Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 125, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

A l ■--- - ■ - - ■ f CLASSIFIED (ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE — Manchu noy beans. Harry Edgell, quarter mile north of Hobo. 121-6tx Decatur Super Quality Baby Chicks, special this week, 1,000 English White Leghorns $6.30 per 100, Decatur Hatchery, phone 497. 123tJ FOR SALE— One male registered Jersey calf, three days old, Charley Ward. One mile east Os Decatur, on Pick way, 124-k3tx FOR SALE 1 used 1932 Fordson and 3 used Fordeon tractors. 1 2-yr. oM work horse, 2 tractor plows. 2 air compressors. 5 electric motors. Plow’ points at a reduction. See the new Fordson before you buy. Craigville Garage. 119-4txeod FOR SALE—Duroc Male Hog old enough for service, wanted to buy Beet cultivator. August Selking Jr. Route 4. Preble Phone. 125 31. x FOR SALE—Four year old Guernsey cow and calf. Also two year old Pure Bred Duroc mile hog. W. A. Whittenbarger, 5 miles northeast Decatur. J.25-a3tx' FOR SALE—AII kin is of garden and flower plants. Yellow resistant -cabbage, rust proof tomato, strong out door grown plants. M. Meibers, 1127 West Monroe street. FOR SALE —Used piano, S2O, cash. Spsague Furniture Company. Phone 199, 124-4 t BARGAINS you will find in our I store. Living room suite, $35; 8piece walnut dining room suite, $657 bedroom suite, $45; mattresses, $7. bed springs, $6; porch swings, $4.50. Sprague Furniture Company. Phone 199. 124-4 t FOR SALE —Old Reliable Established Gen l. Merchandise Business. Must sell at once. Write cr call. Box 62, Uniondale, Ind. . 125a5tx FOR SALE —2B Whippet sedan; 27 Whippet sedan; 26 Ford coach. Used furniture. Bryce Daniels. Pleasant' Mills. 123-a3t USED CARS Indiana Truck 5i15.00 Chevrolet Truck ... $115.00 Ford Truck $215.00 Pontiac 1931 Coach. $375.00 Nash Coach $125.00 Essex Sedan $85.00 Chevrolet Coupe ... $185.00 Whippet Sedan .... $105.00 Packard Sedan .... $185.00 Priced Riifhi and Sold Ritrht Terms to suit your needs. Thompson Chevrolet Co. Decatur. FOR SALE —Early cabbage plants. Phone 300. 1315 West Adams street. 123-g3tx AUCTION SALE—Saturday, May 26 at 2:00 P. M. of all furniture, stoves of all kinds, clothing etc. quitting business. Nu-Way Furniture Exchange, 164 So. Second St. 123-a4t FOR SALE — Received new shipment living room suites, $35 and up; bedroom suites S4O and up; oil stoves, $4.90 and up; mattresses, bed springs and congoleum rugs at very reasonable prices. Stucky & Co., Monroe, Ind. 121-7 t WANTED WANTED —Radio or electric work. Call Phone 625. Miller Radio Service, 226 No. 7th St. Apr 9tf WE WANT Rags, Paper, Metal. Scrap Iron and Woo). The Maier Hide & Fur Co., 710 W. Monroe St., Phone 442. 97 ts eod FOR RENT FOR RENT — Good filling station on state highway. Call 45 for information. 123-g3tx ■ o 111,631,765 Pounds of Meat Boston. — (U.R) — Boston, famous for its baked beans, also has a taste for meat. -A survey revealed that Bostonians ate no less than 111,631,765 pounds of meat in 1933. Seed Potatoes Wholesale and zetaii. Carmen, Rural New York, Million Dollar, Petoskey varieties. Dale Cowan. Willshire, Phone 59. 116-2tawk FARR-WAY Cleaning / SUITS. HATS fJL TOP COATS DECATUR LAUNDRY

