Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 180, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

f CLASSIFIED 1 ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, ' _ AND NOTICES * FOR SALE FOR SALE —Living room aultea, |35 ami up; bed room suites, 125 iind up; also specials on breakfast seta, juai tresse*, rugs and oil ,tQvea. See our new heating and raaga stoves for this fall delivery. Come and see us for bargains. Stucky and Co., Monroe, Ind. 176-6tx FOTI SALE —5, 6, 8. and 10 ton scales and scale houses. Several 2 and 4 cylinder gas engines. Central Sugar Co., Decatur. 178-3 t wanted"" For RADIO or ELECTRICAL repair* call MARCELLUS MILLER phone 625. 1 specialize in auto radio installation and repairs. Miller Radio Service, 226 No. 7th sL 172tf WANTED — Everybody and his (not her and sister to see the wonder of the warm air heating industry, the new HOMER warm air furnace on display at the Decatur Lumber Company office. Our price wil Isurpriee you 30-Aug. 6-13-20 FOR RENT FOR RBNT —Five room modern house on Fourth street. Inquire 215 North Third street. 180-g3t H Ignition K Wires and Cables S for All Cars, f ENGLAND’S S Al’ T O I’ AR T S U Ist Door So. of Court House ’S Phone 282 COURTHOUSE Marriage License Merit? W. Riley, building mover, Route 6, Degatur and Ida W. Girod, Route 2. .Monroe, Real Estate Transfer .Monroe State Bank to Eddie J. and Clara Fricke part of inlot 60 and 80 in Monroe for SI.OO. Walter Schug et al to Earl 'Fliowpson itrlot 14 in Berne for >I.OO. ■Earl Thompson to Walther Schug et ux inlot 14 in Berne for SI.OO. o— President Leaves Hawaiian Islands Aboard the U. ?. S. New Orleans, with President Roosevelt, July 30—(By ladio to the United Press 1 — President Roosevelt poured over the reports on federal projsets in the far west today as the U. S. S. Houston carried him 1 toward Astoria. Ore., next port of , call on his vacation trip. - The study of the ffl-igation. navigation end hybroidw’trlc projects sponsored by his "new deal" In the Pacific northwest was to be broken during the day by a little diversion —the resumption of tactical maneuvers between his flagship and its convoy, lhe New Orleans. , ■-»-■£ —Q Get the Habit — Trade at Home NOTICE ‘ I will be out of my office from •Tuesday, July 31 until Friday eveMing, August 3. Dr. G. J. Kohne Sheets Bros. Cleaners N. 2nd st. Phone 359 Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams County National Farm Loan Ass’n., (’harter 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 Sec Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed • ’ Chiropractor and , Naturopath Phone 314 140 So. 3rd st. Neurocgiometer Service X-Ray Labsretory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Cralgvilie Hoagland Corrected July 28 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 200 lbs S4.M» 200 to 250 lbs $4.60 250 to 300 Mw $4.7« 300 to 350 lbs $4.50 140 to 160 libs 1 3 - 50 120 to 140 libs. $52.75 W 0 to 120 lbs $2.25 Roughs $ 3 down Stags $1.50 Vealem .. $4" 5 Ewe and wether lambs $5.50 East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 2,000; 5 to mostly 15c over Friday's average; bulk desirable 170 to 280 lbs., averaging above 190 ths. $5.25 to $5.35; few $5.40; 150 to 230 lbs., averaging 170 to 190 lbs. $6.tM) to $5.15; mixed quality 140 to »V 0 tbs. $4.50 packing sows $3.90 to $4.25. Cattle receipts 2,200; steers and yearlings strong to 25c and more higher; better grades up 15 to 25c mostly; 5 loads strictly good to choice 1,300 tb. steers $8.90; yearlings $8.10; bulk dryfeds $7.50 to $8.10; in between kinds $6.25 to $7; fleshy grassers $4.75 to $5; common grass steers heifers $3.35 to $4.25; little run reactive cows; i low cutters and cutter grades sl| to $2. Calf receipts 800; vealers strong to higher, $6 down. Sheep receipts 1.700; better grade lambs strong to 25c higher, some plainer lots up more; good to near choice $7, equivalent to $7.25; common and medium $6.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Wheat July Sept. Dec. May Old $1.00% 1.02% 1.03% 1.06% New 1.00% 1.02% 1.03% Corn .69 .69% .72% Oats, old .45% .46 .47% Oats, new .46 .47% FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., July 30 —(UP) ■ -'Livestock;: Hogs steady to &? lower; 250-300 lbs. $54.90; 200-260 lb*. $4.75; 180-200 lbs. $4.55; 300350 lbs. $4.60; 150-160 Ibe. $3.80; 140-154) H». 355; 130-140 lbs. $2.00; 120-130 lbs. >2.70; 100-120 lbs. $2.40. Roughs $3.50; Stags $1.75. Calve* >5; Lambs $6. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected July 28 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or better 88c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 87c Oats —3B c White or mixed corn 75c First class yellow corn 80c Wool __ 20 to 25 cents —— o Fishballs Won Prize Bridgeport. Conn. (D.R) —Baseballs. tennis balls, footballs and basketballs are usual enough in most schools but along came Miss Dora F. Brinsmade, high school English teacher, with fishballs. She won a cooking school prize for the most tasty fishballs. _ _ - > ————

