Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 206, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, i AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SAUE—'Pears 25 and 50c per bushel. 1626 W. M nroe St. 204FOR BUJ4C- Sorrel mare in foai. Theodore Kwell, Route 2 Decatur I‘irtble pluuie. 204-k3tx FOR SALE—I used 15-30 Fordson; 2 used Fordson*; 1 Hart-Parr; 1. 30-80 Ohio Tractor; 2 tractor plow*; 6 culti-paeker and Itoea; 12 electric motor* % to 10 li. 'p.; 1 lloctric cool water pump. See the I ijew Fordson before you buy. — Jiaigville Garage. Aug. 13-15, 29-22, 27-20 I FOR SALE—Bargains in new furniture. Odd chest of drawers I $7.50; card tables 85c; kitchen I cabinets |18; porcelain top kitchen tables $4.98: breakfast se/il 88 50 to $25; 9x13 linoleum rugs $5.65; 9x12 Axminster rugs $25 to $32.50. Sprague Furniture Co., i phone l‘*9, residence phone 5351. / 206t3 [ FOR SALE—Used furniture. We buy; trade and sell used furniture, stoves and pianos. Highest cash prices paid. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 190, residence j 5351.' 206t-3 GRAND PIANO BARGAIN —Will sacrifice on very moderate terms almost new, 1934 model. Apartment Grand if sold at once. Will accept your old piano as part payment. For particulars, address Credit Adjuster, 812 Main street. Anderson. Ind. 206n7t FOR SALE — Kalamazoo Cabinet Heaters, Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces. Factory prices and terms. We save you % to %. Why pay more? Sprague Furniture Co., Phone 199. It FOR SALE—Good honeyrock muskmelon*. Henry Take. 3-4 miles north of Kirkland high school. 205WANTED For RADIO or ELECTRICAL repairs call MARCELLUS MILLER phone 625. 1 specialize in auto radio installation and repairs. Miller Radio Service, 226 No. 7th st. 172tf WANTED TO RENT—Small house reasonable. Immediate possession “ Mrs. Clarence Winters, Phone 271. 206- : FOR RENI FOR RENT — Six room house, 2 miles east Decatur near Dant ' school house, good garden and garage. Willard Steele, phone 542 204-a3tx LOST AND FOUND tOST—Bracelet with green and white brilliant sets. Len or e T.eeple, 238 Madison st. 204t3x «• LOST — 16 size - pen save Elgin watch. Reward. Return to this a office. 206-g3tx