MARKETREPORTS 1 DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS I — . LOCAL MARKET > Decatur, Berne, Craigvlll .Hoagland Willshire, Ohio Corrected May 24 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 200 tbs $3.25 210 to 250 lbs $3.35 250 to 300 lbs $3.25 > 300 to 350 lbs $3.10 140 Oto 160 lbs _... $2.80 I 120 to 140 lbs $2.15 100 to 120 lbs SI.BO Roughs $2.25 Veelers .. $5.75 Wool lambs $8.25 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., May 24.— iU.PJ —Livestock: Hogs, receipts 1,800; holdovers. 570; slow, weights above 170 lbs., 10c to mainly 15c lower; some lightweights off 25c; few 220 to 250 lbs., I selections. $4; bulk desirable 170 to 1250 lbs., $3.85 to $3.90; plainer i kinds. $3.75; 140 to 160 lbs., $3 30 I to $3.75. Cattle, receipts. 250; little done | |on steer and yearlings; cows and! bulls weak to 25c lower; ciMter ■ cows $1.75 to $2.75; medium bulls : $3.25 down. Calves, receipts, 100; vealers un- I changed; good to choice. $7; common and medium, $4.25 to $5.75. Sheep, receipts, 400; old crop I lambs nominal; few mei.ium kinds | and yearlings straight, $8; bulk spring lambs direct to killer; few | medium to choice 50 to 70-lb, springers, sll to $11.50; interior lightweights down to $7.50. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., May 24.—(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, steady to 5c lower; 250-300 lbs., $3.50; 200-250 lbs., $3.40; 160200 lbs., $3.30; 300-350 lbs.. $3.10; 150-160 lbs., $2.90; 140-150 lbs.. $2.65; 130-140 lbs., $2.40; 120-130 lbs., $2.10; 100-120 lbs., $1.90; roughs. $2.50; stags, $1.25. Calves. $6; laml>s. $lO. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept, i Wheat 90% .88% .89% Corn 50% .53% .54% Oats 35% .36% .36% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 24 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 Iba or better 79c No. 2 New Wheat. 58 lbs 78c Oats 30c White or mixed Corn . 55c First class Yellow Corn 60c Wool 20 to 25 cents Berne Bank Will Make Distribution " ■ Rudolph Schug, liquidator for the Peoples State Bank at Berne, announced today that a 15 per cent distribution will be made Saturday, June 2. The total distribution will amount to $21,506.88. the largest check going to the Adams County the amount, $1,933.48 j PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday, May 26 Commencing at 2 P. M. QUITTING BUSINESS Everything must sell to the highest bidder. All kinds of Household Furniture and Stoves, consisting of: New Upholstered Living Room Suites; New Baby Cribs and Pads; China Cabinets: Dining Room Suites; Dressers; Beds and Springs; Kitehen Cabinets; Mattress; Sewing Machine; Leather Davenports; Odd Chairs and Rockers: Drop Leaf Tables; Wash Machines; one Extra Good Kitchen Range; Cook Stoves; Heating Stoves: Ice Boxes; one Hall Clock; one Extra Fine Walnut Antique Bed Room Suite; one Work Bench; one lot of Good Ladies Dresses and Mens Clothing, Odds and Ends. EVERYTHING GOES. Don't miss this sale if you want bargains. Terms—Cash. NU-WAY Furniture Exchange 164 S. Second st. Decatur i hi— See me for Federal Loans and Abstracts of Title. French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract Co. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 11:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8.00 p. m. Telephone 135.

PETERSON NEWS Mr. and -Mrs. Martin Fruehtc and daughter Leona of Maglev vailed on , Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Briener Friday afternoon. Mrs. Frank Fugate and daughter called on Mrs. Glen Straub and faI mily Friday. Mr. and Mrs. tuitnrr Sprague of Monroeville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Al Straub. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Brown and son of Decatur spent Friday even-