—- - — ( A Rich Milk Food. W** ICE C REAM Approved by Good Housekeeping I N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 136. Get a Ringlet End PERMANENT $1.75 V $3.00 Cozy Beauty Shoppe Room 5 W. of C. Bldg. Phone 266 Spring Filled || MATTRESSES I $9.50 - $22.50 I Watch Our Windows for Eargains Ke Sprague Furn. Co. K 152 8. Second St. Phons 190

OUTLAW’S FATHER, OTHER MEMBERS OF FAMILY STAGE (CONTINUED FROM newspaper men and photographers. A week ago they were smashing cameras and denying reporters admittance to their homes. Tester

lIBAIHWN6! JOAN CLAYTON and MALCOLM LOGAN~L

CHAPTER XXIX ■Shall I tell Mark you'll be in later?” I asked. ‘‘Yes,’’Finn said. Anderson stood aside as th* sheriff and the girl went into the office. Dr. Calvert stood looking after them for a minute. Then ha straightened his shoulders and walked in after them. The door closed. I went on thoughtfully to Mark's room. Sue was with him. “Hello, Sue,” I said. “Hi, Mark.” “Hi yourself,” he said. “What happened to Clcndening?” "Dr. Calvert’s predietion came true,” I answered. “The day Vail was killed the doctor said that curiosity would kill Clcndening some day, and it has.” "Was he dead when you got there?” Mark demanded. I nodded. Mark clutched wildly at his disordered hair. “Then you didn't find out what he wanted to see you about? Nobody there knew what he found?” "No. Cross was in Ruxton’s room. Neither of them even heard Clendening telephoning. All they knew was that he was prowling around outside the cottage just before the storm.” “That’s probably what killed him,” Sue said. “Ruxton has a hunch he was frightened or attacked,” I told them. “He wasn't able to give any reason for believing it The place seems to be getting on his nerves.” “Poor man,” Sue said. “It’s his illness.” “He's been full of melancholv forebodings since Vail was killed, Mark agreed. “I wouldn’t like to live in that cottage myself.” He frowned and began plucking at his hair again. “Now, what could Clendening have found, or imagined he found, outside the cottage?” “Why speculate?” I asked. “We’ll never know, and something more important has happened, anyway. Fetipa’s come back. Mark sat up. He reached for the telephone. “That’s news for Finn,” he cried. “He knows it already," I said. “In fact, he’s questioning Felipa now. Clendening telephoned him before he called you.” “Gosh, I wish he’d give me a chance at her,” Mark said. “I want to know why she ran away!” “She almost got away again. Anderson told her to get her things and get out, and if the sheriff hadn’t come up to see Clendening, he probably never would have seen her." Mark chuckled. “Anderson must have needed that permanent smile of his when the sheriff walked in on him.” He rubbed his hands. “Well, well, life’s getting interesting again!” Mark fretted for half an hour, wondering whether the sheriff was coming to see him. before Finn arrived. The sheriff looked angry and disappointed, though he tried to hide that from us. “How are you, Mr. Hillyer?” he said, and to Sue. “How are you. Miss?” Sue and Mark said hello to him and Mark added, “I hear there’s been a lot of excitement around the place today.” “Do you know what Clendening called me about?” Finn asked. .dark shook his head. “I haven’t any idea,” he said. “The last I heard of him, he was trying to find some hidden meaning in the record of ‘Waiting For You.'” “You haven't got any Idea what he might have been looking for?” “No. He isn’t one of my assist* ants.” The sheriff reached in his coat pocket. When his hand eame out there was a small round metal object in it. “I found this in the poeket of his dressing gown,” Finn said. As Mark took it in his hand, I saw it was a 'metal button that the sheriff had found. Mark held it close to his eyes and read aloud. “Short-Carr." He looked puzzled for a minute and then said, “Oh, yes, the overall manufacturers. Well, that’s interesting. There was a button missing from the overalls you found in the lake. I remember.” Finn nodded. “I figure Clendening picked this up somewhere outside the cottage. If we only knew where, It might mean something.” “Yes,” Mark said. “Well, I’m sorry, sheriff, but I didn’t commission Clendening to look for it, and I haven’t any idea where he found it. It’s just another clue that’s flopped, like the picture Loren took.” He paused and lit a cigarette. “What about Felipa? Did she tell you anything?” The sheriff’s face reddened. “Not yet, he said grimly, “but she will!”

