Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 68, Decatur, Adams County, 19 March 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

F CLASSIFIED f ADVERTISEMENTS, I BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE I'CiR SALK -Buzzed wood for heating stoves for furnace. A. I). Suttles, Agt. 6ti;g3t FOR SALE—3S funding hogs. Max Thieme. Phono €-845. 66g3t FOR SALE —Irish Cobbler potatoes. Certified 2 years ago, New York ; state. Bruunegraff. Bells stores or I call at 109 So. 11th for special , wholesale price on quantities. 66-k2tx FOR SALE New furniture of all kinds at bargain prices. Liberal trade allowance on your old furniture. Sprague Furniture Co., 153 So. Second St. Decatur. a-68-6t FOR SALE—4 year old horse. Ernst Thieme, 7 miles northeast of Decatur. 68-3 tx FOR SALE—Daviess county 4%% road bonds, about $1,500. Will sell below par. Address Box “Bond Holder,” care Daily Democrat. 67-3tx WANTED ~.11 —I. ■ ! . I — |. | | .!■ WANTED TO RENT--Partly furnished or unfurnished house or apartment by responsible party. Address Box DFC % of Democrat. 67a3tx WANTED—Light hauling, ashes, rubbish, etc. Prices reasonable. Phone 1208. 67k6tx MALE HELP WANTED WANTED — MALE — Instruction WE WANT TO SELECT a reliable young man now employed, with foresight, fair education and mechanical inclinations, who is will Ing to train during part time or evenings, to qualify as INSTALLATION and SERVICE expert on all types ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS. Write fully, giving age. (phone. present occupation. Address, Agency, % Daily Demcrat. . 68t2x MAN WANTED—in this locality , as Direst Representative of well known oil company to sell small town and farm trade. Experience not necessary. No investment required. Chance for immediate steady incon e. Write P. T. Web- j ssler. General Manager, 6231 Stand- i ard Bank Building. Cleveland. Ohio. Itx MALE HELP — Man wanted to supply customers with famous Watkins Products in Decatur. Business established, earnings average |25 weekly pay starts hn- I mediately. Write J. R Watkins I Company, 250-60 N. sth st., Colum- j bus, Ohio. Itx FOR RENT FOR RENT —Three front rooms nice for a law officce. rent < heap. Above Burns' cigar store. Bertha Ellis, phone 1223. 67t3 FOR RENT—Six room house, garage. good big truck patch, orchard and hen house, 1% mile northvast of Monroe. J. J. Longenberger. Monroe. Ind. 67a3tx FOR RENT — Country home with truck patch ami fruit on road 221. Bert Wolfe. R. R. 8. Phone 8795. -68-3t x I-’OR RENT— 6(> acre farm 1 mile east and 2 3-4 mile south of Monroe. Well improved black soil; good buildings. Immediate possession. A. J. Hirschy 536 Packard Ave. Fort Wayne. Ind. 19-21 24-x FOR RENT—6 room house, 5 miles northwest of Decatur. Lights. Oarage and Garden. Mrs. S. J. Spangler; 128 E. Foster Parkway Fort Wayne. Ind. Phone H-36763. 68-3tx ■ — FOR RENT —House on High St.. across from hospital, and three acres of ground. Cal! 571. g-68-3t — Q '■ ' LOST .IND FOUND LOST — Indiana license plate No. 427523. Return to Democrat office. k-68-3tx LOST —-Black and tan rat terrier. Reward. Call 457- 68-g2t FOR SALE—Scarefied yellow sweet clover seed. L. A Ripley, Monroe. 68-g3t ,_ o Appointment nt Aifniinistrairlxei, Notice Is hereby given. That the undersigned have been appointed Ad. iuini«tratrixes of the estate of Charles Wieginnnn. late of Adams County. deceased. The estate is probably soiwnt. Marie Wiegmann, Martha Buttemeier. Administratrixes March 12th, 1934. C. L. Walters, Attorney I -Marih_l2-jf-_.’li