CINDERELLA'' Harold Bell Wright

~ — r ■ " SYNOPSIS Ann Haskel, taciturn, independent mountaineer, rules the little village of Pine Knob, in the Ozarks, with an iron hand. Though generally considered hard and unbending, Ann could also be extremely generous. A hard-working farmer herself, Ann disapproves of the useless life led by the wealthy vacationists at the Lodge. Among these, however, is one exception— Diane Carrol, lovely young artist, whose work means more to her than her wealth; yet Ann considers Diane's painting a waste of time. The latter, however, greatly admires the mountain woman who sacrificed her own happiness for her son’s future. Years before, following the death of her first husband, Ann had placed her boy, John Herbert, in the care of an old friend, Judge Shannon, so that he might be educated properly. She has not seen John Herbert since. In his place, she raised a ne'er-do-well stepson, Jeff Todd. ; Then, one day, John Herbert unexpectedly returns. Diane happens to be at the station when he arrives and offers the stranger a lift. They are trapped in the woods by heavy rains. John Herbert confides in Diane that, although he studied law, his heart is in writing and he hopes his mother will not be disappointed. With darkness approaching, they find a sheltered spot and John Herbert goes in search of kindling wood. CHAPTER XIII. “We must hurry.” urged Diane, following his example. ‘’lt's growing dark fast.” With desperate haste they gathered wood to last through the night. The light was almost gone when John Herbert ran back to the car and returned with the cushion. While Diane watched he quickly arranged the bits of dry leaves and twigs and dead grass. A match flared, the tiny flame caught in a wisp of grass, reached for the dead leaves, leaped to the twigs, and a ruddy glow banished the dark shadows under the ledge and touched the wet bushes near by with glistenin': light. , “Hurrah!” cried Diane. "All the comforts of home!” “Better have some more wood,” returned her companion, and disappeared in the gloom beyond the circle of the firelight. With his going the girl felt suddenly very much alone and unprotected —an odd feeling for Bill Carrol’s daughter. About the small spot of light in which she sat the vast forest made itself felt. At her back the wall I of the cliff, with the overhanging | ledge, in the glow of the fire, was friendly enough, but out there in the darkness a host of phantom shanes crowded close in threatening silence—watching, waiting—held back only by the narrow circle of the light. She shuddered and moved closer to the rocky wall. She listened. There was no sound save the sullen distant grumble of the angry creek, and a ghostly sigh as a breath of wind swept through the ! tree-tops that were heavy with the rain. Her companion seemed to have vanished completely. It was as if he had never existed. How strange! She did not realize that i on the sodden earth and among the wet bushes the young man’s moveI ments would make very little noise. The suspense carried her to the verge of panic and, unable to endure it longer, she shouted, desperately: “John — John Herbert—where are you? Are you there?” His cheery answer sounded startlingly near. “It’s all right. I’m coming.” As he emerged from the darkness with a log of goodly proportions on his shoulder, Diane realized how glad she was that she was not alone and that it was John Herbert Haskel who was with her. “I thought I had lost you,” she said, in a tone of relief, wondering at herself. He laughed happily as he lowered his heavy burden to the ground. “I was hunting a good backlog—one that will last. It’s not quite so dark as it looks from here. It will be, though, in another ten minutes.” She watched him with a new interest as he arranged the backlog and the fire to his satisfaction. “But that load was heavy enough for two men,” she remarked. "I never guessed you were so strong.” “Oh, that,” he returned, with a touch of embarrassment. “Why.

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY M, 1934.

Ing with Mr. an I Mrs. W. B. Weldy and Mrs. Mabie Marshell and sou Henry. Mrs. Bob Bentz and eons of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Heller and aon Bobby called on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spade Friday evening. Mr. ami Mrs. Fred McGill of Fort Wayne spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Straub. Miss Jean Hauck is spending a few days in Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Burt Aungst of

you see, I went in for football a little. Used to throw the hammer ' some, too, and that sort of thing.” e He did not tell her that he was c credited with having made football 1 history for his university, and that * he had won a half-dozen or more * medals in various athletic events. I When it came to taking pride in * some things, Ann Haskel’s son was f as queer as Bill Carrol's daughter. J But of his chosen work—the work to which he proposed to de- ! vote his life—John Herbert talked . freely. f The darkness of the night deep- , ened. The starless sky shut down > over them. The forest drew its ■ gloomy walls closer to hide them. . Save for the low, distant sound of . the swollen stream, which was like a sullen undertone, they were eni gulfed in a vast silence. Time > ceased; life stood still. The circle