Need B Bail Bearings? 3a We have them tjj ih ail sizes. > ENGLAND’S J? AU T 0 P A RTS H Ist Door So. of Court House '4U Phc.te 282 ——" ■ i MteSCELLANiEOVS — Custom canning—Our canning factory is now open each Jay of tile week, no custom work received on Saturday. Home Canning Co., Monroeville, Ind., Phone 3422. 6t-M-W-IS3 o NOTICE We leave three or four high school girls who desire a place to stay during the school term. They i will be willing to work for board and room. Inquire of W. Guy Brown, high school principal. 204g6t Boys Suilts, line tor school wear at only $2.50 in Tecpie & Peterson’s sale. TEACHERS MEET FOR INSTITUTE feONTINUKS) i'Hfui PAG It ONE’ and college students. Every primary teacher should have a college degree.” This afternoon Dr. Sherman talked on ''Problem Children.” In this talk he explained some of the important factors in tiro education of children. o Mr. and Mrs. Elmo C. Miller and children Marjorie Ann and D nald air J John AWierding, Jr., and Miss Mary Meyers have returned from a inctur trip to Canada and Detroit, Michigan where they vksitej with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Jluyars. Mrs. Clara Meyers who accompanied ■ them will remain in Detroit to spend the week with her son.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKET'S LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Cralgvllle Hoagland Corrected AUR“*t 29 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 25« to 300 lbs $7.70 200 t. 250 lbs. $7.61* 160 to 200 lbs $7.50 300 to 350 lh» $7.50 150 to 160 Ibe $6.60 120 to 140 lbs. $5.80 M* to 120 lbs. $5.«0 Roughs $2 to $6 • Stags $1 to $3.50 .Vealers 86 75 Ewe and wether lambs 86.25 Buck la in be $5.25 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 29. — (U.R>—Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 1,200; holdovers, none; active to all interests; 25c to 35c above Tuesday's average; bulk desirable 170-260 lbs., averaging from ISO lbs., $8.35-88.40; 140180 lbs., 87.50-88.25; 120 lbs., with I end of plain quality, 86. Cattle, receipts, commercial. 650; government, none; dependable trade today; strong at recent advance; good yearlings. 88.50; fleshy grassers, 86; common aud medium. 84-85 .59; low cutter and cutter cows. 81.35-82.25. Calves. receipts, commercial. 225; government. 100; vealers slow; weak to 50c lower: good to choice. 87.50; sparingly. $8; com-i mon and medium. $5.50-86.75. Sheep, receipts, 680; lambs un- * changed; good to choice. $7.50 to largely, $7.75; common and med. ium. $5.50.87. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat, old $1.02% $1.03% $1.05% Wheat, new 1.02% 1.03% Corn .79 .80% .83% Oats, old 51% .52% .52% Oats, new... .51% .51% FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 29. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, steady to 15c higher; 250300 lbs.. $7.95; 200.250 lbs.. $7.80; ' 180.200 lbs.. $7.70; 160-180 lbs.. I $7.60; 300-350 lbs., $7.70; 150-160 ' lbs., $7; 140-150 lbs.. $6.75; 130-140 ; lbs.. $6.50; 120-130 lbs.. $6.25; 100120 lbs., $5.60; roughs, $6.50; stags | $4.00. Calves, $7; lambs, $6.95. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 29 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 93c | No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 92c Oats, 30 lbs. test 44c White or mixed corn 96c First class yellow corn SI.OO Rye -50 c o V ppoifU »ieut »f VUmiaistratrix x... 3t:a> Notice is hereby givev. That the undersigned lias been appointed Administratrix of the estate of Fran-1 kye Haynes, late of Adams County I deceased. The estate is probably sol-I vent. Elizabeth Hendricks. Administratrix Lenhart Heller anil Sfhurjter. Attys Aug. 1931. Aug. 29 Sept. 5-12 —o STOCKHOLDERS MEETING Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Citizens Telephone Company of Decatur. Indiana, will be held at the office of the secretary of said company, in the city of Decatur. Indiana, on Thursday, September 6. 1934 at seven o’clock p.m. for the pur-1 pose of electing five directors to i serve for the ensuing year aud for the transaction of such other busi-1 ness as may be properly brought i before said meeting. Herman F. Ehinger. Sec y, i Aug. 29-6 t

————■ For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 104 So. 3rd st. Neurocalwneter Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to sp. m. f 6to 8 p. m. Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams County National Farm Loan Ass’n., Charter No. 5152, office with the Scburgcr Abstract Co., 133 South 2nd street. Decatur. Fire and windstorm insurance accepted in any old line or good mutual insurance co. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8.00 p. m. Telephoue 135.

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten quep*'one? Turn to page Four for the answer*. 1. On which ocean does the South Americm c untry Peru border? 2. In which state is Great Salt Lake?