Roy S. Johnson Rw " Auctioneer *, Now booking winter ana spring sale dates. My JtTT dates are filling fast, claim your date early. Mar. 21—Mrs. H. M. Lee. % mi. east of Baldwin. Ind. and % mi. west of Mctltti, Ohio on state road 114. Office In Peeples Lean « Trust BldJ. Telephone: Office HK Res. 1023.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL 1 AND FOREIGN M ARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected March 19 No commission and no yardage Veal# received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 lbs. $4.35 210 to 250 lbs. $4.45 j 2’50 to IM Ills. $4 ! 300 to 250 lbs. $3.75 ■ 140 to 160 lbs $3.40 130 to 140 lbs. $2.60 100 to 12’0 lbs $2.00 Roughs $3.00 Stags $1.50 Vealers . $6.60 Lambs $8.75 Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1. dozen 17c No. 2 dozen 14c No. 3 dozen 12c CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 87 87% 88 Corn 50% 52% 54% Oats .. 33% 34% 34% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y„ Mar. 19.— (U.R, — Livestock; Hogs, receipts. 5,500; holdovers. 200; fairly active, steady to 10c over Friday's average, bulk desirable 160 to 240 lbs.. $5 to $5.10; few 210 to 250 lbs., selections, $5.15; plainer kinds and mixed weights, $4.85; 150 lbs., down $3 to $4.60. Cattle, receipts. 1,100; steers and yearlings scarce: quality plain; market active, generally 25c higher; good to choice steers. $6.50 to $7; medium and short feds, $5.50 to SOS; yearling heifers, $5.85; cows steady to strong; tat cows, $3.40 to $3.75; cutter grades. $1.60 to $2 60: medium bulls, $3.15 to $3.50. CaClves. receipts, 1,100: vealers strong to 50c higher; good to choice $7.50 to $8; common and medium. $4.25 to $6.50. Sheep, receipts, 3.100; lambs 25 j to 40c higher, quality and sorts con-. sidered; good to choice jvoolskinsi mainly $1; few decks mostly sort-; ed. $10.25; common and medium.: $6.25 to $9.50; wool ewes. $5.00 to I $5.50. ————.»_ Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 10 to 15c higher; 200-250 libs. $4.55; 250-300 lbs. $4 65; 160200 lbs. $4.45: 300-350 lbs. $4.15; ■ 150-160 lbs. $3.65; 140-150 Tbs. I *53.40; 130-140 11,s. $3.15; 120-130 lbs. $2.65; 100-120 lbs. $2.15; | roughs $3.50; stags $2. Calves $7; lambs $9 to $9.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE — May July Sept. | Wheat 87% 86% 87% Corn 51% 53% 55% Oats 35% 35 34% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected March 17 Nt. 1 New Wheat, 60 lb* or Better 78c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 77c Old Oats .. 31c New Oats _ 29c First Class Yellow Corn 50c to 58c Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans 66c to 90c

IKoMZKI ON FURNITURE—AUTOS—RADIO#— LIVESTOCK ETC.— MONEI LOANED IN A CONFIDENTIAL MANNER. CONVENIENT TERMS i Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 837 Decatur, Ind. Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams County National Farm Loan Ass’n., Charter No. 5152, office with the Schurger Abstract Co., 133 South 2nd street. Decatur. Fire and windstorm insurance accepted in any old line or good mutual insurance co. For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 140 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hour*: 10 to. 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to S p. m. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye. Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 lg:30 to 6:00 " Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telaohone 136.