Fjf Jb WK IL WSF 7 \ T !/• “I thought I had lost you,” she said, in a tone of relief, wondering at herself.

of their camp-flre light became their world—a tiny world in which they were alone. It may have been this feeling that they were shut up in a world that was all their own, and that all other worlds were so far away, which led the young; man to open wide to his companion the door of his inner self. It may have been because his companion was an artist—because there was between them a bond of sympathy, of understanding, and mutual interests. It may have been simply because they were man and woman sharing amid such wild surroundings such primitive shelter. Whatever the reason, the last of the Haskels spoke without reserve of those' things which to him were most vital and sacred. And Diane, leading him on, came to know this man as she could never have known him in the normal course of their lives. Indeed, as he revealed himself to her in his ambitions, his philosophy of life, his devotion to his ideal, his worship of the beautiful, she forget that they had met only a few hours before. She felt that she had known him always. She had a sense of intimacy with him such as she had never before experienced with any man—not even with her father. After all, acquaintanceship — real acquaintanceship—is not a matter of years; it may be more a matter of moments. Conventional introductions do not introduce; they merely mention names. If two people are to become genuinely acquainted, they must make themselves known each to the other. If opportunity for this be wanting, they must ever remain strangers Bill Carrol’s daughter and Ann Haskel’s son, that night, were properly and adequately introduced. They might, indeed, thereafter go their separate ways: they eould never after such an experience be strangers When John Herbert declared his fervent belief that life should he beautiful, not hani snd sordid with

Fort Wayne spent the week-end I with Mr. and Mrs. Grant Ball. Mr. and Mm. John Bright and Mrs. George Bright called on Harve Beery and family Sunday. Bob Beery, who has been spending a few months in Mexico, came home last Friday. Mrs. Bob Bentz and eons of r.ndianapois are spending a few I weeks with Mr. ami Mm. Ralph Straub and daughter Virginia. Miss Frances Abbott spent a few days in Decatur last week.

i1 ugly materialism, Diane thought of Ann Haskel and Nance and Jets. ’ Desperately she argued that the , i profession of the law for which hig 1 mother had educated him might : well serve his idealism. “Humas, i rights—the guardianship of the! weak, the protection of the innoi cent, the thwarting of evil, the i overthrow of the vicious, do not these constitute the very founda- . tion of beautiful living? Is not justice one of the noblest expressions of beauty?” “Yes,” he admitted. ' But how can one be true to his ideals without first being true to himself? I cannot go in for the law merely because mother wishes me to. 1 must do the thing that is in me t« do. If I deny that which is me I falsify myself.” And Diane, remembering her own early struggles with Aunt

Jessica, and the creed by which het father had lived, smiled her com&lete understanding of this stuborn soul. Thinking to turn the conversation into a somewhat lighter vein, she remarked, laughingly, that i there might be peculiar advantages, these days, in having a good lawyer in the family—preferably a federal judge. But even as she spoke she remembered certain activities in which the young man’s mother was popularly supposed to be interested, and was sorry for the allusion. Then, when she saw that John Herbert had cleanly missed the point of her remark, she was tempted to experiment. With a little shiver, as if chilled, she said, “I confess I wouldn't object to a good stiff drink right now, law tfr no law.” This, of course, brought up the lively question of prohibition, and Ann Haskel’s son expressed with no little vigor his uncompromising contempt and hatred for bootleggers, illicit distillers, and all those who profit by the violation of the Eighteenth Amendment He did not argue that the law was wise. He only insisted that it was the law and was, therefore, to be upheld by all decent and right-thinking people. He admitted that he would not be opposed to the use of liquor under different circumstances. He was not, he insisted, a fanatic. “But the majesty of the law, the obligation of citizenship.”— Again and again he quoted Judge Shannon, and as she saw his tremendous respect and admiration for the man under whose influence he had grown to manhood, Diane understood why Ann Haskel had placed her son in the keeping of such a friend. But when the young maa declared his conviction that his mother felt as the judge did about this much-discussed question, Diane was frightened. (To Be Continued) Capyntht. 1132. ov Hirold Ball Wrlfkt niur'buted t>y Kias F«alum Syndicate. Inc