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SYNOPSIS Caroline Rutledge and Howard Dunsworth become engaged despite the opposition of their fathers, Philip Rutledge and Henry Dunsworth, who have been enemies for years. Then Henry ruins Philip in business and Caroline breake her engagement when it is obvious that money means more to Howard than love. He explained he would be disinherited if they married and now that Caroline had no money, he did not see how they could manage. The Rutledges leave "Hawthorn,” their luxurious home, and go to live in a poor section of town. Alva, Caroline’s mother, collapses from shock and fatigue. Their neighbors, Malcolm Stuart and his mother, come to the family’s assistance. Malcolm is an inspector at the Rutledge factory. Though Philip, himself, is helpless in their adversity and leaves the burden on Caroline’s shoulders, he snobbishly resents the idea of accepting aid from “these people” as he terms the Stuarts. One day. Philip warns Caroline: “You mtist be careful of that Stuart boy. my dear. It's quite possible that he would be presumptuous enough to fall in love with you.” Malcolm overhears the remark. Caroline tells Malcolm not to mind her father for he never thought any boy was the right one for her, adding: “I shouldn t want you to fall in love with me because I couldn't return it. Their eyes meet. Caroline's pity for Malcolm prevented her from realizing how perfect had been the fusion of their minds in that one glance. Never had there been between her and Howard one moment so electric and breathless as this. Next day, Malcolm avoids Caroline. At a party, Gwendolyn Hoffman, a social climber who has always been envious of Caroline, asks her if she is too sensitive about her broken engagement to come to a party Gwendolyn is planning for Howard upon his return from California. Caroline leaves without answering, realizing that Gwendolyn wanted her as bait to draw Howard. The following day Malcolm comes upon Caroline washing her car. She asks him to pin back a strand of hair which was putting out her eye. “It put mine out too,” Malcolm grinned, “the first time I saw it in the sunlight!” CHAPTER XVIII “Take this pin out of my hair and fasten it all back tight, please.” she begged. Malcolm gave her the required assistance. Standing so close to her he felt all over again that surge of emotion, the memory of which bad kept him away from her for weeks. “Have you been away?” she asked when he had finished—not very quickly. "You have,” he returned, for he had seen her several times leaving the house early in the morning. “Working?” “Off and on—mostly off. Why haven’t you been to see me?” As she asked the question Caroline knew that she had missed him. “Lots to do,” he evaded. “But any time you need me . . Caroline started to say she had needed him most of the time, changed her mind.—he was much too nice to be encouraged simply because she had an uneasy conscience over her father’s offense—and said instead: “I’ll remember.” “You need me now,’’ he told her, feeling like a fly caught in honey, but not minding it. “I’ll finish this for you.” The next morning Carolina rode to call on Mrs. Harmon in a spotless car. She knew after the first five minutes with her friend that Temple had already heard of the tumble the Rutledges had taken. “I want to be your governess, Temple,” she said when Mrs. Harmon had expressed her sympathy. The large room, faultlessly furnished in French period, the atmosphere of refinement and luxury that was so natural to her. had given Caroline a feeling of confidence. She was in a world where she belonged, and in a world where she belonged she was self-reliant, assured. “Os course you know I have no 8.A., but two years at the U ought to qualify me for elementary teaching.” she went on, as yet not noticing that Mrs. Harmon’s expression was not very promising. “Why . . it’s true lam without a governess.” Temple said doubtfully. “but ...” she laughed uncertainly, “I hadn’t thought of you, Caroline. You see—we are so much abroad—the children’s French. you

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, At (U ST2O. 19.31.

3. WUat famous Industry was established at Gobelins, Faubourg Saint-Marcel. Paris, In 1601. 4. Do state ..ftlciub pay federal Income taxes? 5. Wlut Is the uauie of the sour add In vinegar? 6. What is a non de plume? 7. What grouiJj of islands lies ff the west coast of Formosa on the tropic of Cancer?