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. Who was the severe.** of the Papal States? 2. Name the composer of the "Bine Danube Waltz"

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CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN "1 think I’ll go and see Dr. Baker, Vai, you know, the doctor we had for John Harmon. I think I’ll go tonight—he has office hours every evening." Stanley slid off th* bed, stood up a bit shakily. It was still hot in the room but the sunlight had been blotted out by a thick, warm dusk. Valerie accepted this casually but later she said: “Want me to go with you, darling, for moral support and what-not?" Stanley was drawing * lipstick carefully across her mouth. Now she rubbed her lips gently, shook her head. “No, thanks, Vai. I’ll be all right. It’s just around the corner in an apartment hotel. I went there one night for some medicine.” After she had gone, Valerie sat for a long time in the wing ehair frowning thoughtfully. She had not forced any confidences but she thought she knew pretty well what had happened to Stanley in the past three weeks. She wished that John Harmon was home, that Drew Armitage had never left Chicago and that Perry had not gone off to Canada on his annual fishing trip. She felt that Perry would have helped tremendously just then; that he would have made certain things seem much less unbearable, the weather, for instance, and the look that had been in Stanley’s eyes just now, and the stillness and heartache she had somehow managed to leave behind her in this old room. A nurse admitted Stanley and took her name and address and said that the doctor would see her in just a few minutes. Then she left her and went back through a white paneled door. The room was small but miraculously cool. There were slim maple ehairs and none or two deeper, cushioned chairs, and a maple table w i t h a gay litter of magazines. There was a faint smell of ether and antiseptics and a genera) air of well-ordered expectancy about the place. Stanley found herself thinking that in this pleasant, calm atmosphere nothing seemed so very bad. She might have been waiting for a manicure or a facial or something equally unimportant. She picked up a New Yorker and turned its pages—hats were wearing brims again, enchanting ones, this season; there was a new perfume “as intriguing and mysterious as moonlight”; gloves were going to be very important, soft, wrinkled, suede gloves— Her hands were trembling so that the magazine shook ridiculously. She put it back on the table, sat staring at the closed white door. She tried to think about casual, impersonal things; whether the doctor was really busy or was just having his dinner or was perhaps finishing a good detective story. She remembered him as being a young man with friendly eyes and a pleasant, informal manner. He and John Harmon had got on splendidly. Ke had been interested in John Harmon’s novel, had said he would bring, a copy around to be autographed. For a moment she wondered a bit apprehensively if it mightn’t have been better to have gone to a stranger—someone to whom she would have been just a name—but she dismissed this almost at once. He had had friendly brown eyes and had laughed a lot: had been efficient without appearing to be. He would know exactly what to do and would make it all seem not too important—as he had made John Harmon's temperature and the frightening way in which he had raved deliriously seem not too important. The nurse came back most unexpectedly, and the next minute Stanley had gone through the white door and was shaking bands with Dr, Raker,

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 19. 1931.

' 3. tyhu was Eratosthenes’ 4. What color Is burnt umber? 5. For wliom was Muir Woods named? 6 In which state Is the city of Keokuk? 7. What is the Decalogue? 8. What is the meaning of tho word veto? , 9. Who was Eric the Red? 10. Who was Johann Kepler?

