. so you will [ have a stock on band when March, comes around. Pots and bulb -pans | serve the purpose very Well, and 1 thby dt> not dry out as quickly. A south window is preferred to any other, for this type of growth The plants ned plenty of sun. and if deprived of it. a spindly stalk will result tliat will cause serious

( capital. He had wanted to go back l , to the proof reading, but Stanley 1 ; had firmly refused to let him do it, j insisting that it was stupid to wash , any more time away from his book “But I can’t live off you, Stanley > surely, you must see that.” “I don’t see anything at all, except that you are stubborn and mid i Victorian and childish!” retortec ■ Stanley, tears in her voice, tears ’ very near her eyes. “Besides • there’s the money in the bank and , i the fifty from the farm — that’s , yours. With my salary it will carry us through the spring and by that - time, you’ll have something to show Maynard. Don’t be stupid, darling!’ And so they had left it at that, and in time John Harmon had even ' come to forget it Maynard had promised to read the first chapters of the new novel and if it was all he hoped for, he had offered to make an advance on it, against fall publication. “It’s certainly great of him, Stanley,” John Harmon told her, coming back with this information from Maynard’s office. “He believes in me. I can’t let hi® down, I’ve got to come through with some- 1 thing good.” He had arranged a regular working day. He went to his desk when Stanley left at eight in the morning and worked until noon. Thea, . after a lunch which he managed himself, he wrote until three, when he knocked off to walk for a couple of hours, picking up Stanley at the bookshop, a little before five. There were other days though, days when it rained, or when things were breaking wrong with him, that he went straight from his desk to Felix Rose’s little bookshop. He had found something in this old man that he had never discovered anywhere else or in anyone else. He fell into the habit of spending a little time each day talking and smoking with him, in the back of his dim, narrow little shop. Felix Rose had grown old intel- : ligently. He possessed a sure sense of balance, a fine sense of discrimination! He looked at life through the convex lens of the telescope and saw it at a distance but with an amazing clearness. There was no confusion of proportions, no oblique angles, no magnified dimensions. He stood on a high hill and looked back—and on. And there was repose in his soul and repose in his gaze and a great deal of tolerance in his acceptance and rejection of what he saw. And in a vague way John Harmon realized all this, and envied him it. He tried to tell him so sometimes, and the old book dealer would touch the tips of his fingers together lightly and smile at him I through the shining lens of his horn-rimmed spectacles. “The inspiration of youth and the wisdom of old age—ah, there, my dear boy, would be a combination! But a cruel one, a relentless one, perhaps. To write, to struggle, to grope, as you are doing, one must be close to life— must see it magnified, out of proportion, tremendously exaggerated. When you hava left it behind, when you have arrived at a distance and can look Lack and see it as it is, something is gone, lost forever. The strugglei I is over, the groping is ended—and | the desire to write has fled. So you see ”He shrugged expressively. (To De Continued) Copyright. 1932. oy Allene Corliss nuolhuted by King FeaturH Syndicate. Inc.

Where Spark May Start War in Europe ■

germawyS< x z s Munich piTtn/Kn 3 STIYft viennaKA IKNSBRUCK/,i pALZBURG o T a I I S T L ,/ -—) fl X ’fGftAl ) C I Y „ > c o. X ’ ITALY < *c^ Via \ < 1 — J—

Shaded portion of above map shows where Austrian troops, regular army and Heimwehr, are massed near the Austro-German border in anticipation of an attempt at invasion by German Nazis from Munich an<t other points in Bavaria, Prince Ernst Rudiger von heuxberg (right) is looming as Austria’s new ' aUv I - ■— ■■■

I HOLES 1 DRAIHAOE V 1 STRAND OF WIR£ TO prevent WARPING CUT A piece of saga, bURLAP TO FIT ' jgfe'A BO* THIS HELPS TO CONSERVE MOISTURE A CIGAR BOX MAKES A HANDY i : “FLAT’ FOR- starting seeds ! INDOORS. ) i loss. A good supply of fresh air is , also needed, and with the room 1 temperature at about 70 degrees, i they should thrive without much loss or trouble. Even in boxes, seed should be I sown in rows. By doing Oils they will be easier to handle when they are ready to transplant. Broadcasting seed is tin old-fashfoned and wasteful method of pituting. Sow your seed thinly, unless you 1 expect to do a quick job of transplanting: they will mature much better this way. Two true leaves should haye sprouted on the seedl ing before they are ready, and this is oftentimes hindered by crowding. Keep on the lookout for boxes or | pots. If you use boxes, be sure to I punch several holes in the bottom ' of them to allow for drainage—a few pieces of flower pot or crockery on the bottom will also help. If the boxes are frail and likely to fall apart, wire them together so that the mositure from the earth in them will not warp out. the seams. | ►——.J' J Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answer*. 7. What is a moratorium? 2. To what movement ha.s Mar-! garet Sanger devoted her life? 3. In which state of Mexico i; the I port of Tampico? 4. Name the final bugle call of! the day at army posts. 5. In classical mythology, what I was elysium? I 6. What was the "battle above the 1 I clouds?” 7. Wno was General John Hunt Morgan ? 8. In which ocean is Nova Zambia? 9. Os what river is the Tanana I River in Alaska, a tributary? 10. Who was Thomas Bulfineh .’ j 1. On what date did President Lincoln issue the Emancipation pro-1 clamation? 2. What is the popular name for I I Americau bison ' I 3. In what Collection of oriental I takes tales Is the story of All Baba I and the Fort Thieves? 4. What was the home state of President Monroe? 5. Which American Chief Justice