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. 11 '- Y

I day they were answering all que»Hons graciously and posing for , pictures willingly. ‘ zThe act brought criticism yesterday from the Rev. M Millard, pas- > tor of the Broadway M. K. church. “In the name of the youth of In- : diana and for the sake of the name ■ of our state. I protest against the continuation of this sensationalism

“Why did she say she ran away?" "She said she was scared,” Finn answered. "That’a her story, and she's sticking to it.” “Where has she been?" “In New York, with aome other friends." “I suppose ehe walked past the lake to the state road and got a lift to some town where she could get a bus, didn’t she?" Mark asked. “That’a just what she did,” Finn said. “Why did she come back?” “Well, her story is that her friends in New York told her she waa liable to get in trouble, hidin’ out. My guess would be she came

AI xfk/. 1 r '•OF A “There’s no need to bully her,” Calvert said quietly. "I wrote the note.”

back when she read in the papers that the case was closed.” Mark nodded. “And besides, her money was still in the bank here. I’d like to see her, sheriff. Where is she?” “She’s still in Anderson’s office. I got a deputy with her.” "Did you ask her if she left a note when she ran away?” Finn grinned craftily. "I didn’t ask her. I told her I wanted to know what she said in the note.” His expression changed to one of disgust “She said it was a note to Anderson, sayin’ she had to go to New York.” He shook his head. “There’s nothin’ slyer than one of these women when they don't want to talk.” "I wish you’d bring her in here. I can speak Spanish a little, and she might talk to me.” The sheriff shrugged. “If I can’t make her talk, you can’t,” he said. “I don’t mind if you take a try at it, though.” He picked up the telephone and asked for Anderson’s office. When the deputy answered the telephone, he ordered Felipa brought to Mark’s room. "Thanks,” Mark said. He smiled at Sue. “How's the million-dollar smile working today, sweetheart?” he asked. “About ninety-nine eents worth,” Sue replied pertly. “It might work with Felipa, though. She’s a simple soul.” Mark grimaced at her and began to smooth his hair anti adjust an imaginary necktie. There was a knock on the door and he turned and smiled dazzlingly in that direction as he said, “Come in.” We all burst out laughing, for it was Dr. Calvert, not Felipa, who entered. Ha looked somewhat surprised and asked, “What’s funny?” “Mark is,” I replied. “That smile was supposed to knock you over, doctor.” “Sorry I’m so unresponsive,” he said. He looked at Sue and said, “Now. if it had been your smile—” Then, recalling himself, he cleared hia throat embarraasedly and said to the sheriff in • very business-like voice: “I’ve Just made a very complete examination of Clendening’a body. There’s absolutely no evidence of

“If debts are to bo paid by relating this grewaome story, what I about the Interests of I? families who have lost their loved ones as la result of this man's checkered I career." —oi ,Mr. and Mrs. Roger Swaim and Idauhgtere of Bluffton were visitors |H lie. atur Saturday e'ciiitig. _

violence. I don’t think an autopsy will be necessary.” He was about to leave when there was another knock. Thia time it was Felipa and the deputy. The girl looked sullen and frightened. “Buena* dias, Felipa,” Mark said. He smiled at her very kindly, and added something in Spanish, relipa's dark-circled eyes lost some of their fright. She replied rapidly in her own language. Mark answered her and then turned to the sheriff. “I’ve told her that it is impossible for you to believe that she is telling the whole truth. I said that we all want to help her, but that she must be frank.”