He was glad to see her. He told her so and asked about John Harmon. She told him John Harmon was abroad. He was delighted. And then, putting her in a deep ehair opposite him, he sat down at his desk, the nurse went out, closing the door softly behind her, and he said to Stanley, in the same wholly unprofessional tone that somehow contrived at the same time to be a bit different than it had been before: “And what can I do for you. Mrs. Northrup?" Stanley looked at him and locked her hands together tightly and moistened her lips. “1 think 1 am going to have a baby.” His smile which had been a bit tentative, became at once expansive. “Fine. That’s the best piece of news I ever hear in this office. Well have to take good care of you now, until that clever husband of yours returns." Stanley stared at him, twisted her fingers together, opened her lips to speak. But he was asking her questions, brief, rather simple questions. She answered them mechanically. He rang for the nurse and said something about an “examination.” When it was over and she had come back again to the deep chair, he smiled at her reassuringly. “Everything’s fine, Mrs. Northrup. Not a thing in the world to worry about Now just forget all about it for, say a month, then come back and see me again. If you could get away from the city for a while it might do you good. A change is sometimes the best cure for the morning nausea, but that will pass away, in a few weeks more—you’re probably through the worst of it now. And if there’s anything you want in the meantime, just eall me up or come in and see me.” “But, doctor—" Stanley wasn’t just sure what she was going to say. Nothing much, she thought, somehow, everything seemed to be settled all at once. But he interpreted her halfformed question from force of habit “There will be plenty of time to settle details later — hospital, nurse, all that sort of thing—it’s hard to be definite so early about these things, but I should say we can safely count on your being confined .in December. The thing for you to do now is forget all about it and just take care of yourself. Later on you can get excited about the baby. Right now 1 want you to forget it and think of yourself.” She smiled because he expected her to, shook hands with him and followed the nurse out. The nurse shook hands with her too. and smiled at her. ‘'l’m sure you’re going to be fine. Mrs. Northrup. and you’ll feel much better in another month. They say the second month’s always the worst. And Dr. Baker will take fine care of you—he's wonderful with confinement cases. 1 tell him he ought to specialize in them.” Stanley went down in the elevator and walked out of the apartment building and started home. She was going to have a baby. There was no longer any question about that. She was going to have a baby. Dr. Baker had taken it for granted and the nurse had taken it for granted. Stanley found that she. too. was accepting it; calmly, without rebellion, with, indeed, a rather pleasant sense of ■inevitability. She walked rapidly and easily with a nice feeling of release from physical pain. Her head no longer ached, she was. in fact, not conscious of her body at all. Something was happening to her; a numbness was slipping away from her. She no lunger felt empty, apathetic, bereft of every vital impulse. In the time it took her to leave the doctor's office and walk 'wo blocks through a soft, hot dark night she discovered that somehow she had come back from a mean-

1 What’ in the name for the byI brid offspring of up ass and a mare? ' 2 What Is buoyancy? 3. Where is tho island of Tenoj dos? ! 4. To whet race Io the Marx broi ther* lielong? j 5. What river drains the Five Great Laltes? I 6. Where is the famous park. Ken-

ingless void into a world of puli' ing, fierce reality. She saw things all at once with an amazing clarity. It was as il she had been staring *nto a pool of stagnant, clouded wau in which nothing was capable of reflection, and then miraculously the water had cleared, had become smooth and limpid and shining, with simple. clean-cut reflections, she saw herself, suddenly and irrevocably, a* Stanley Northrup, not as Stanley Paige who had desired Drew Armitage and. lacking the courage of her desires, had sent him away, not as Stanley Paige who had loved John Harmon an l married him and then forgotten him so completely—but as Stanley Northrup, a very real and not particularly romantic person who was going to have a baby — and there was something supremely ridiculous and absurd in the idea that she could ever have forgotten John Harmon—a person who was going to have a baby did not think of another man, most certainly did not forget the man whose baby she was going to have. She didn’t know exactly why this was so, she didn’t care particularly; that it was so was all that mattered and that mattered tremendously. And that it was so simplified things amazingly. There was no longer any question of her wanting Drew — Drew belonged very definitely to a slender, ardent-eyed, trembling-lipped girl who had lived in a fool’s paradise and had never even thought of having a baby; there was no longer any question of her not wanting John HarmonJohn Harmon was all that really mattered in the past, he was what so utterly emphasized the future, he was what so completely accented the present, only, curiously enough, there were two of him. now--one, ridiculously tall and thin and rum pie-headed, the other ridiculously small and round and rumple-headed. Stanley had reached her own block. Now she quickened her walk, ran up the steps of the house and turned the key in her own door. Then she remembered suddenly that babies weren’t supposed te have much hair—not at first, anyway. She pushed open the door, found Valerie still curled up in the wing chair, told her in a breathless, rather hushed voice: "I’m quite sure my baby will have hair, Vai—soft, rumply, brown hair.” • • • A few nights later Perry, back from his fishing trip, dropped in at the house o» Ninth Street. He found Valerie clad in her scarlet pajamas, her hair clinging in damp little rings about her forehead, her hinds covered with soapsuds. “Stanley’s not here.” she told him, emerging from the bathroom, “and I’m in the ifiidst of the family wash, but I’ll be finished in a second if you want to wait." Perry wanted to wait. He slung his hat onto a convenient table and sat down on the divan and lighted a cigarette. A faint breeze drifted in through the open windows and stirred the chintz curtains and the leaves of the primroses and potted geraniums. The night was warm and pregnant with the promise of rain—tender, springlike rain—and somewhere a hurdy-gurdy jangled a wistful, thin little tune. "Where’s Stanley?” he asked, tipping his bead back, lifting his voice above the noise of running water in the'bathroom. “She’s gone" over to Newark. She said if you showed up to tell you that she had gone to see Ellen —that you would know who Ellen was.” Valerie appeared again, drying her hands on a Turkish towel. She curled up on the other end of the divan. In the soft glow of the yellow.shaded lamp she looked slim and young and a little tired and entirely lovely. (Ta Br Continued) Com-right 1912. hr Alter-* Orßw Di«ti ih'itc«< b> K ia* FrJk«iiA£» Svu-hr»«»