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these tese Qu set Ions? Turn to page Four tor the enswere. 1. In which borough of New York is Fordhum University? 2. Who wrote the song, "The Last Rose of Summer?" ' 3. Who wrote "Old Curiosity Shop?" 4. Name the largest National Park in the U. 8. 5. Who was Marcus Trentfous Varro? "6. Name tne lumous wateifalls in the Zamzezi River, Africa. 7. In what year wan Abraham Lincoln assassinated? 8 OZ what country is Canberra the capital? 9. What body of French troops ! made the last desperate charge at the battle of Waterloo? 10. What language was spoken <n ancient Rome? o MtTlt K TO XOX.HI:x|I>t:XTW In Adaiiin < Irriilt < owrl \prfl Term. IWU STATE OK INDIANA ADAMiS UOUNTTY SS Harriet Beatty, Administratrix of! tiie Estate of Elisabeth S. Morrinon.: Deceased VS. American Life Inaur-i a nee company, a Michigan corporation. De|>artment of financial institutions of the state of Indiana, l«eo Yager, Special representative in the matter of Liquidation of Old Adams County Bank Union Central Life Insurance company, an Ohio corporation. The Old First National Bank, a corporation Harriet Beattey, Bruce Wallace, Hattie S. Obenauer, A. It. Aahbaucher, doing business under the name and style of Ashbauvher s tin shop. To American Life Insurance Company, a Michigan Corporation, Union Central Life Insurance Company, an Ohio Corporation and Bruue Wallace: You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioner as administratrix of the estate aforesaid has filed in the Circuit Court of Adams County, Indiana, a petition making you defendants thereto, and praving therein for an "order and decree of said Court authorising the sale of certain Heal Estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of said estate, and has also filed an affidavit averring that you and each of you are non-residents of the state of Indiana or that your residence is unknown and that you are necessary parties to said proceedings, and that said petition, so filed and which is nowpending, is set for hearing in said < Circuit Court at the court house in IMn atur, Indiana, on the first day of September Term of the Adams Circuit Court, 1934. Witness live Clerk and Seal of said Court this 23 day of May 193 4. David I>. Depp <Terk of Adams Circuit Court ' LITZ ANII MIEH*, tltorac>« I.Et.tL VOi'KE OF l»| III.I< HEAMIMJ Public Service Commission I>o< ket No. 11579 In the matter of the petition of the Citizens Telephone company for authority to discontinue operation of Switchboard at the Munroe. Indiana, exchange and to its Monroe exchange subscribers w*ith telephone service from its gnd Berne exchanges. Notice is hereby given that the Public Service Commission will conduct public hearing in this cause in the High S< hool Auditorium at Monroe, Indiana 10:30 A. M . Monday, June 4, 1934. Public participation is requested PUBLIx’ SERVICE COMMISSION By Samuel L. Trabue. commissioner. Sherman Minton, public counsellor. Indianapolis Ind. May 23, 1934. May 24 NOTH E OF COMMINSIONifiK’S SALK OF RKII. RffTATK In the Id a him Circuit < ourt tpril Term. 1U34 No. IMMIS STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF ADAMS, SS. John H. Hilty, et al. vs. Christ L. Llechty, et al. The undersigned Commissioner, by virtue of an order of the Adams Circuit Court, made and entered hi a clause therein pending, entitled John H. Hilty, Peter Hilty, Christian Hilty, Amanda Indermehle, Jutlius Miller, Catherine Miller, Amos Llechty, Anna Luginbiil, and Barbara Reichenbach vs. Christ L.Liechty, Emi! Liechty, William Llechty, and Catherine Liechty, and numbered 14905 upon the dockets thereof, hereby gives notice that at the premises, Berne, Ind., on the 7th day of June 1934, at 10 o'clock A. M of said day. he will offer for sale at public auction and at not less than two thirds of the full appraised value thereof. the following described real estate, to-wit: “Inlot 507 in the 59th Addition to the town of Berne, Indiana, as platted by Hilty Bros , in Adaqis County in the state of Indiana." Terms of sale: At least one-third of the pun hase price cash in hand and the balance in two equal Installments, payable respectively in not to exceed nine and eighteen months, to be evidenced by the notes of the purchaser bearing six percent interest from their dates, waiving relief, providing for attorneys fee and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. C. L. Walters Commissioner May 17-34-11 NOTICE OF FINAL OF ESTAIT-: NO. .T 037 Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Richard Keith Davis, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, on the Sth day of June, 1934, 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, and receive their distributive shares. Milton C. Brown, Administrator De<atur, Indiana May 17, 1934. Nnthan C. Nrlaon, Attorney May 17-24