know—it it to important. ■* “I speak it,” Caroline said, but now her voice bad lost the overtone of confidence. “Yes, of course, but .. . not, as I remember, terribly well, <iear.” Caroline saw now that her hostess’s eyes showed a faint distress, and her manner, as she lighted a cigarette, was perturbed. “I see,” Caroline said slowly, “Sorry to have made that necessary. Temple.” “Otherwise,” Temple said quickly, “I’d be happier than you have any idea, to have you. Caroline. Tho association for the children, you know.” Embarrassment lingered between them, in spite of Temple's softening assurance. Caroline took an early departure, although Temple had urged her stay for hincheon and bridge—“just a few tables.” “Not with my luck,” Caroline laughed. Temple told her guests later that Caroline was “taking it all beautifully—a little absurd in looking for work when she eould marry- almost any man—but a good sport just tiie same.” “Well,” Caroline said to herself on the way home, “what now?" What price education? Mind training at college—and she couldn’t do a single piece of worthy work—work that other people would pay for. Misfits in their new world, all of them—her father, her mother, herself. Incredible—but the things they could do seemed to have no economic value. For the first time Caroline was jarred into a thorough appreciation of the sociological aspect of her life. “I can’t cook, I can’t sew—l wouldn't even know how to do a scrubwoman’s job well if I got one I” Was she, were they all, of no worth? Would her mother slip deeper into apathy—her father into futility? And she—if she couldn’t find work, what would she slip into? Discouragement had settled heavily upon her by the time she reached her home. Her father was there. “I’m glad you came,” he greeted her. “Jenny is complaning about having to stop her work to prepare my lunch. I wish you could get someone else—a servant who knew her place.” “But father, Mrs, Wade does everything for us. It’s laundry day. you know, and we have so much....” “I only wanted a tongue sandwich, but I wanted it grilled.” Caroline prepared it, and a salad for her mother. Her own appetite had left her. but she sat at the table with them, sipping a tomato juice cocktail. Her father observed her pallor, the droop of her lips. “Why don’t you marry, and get out of this?” he threw at her suddenly. For a moment she did not answer, then: “Because I love Howard,” she said unemotionally. Her father looked away. “He’s back. I saw him this morning,” he said quietly. Howard had not come back to her—Caroline could not escape the truth of that But still she held to an unreasonable hope that he would call. Her father knew—once she told him she was ashamed of being a slave to a love that was so utterly hopeless but that she could not help it This was when her father, thinking Howard was standing in the way of her future, had denounced the young man roundly. “I agree with you—he isn’t sound,” Caroline had said wearily, "but love isn’t a thing of sugar and spice and everything nice. You know as well as I do, Father, that we don’t love people for their virtues. We’re just lucky when those we love happen to be worth it.” He had said no more against Howard at that time. Caroline, at any rate, he saw with satisfaction, was not going to sit and pine for ■ the young no-account. Just where she went and what she did during the days and weeks that followed he did not know beyond the mere fact that she w r as still looking for a position. The disappointments, the discouragement. she kept to herseif. But around her eyes dark shadows appeared and she was unwontedly silent except for infrequent periods of forced gaiety. Her mother —in ignorance of their increasing financial distress—was lacking in sympathy toward her ambitions. Her father did not seek to oppose her in her desire to work, but she felt he had no true understanding of her viewpoint. Their ideas and ideals had diverged; their talk was made talk.

8. Which Preaident ixJued the phrase "back to normalcy?' (». Name the vast desert region if central Asia. 10. What do tho Initials U. S. 8. IL stand for? o NOTICE I will 'be out of any office from Attguet 26 to September 4. Dr. F. L. Grandst aft

Only with Malcom did Caroline find a satisfactory companionship, and that wa» not wholly satisfactory. There was always that feat that their friendship would devekiy into something stronger on his part She recognized the danger, not through vanity, but through hei own suffering. Malcolm might have told her v was too late to worry about that He knew he was head over heels it love with her. But if it ever es caped him it was only in looks, fo* he was determined she shouldn’’ know. He understood her wei enough to foresee that she woulc put an end to their neighborly cam araderie if she suspected that the hours they spent together filled the remainder of his days and most ol his nights with bitter-sweet longings. It was Malcolm who listened t< the recital of her troubles, whe heard of her fruitless calls at offices, at institutions, at any place of business where she thought there might be work for her: the adver tisements she answered. She did not tell him, —fearing it would sound theatric anel eheap,— that there were jobs she might have had only they weren’t with men she was willing to work for. Reputable employers, she’d discovered by comparison with some men she’d met, weren’t putting a girl’s personal attractions ahead of the experience and ability of trained workers among the unemployed. Malcolm had his own unspoken ideas about this angle of her difficulty. "She’s smart. She’d make good at a lot of things if someone would give her a chance,” he thought. “But who can afford to hire a girl just because she's goodlooking?” Finally, on an evening when Caroline’s spirits were lower than ever before, her father asked her to drive him to town. When they were away from the house he told her he only wanted to talk to her alone. “If you were looking for a position in order to show your independence. or for pin money, or just to pass the time,” he prefaced the important things he had to say, “I must tell you that there’s another reason to add to those.” Caroline waited in silence for him to continue. Philip drew in a sharp breath for the plunge. “I’m absolutely strapped,” he said. “Everything I had—even my insurance—has been liquidated and used to pay off debts. There was a little left—it’s gone—everything I’ve tried has been a failure.” “Spent?” Caroline uttered the word sharply. “Stocks, mostly. I thought, s few weeks ago, the market was going up. I held on just a little too long. All I can do now is put a mortgage on the house out here—it won’t be more than a thousand. That won’t last long—and then we’ll be pawning things, I suppose.” “After that comes the breadline,” Caroline said, “unless I get a job. “That’s what I wanted to tell yon. You’ll have to be in earnest about it now.” Caroline's answer confused him. It was nothing more than a jeering laugh. The next time she saw Malcolm she said: “It’s do or die. Where will I get a job?” Her tone was deceptively light. He made a halfjesting remark about work at the factory. As soon as the words were out of his mouth he could have kicked himself. But Caroline was not thinking of any tactlessness in them. Greatly to his surprise she took his suggestion seriously. “What could I do there?” she asked him. “Why ... I don’t know. I didn’t really mean it. 'Fraid I was just trying to get a laugh.” “But I mean it,” she insisted. “Tell me about it.” 'Weren’t you ever there?” “Yes, but not in a long time. I liked it. It gave me a thrill to think that it had grown out of the brain of one of my ancestors and a ramshackle woodshed. I still have one of the kettles he used.” “It isn’t a bad place to work,” Malcom said. “The factory, I mean.” “Tell me what a girl with no training could do!” “Start at the bottom, for one thing,” he said. “That’s where the first soapmaker in the family started. I'll take it!” (To Ba Continued) Copyright Uy Ruth Dew*? Crov«t ntutrlhiHFd b: King Feature* Hothl