Largest U. S. Plane Ready For Service 1 fIMSF' ■ JflK f * * M -jTi WEhIeL. IF a? SWML ' t art? > -HSi 1 lIM Igor. I ----- jHßteb. a* I S .42 Largest U S &unzr J The biggest airliner ever built in the CrtWed States was recently completely at Bridgeport J ready its initial tests. The big ship, designed by Igor Sikorsky on yeeflcations laid u.>wn by (9 Charles A. Lindbergh, has accommodation for 32 passengers, a crew of five and 1,000 pounds of null® a full load, her sou™ motors, developing 3,000 horsepower will give the big sh lP a cruising speed of an hour and a non-stop range of 1,200 miles. W ith the mail load alone the ship could fly between 3 000 miles without a stop. Although intended for Pan-American Airways South American sern3 servers believe it possible that the S-42 and five sister ships now under construction may ultimatdjJ seiverauvv v regular trans-Atlantic service.

sington Gardens’ 7. Who waa the author of ‘‘Plain : Tales from the Hills?” 8. Who wrote, "Othello?” 9. Name the largest of the Can- | ary Islands. 10. IVhat is the name for an or- ' gan in the body that appears not ; to function? COURTHOUSE Files Appearances Lulu Vance vs. John Mann et al. 1 establish and foreclose lien on real ■ estate, appearance filed by John T. j Kelly for defendant John Mann. Lulu Vance vs Harlo Mann eta al i established and foreclosure lien o.i ■ real estate, appearance filed by l John T. Kellv for Harlo Mann and : Aurora Mann. Estate Cases Albert F. Adams estate, final re- ' port filed, notice ordered returnable April 12. Estate of Arthur Barrone, report of inheritance tax appraiser filed, notice ordered returnable April 16. Real Estate Transfer Iris E. Myers to Dora A. Myers. 160 acres of land in Hartford town-

American Embassy in Moscow - li nßvff MnXw U il Lh S mansion that is to house the United States Embassy m r!°S - U J’, h S - <?• thc wnth house of lho Cent '= ! Executive I Committee of the Soviet, the mansion was turned over to Ambassador I W illiam C. Bulhtt by the Soviet Government. It will be the Ambassador’* official residence a* well aa his executive officr