He motioned toward a chair and said something that must have been an invitation to sit down-, for Felipa cautiously walked to the chair and sat on the very edge of it. She darted a glance around the room and then looked back at Mark. It seemed to me that for an instant her eyes rested on the doctor before they moved on. His face was impassive as usual. Mark resumed his conversation in an easy, friendly voiee. The girl began to relax. She replied to him at greater and greater length, with emphatic gestures. It was quite apparent that he was winning her confidence. Presently he began to speak in English. “Your friends in New York were right when they told you to come back,” he said. Then suddenly he asked: “Who wrote you the note you got the night you left?” “Why,” she stammered, "what note, Mr. Hillyer?” “Now, Felipa, you know what note I mean. The one the bellboy brought you that eveniag.” She clasped and unclasped her hands in her lap. A look of distress twisted her face. “No puedo decire,” she answered. "I can’t tell you.” “Who wrote it?” Mark asked. His voice was still gentle, but there was compulsion in it. “A man,” Felipa said. “He wanted to see me.” “Was it Joe Barker?” Finn demanded. “No,” said Felipa. “Joe Barker? What was he to me ? Once he took me to the movies. That wa« all.” “Who was it, then?” Finn asked. He walked closer to her and stx'-i looking down at her. Then, as she remained silent, he thundered, “If you know what’s good for you, you’ll tell the truth." Suddenly Dr. Calvert stepped forward. “Stop it!” he cried. The sheriff whirled on nim. The doctor looked at him, smiling. It seemed to me the kind of smile you might see on the face of a man who, having abandoned all hope, had lost all fear and won the right to laugh at disaster. “There’s no need to bully her,” he said quietly. "I wrote the note.” (To Be Continued) ConyrUht. bv lain Clayton ?nr) Walcolni Txtgaa DUlributad toy Rina Features Syndicate, Inc

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these tese Qusstlcns? Turn to P*fl® Four foe th* answer*. 1 What Is a yacht? 2. What do the wingc I cap and , sandals with which Metvury Is al ways represented, mean.’ 3 What U the name of the document issued by a government for (he Identification and protection of. Its citizens aboard? 4. Which species of Mrd makes the longest annual flight 5. in which eity is George Washington Univ.rvlty-? 6. N uue the Speaker iff the I . b House of Representative*. 7. Who was Yahwe? 8. What proportion of the weight of the human ibcaly is blood .’ 9. What are Pasteur Institutes? JO. Who discovered the circulation of the blood? 1. hi which state is the town of Pass Christian? 2. Where is Commonwealth College? 3. What women writer used the pseudonym George Eliot? 4. What is the state flower of Ohio? 5. What particular type of radiation was developed by Prof. Roentgen? 6. Are the dal's of the week alWays written with capital letters? 7. Who wrote the collection of sonnets and lyrics called "The Passionate Pilgrim?" 8. What does prognathus mean? 9. Name the capital of British Guiana. 10. What ib the relationship of children who have one parent in common? Marriage Licenses Set Record Allentown. Pa., — (UP) — Add Love's paradozes; Vital statistics

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.figures for Lehigh County reveal that an all-time record number of ■ 573 marriage licenses were applied ; .for during the first six months of t<Ki4 But. for the same period 58; j tuples filed IH’i’l" for d|v<>rte ' rumor change IN PERSONNEL ! (CONTINUED FROM* ' to be followed closej ly by Go* • I’aul V- McNutt, The governor is said to feel that ’ a drastic *t» P I* n*caM*ry to end ; criticism of the Indiana prison ays- | tent. The administration has been i blamed hy critics for the escape of ' ten ntontibeni of the John Dillingei ' gang last September, the parole I of Dillinger himself, more than a year ago, fn fluent escapes by trusties and the moot recent outihreaki in which two trusties and five inI matf* of the prison hospital walked ' away early Saturday morning. Despite his friendship for warden j Kunkel, it was pointed out, McNutt I may be forced to make a change in

Public Auction The undersigned administrator of the estate of Margaret V Reckard. deceased, will «»H *t public auction at 415 South sth i Decatur, Ind., on TUESDAY, JULY 31st Commencing at 6:39 p. m. [Household Good consisting of Bids. Dressers. Stand.. Stole.;. Tzbl* ' Chairs; Cooking Utensils; Dishes; many articles too uunieruu $ ! mention. Terms —Cash. C. E. PETERSON, Admr. Roy Johnson, auct. - —annniiMnfnirirnTiii'f it.-.-...-

tho prison adininietralion t bf the proximity (rt t ” n >| paign. | Kopublii ans are expected lo ]| tho many weaipes as lo «■ teriaLelaiuUng that Polith"'”! be taken out ~f the prison | Wayne Coy. secretary to lh . I emo. in charge o r pen., J 'I has been investigating th.3 Saturday. He | s expected tn the result of his inveMtlg.,3 the governor eirly this JJI Hammond Workers Abandon Strik, ■Hammond, Ind, July More than 600 employe. ( ,t m Shell petroleum corporation ni at East Chicago returned to today following settleniert <>i strike which has kept the* uu s since July 2. An agreement was reai hwi J union representatives and officials at St. Louis UVtr J . week-end. ■ I All pickets were withdrawn i. strikers. "

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