manJ’ it being rumored he seeks ■ military ship Meanwhile Italian t'orps are rcadv a>. < irerked with crosses) to aid Austria in th» el ---HH . ratene ' German invasion rate: -' •» • so'-iri c* I a'7 13 t-i-':—•- - .'VH , * I II! >■

wrote the opinion of the court in the Dred Scott case? 6. Who was immanuel Kant? 7. Name the first Methodist minister in America. 8. In which city is "Tin Pan Alley?’” 9. Who was the founder of the ; Mormon church? 10. What is a "variable” star? _o G«t the Habit — Trade at Home

LKI kflC • > aww PUBLIC SALE M As the fatm on which I live has been sold. I ha'.e de< ided farming and will sell at public auction on tliaeold Butb i farm. west of Decatur on the Archbold road, on MONDAY, MARCH 12,1934 I Commencing at 10 A. M. 3—HEAD OF HORSES—3 'B Red roan mare. 5 years old, wt. 1500 lbs. hi foal; Bay I old. wt. 1700 lbs.; Bar horse, smooth mouth, weight 15w n>? BH »— HEAD OF CATTLE—9 jB Registered Guernsey cow, 7 yrs. old. will be fresh March Guernsey cow. 4 yrs. old. eligible to register, milking gis.d tow, 10 yrs. eld; Roan eow, 4 yrs. old; Black cow. yi? old; heifer. 2 yrs. old. eligible to register; Red yearling heifer, heifer calves. HOGS AND SHEEP—Sow with 8 pigs by side, . ,«•? will in May: 21 shoats from 50 to 75 lbs. each; 19 ewe? with side; 1 buck. POULTRY —70 fullblood Buff Orphington pullet? m FEED—ISO bu. of good hagl-y oat».*«xUa good iseed. -1 | timothy hay; 1 ton clover hay; 2 ton of bean hay; 2" shocks 1 fodder IMPLEMENTS ANO TOOLS H Good in. farm wagon; 16 ft. gondola rack extra good; box; .McCormick 7 ft. binder; International hay 'loader. new: manure spreader: Hoosier fertilizer grain drill; M. < ■ rinirk ft.; Black Hawk corn planter; side delivery rake; ci "i ?<<<! <r; walking cultivator; good mud 'mat; 4 hay sling?. chains; 1 set ot breeching harness; 4 good collar?, w.dkine plow; spike tooth harrow; spring tooth harrow, but< 1,. ring 1 DeLavnl No. 12 cream separator, like new: 2 gal laul prc?s. power washing machine and many articles too linin'. m TERMS—CASH. D HENRY SAUER, Own® Roy y. Johnson, auctioneer V,'. A. Lower, clerk. As I have rented my farm. 1 will sell at public ’ "ii north of Magley. fir ,' farm north of Magley Refoiiu"! WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1931 1 Commencing at 10 A. M. B| 3—HEAD OF HORSES—3 B Black mare, It years old. wt. 1600, sound; S' ■ Gelding coming 2 years old, will make a good big Im i • i-' ll colt. 6 months old. 11—HEAD OF CATTLE—II ■ i \ Registered Holstein cow. 6 years old. an outstandin I good flow; Roan cow, 5 years old. calf by side; 2 helh i r'N i old. bred; 2 yearling heifers; 2 short-horh heifers. 9 i h? * Shorthorn hull. 6 months old; 1 Shorthorn heifer. '• ■ Holstein bull. 18 months old. B HOGS —White sow. 9 pigs by side; 20 feeding hog v GO to 140 pounds. B| FEED—2OO bushel of good corn; 25 bushel of gI ' " I ton of mixed hay. M IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS B 10-20 McCormick Deering tractor. In gtlod condllioi Joint tractor plow: tractor disc; cultipackcr; Studebakci wagon; gondola ruck; flat bottom hay rack; American 10 di spike tooth harrow; spring tooth harrow; Internwtimi 1 hay , Massey Harris 5 ft. mower; tedder; International ri'in - , 1 horse wagon; spring wagon; John Deere corn plan!' 1 trailer: mud boat; dump scraper; harness; */, h.p. « .'<lii» pump jack; cross-cut saw; iron vice; A-shape hog lion ■ breaking plow, riding breaking plow. B| 1929 Model A Ford Roadster, in best of condition B CASH. I MRS. MIN A REPPERT. Own® Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer B Lunch by the Magley Ladies Aid. B

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Blame Hea\\ I o- ■ For Fatal \vfl Lebanon. In I . .... the death of 1' , stopped for . that lv ’ ...