I snip for si.vo. Marriage License j William Ford, laborer, Adams! i County and Cordelia Kraft. Adams j County. Ira H. Sprunger. linotype opera- • ! tor. Berne, and "Anna V. Luginbill. | ■ proof reader at the Berne Review. . Berne. Leo Hanni. Berne Equity Eleva I tor. Route 3. Berne, and Vent Hu- ; ‘ ser. print shop employe. Berne. o Owns r.a-e Relic Belleville. Kan.—(UPJ Mrs. Joe Barrett, a collateral descendant of , , George Washington, possesses a ‘woman’s slipper purchased by the i (first President for a niece. The •niece wore the slipper at social I functions at Washington's home. New Orleans Crime Slumps ! New Orleans —(l*l'l— Vrje-sts ‘ ■ in New Orleans for every type of i offense are decreasing gradually, according to the four-year report I compiled by Superintendent of I'oi lice George H. Reyer. There were . : 28.514 arrests in 19;:’: 31.551 In! 1932; 33,537 in 1531; and 37.233 Ini 11993, 16.797 were charged with be-! | iug disorderly; 3.148 for being | drunk: 158 with nart-otfc violations, i and 66 with murder.

Mi l'll I". Foil 111 | | ,, H ~_| 4’oll till M t IMlK'td * Notice Im hcr* ii> given « Boar«l of <'ornt)iis>ioner« I <’ounty, hid><4n , will rttiiß I for suppling • •.» 1.. iMrd I ed for th* inHint'n.tiß r of | ty Infirmary for the I b*«cinning April 1 ■ Bids to be re t ited April® Requisition nou on I-if five of tin Aud.tor of I I County. a Auditor Adams Cmß _ mJ M»TH K KOH HID* MiKinl Notice ia her. i-\ given M Board of Omni < r.tmaM | Aihtma Countj. 'Lih- ; Indifl on Tuesday. April pH, ■ I until den o'clock A M on $ receive bids 1«»’ <arfl 'run third vein p ■>. :>dntM i livered at tl:« <>-meat Ml I Ilouae in l>eratu' Indiana. ■ Kach I»i4l must Ih> acafl ' with bond and atfidax it MM i by lanr. • yai ‘ r<>ii any-nr .11 n*.K *-1 AH coal furnn • I wllH 1 to the approval of the ■■ ddnt or custodian f th* ; institution when- th* mbw a ( uaed and to b« -HiveM d time or Mmes * th< der at ibe th«'v >’f awarwß | tract. (Men < owao 1 Auditor \danw« 1 ntucc Walla* • cann id m ianapolls for a fe* daya ••’"I rin • Mr- Ohot ■ PUBLIC SALE 1 will sell at nuMic .*3 ' the E. T. Crosl y tarmAs* of Baldwin. Ind % wik * ■ McGill. Ohio, on S'a'« lat 12 o’clo. k noon, tm 1 Wednesday. March 2 i the foll'iwflig il‘ ■■ 1 bwd fH 2 Hd. of Hoi " ' la ' *• i of iron gray ni.c ■ ot»s I years old. a fill' nan" vt ■ j 7 Milk Cow Wol tri* ’ 1 years old wit 1 t .ill • ' ie- ' I cow 6 years old with l ’ al( W ’ 2’ Jersey cows n 'ear- "W- 1 • fresh by day of ■' ,r * | 6 years old. will t< fr.’*h Red cow 8 veaiold. **■ I fn M*ty; Jersey ■”* 7 giving good flow of milt Farming Iptplen” n,s " Binder 7 ft cut; Melon™ ing Mower 6f' 111 lypering 12-Dis> I ertilh*' Drill, giswl as new. 1 ' itor Disc; Cnllinaeker: wagon, new; Farm war<>«. I gondola Hay Ifa.k. I”"* I Ruke; Oliver 14 im h rldilf ing plow; Ciiltbawr, Plow; M.inuic S ( i.oiler, spike tooth liano". Boet Plow; Beet Lif’cr > Gas Engine; Pump J’ l " 1 House Bxlo. OH Piano: J Corn Planter; F ov. ™ loin other article-. Terms Cash MRS. H. | Roy Johnson, auctioneer ■ j Gleliii Gideon. ei< ik.