“Do you know that the (hevrol 11 head motor 'O —!• the most economical motor to ooer t. . IV motor car today. And that In addition it i able of any motor built. Furthermore , “ th ' "'««■ gower and 80 miles an hour if you want will mias the finest ride you ever nan » driv ‘ BTONEBURNER. Phone 170, for a n.J >6u ' ill kX"*

Robin Battled Own Shadow Battle Creek, Mich.—(U.R) — The i long-known antipathy of the robin for his own shadow was demon strated here when one of the redbreasted clan attacked his reflec- . tion in the door panel of the car owned by Charles H. Scully. Scully i returned to his parked can to find ; the bird clawing and pecking at the shiny surface. So infuriated was i the bird at the interruption of his battle that he flung himself several time at Scully. o— - Woman Builds Banjo Clock Detroit — (U.R) -Unable to buy a t much-wanted banjo clock for orna menting her home. Mrs. Ruth Bird • is making one with the aid of a plan of adult instruction recently -

Public A uctl DECATUR RIVERSIDE SA J IIHEINEK KEEI) BARN ■ SATURDAY, May 26 - 12o’chri J 20 Horses-10 Illinois horses; 1 pa ir Bay mares ij.il li 1 pair Sorrel Geldings. 4 and 5 years old i pair Ren,i-B.it years old. 10 head Good Milch Cows: 10 nead Feedmjfjg Bulls; Feeding Hogs. Sows and Pigs; 1 Pure Bred immuned. 2 Oliver riding corn plows, like new; • mow®? corn plow; 1 s>de delivery rake; 1 hay tedder; sheet son tractor; Oliver tractor plows. 14 inch: set Load of Shrubbery and Trees. Miscellaneous" i%| DECATUR RIVERSIDE SAM L. W. MURPHY, E. J. AHR, Managers |

MARQi™ (11 rta * n • ’ al J ■Li lUll If Kill *Vlb l!»;>’itifal l'r«‘“ ! rl HbT ' ♦ ' S <»<>th l'» WUEH.Ia ■ 1J Men’s 75c value Men's 111 | Blue Work Seersuctt I SHIRTS PAMB . ™^ p CUT ’ Sale Price Sale Pm I 58c _9H 10c “Otis” • $1.35 vain I Unbleached Birds-Ew I MUSLIN DIAPEIj 6(» th Anniversary ()n<? r|) „ en tft I Sale rue Soft Finish • I sN<m lrritatins. »l Sale Pr*e I Yards for .39c PLEASE NOTICE I Every Item in this store (eveepi I ;,,nl 'J'rSl Specially Priced DURING 01 It ' 'th P . ;i | SALE. This store is actualh tin ■ ns 1)1(1 I We appreciate the splendid patrcmue th..* '® I and customers have given us in tH P* b • a lone time to stay in business but ".'. <[ooßl .our Honest Business Principles .1 TEST OF TIME. THE SCHAFER STR HARDWARE AND HOME Fl

■ " r E( l"lStio B . Iequips nuke Ib fl "railing fo r a ' provided. *'9ro Cookl J ! A?*"'"file, »’U‘ 'i .if his Ju v >!a-. T-ashms CoU« l , Negro 'ia 1 only employe wh., tl.i- 'ib-ge (ucsunj. I foun.lt-il, Get the Habit