Hartford City Girl Dies From Injuries Marion, Ind . Aug. 29— <U.R) — Miss Maxine Worley. 19. Hartford City, died In Grant county hospital last uight trom a skull fracture suffered In an automobile accident near here early Sunday. Her companion, Ralph Woods. 21. Hartford City, suffered a broken arm and ncalp wound*. Retiring Legion Commander Is Wed Chicago, Aug. 29. — <U.R> _ The marriage of V. M. Armstrong. Indianapolis lawyer who retired yesterday as state commander of the Indiana American Legion, to Miss Ruth yaiil. ladianapolta school teacher, will take place here today. —o —— TREASURY HEAD IN REPORT ON EXPENDITURES (CONTINUED FBWXM PAOB meat actually had gone Into the red only a ralf billion dollars in its recovery efforts, Morgenthau pointed out that against t.he gross increase of six billion in the public debt there could be placed: Increase in cash balance of $1,600,000,000. Tlje $2,800,000,000 gold profit. A *lotai of $1,094,000,000 in recoverable funds from emergency agencies. At the same time, he said, except for the drought appropriation of $525,000,000 the government had held its spending well within budget estimates. A Nest Egg Hyde Park. N. Y.. Aug. 29—(U.R) President Roosevelt regards the $2,800,000,000 profit from devaluation of tile dollar in terms of gold as a ‘uest egg” that ultimately will be used in reducing the CUSTOM CANN I N G any day at HOAGLAND 6c a can CO LTER Canning Co. Hoagland - - Indiana

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Firemen are shown pouring water into the smouldering ruins of the print shop at the Illinois state reformatory at Pontiac, 111., which was ignited by

French Beauty Is Mexican Q U e ei * - Sr; ■■>'-. Selected on a basis of charm, beauty, personality and popularity, pretty Simone Ussei, above, representative of th.- French colony i» Mexico, has been crowned Queen Churubusco VII, the most covctH social honor in Mexico, at Mexico City's annual Black and Whin balk Twenty-three other beauties competed for the honor. .

national debt. In making known his position, today Mr. Roosevelt subscribed to a policy outlined in an address by Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. He emphasized the world ultimately, however, to indicate to observers at least that some time would elapse before any steps would be taken. It was Mr. Roosevelt who de

PUBLIC AUCTION DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES FRIDAY, August 31-1 O’clock SC— MILCH COWS, HEIFERS AND STOCK BULLS-50 Few Horses, Hogs gnd Sheep. Consign property you have for sale and get the cash. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALE DECATUR. INDIANA E. J. AHR—Managers—L. W. MURPHY

prisoners during a riot in which one convict killed and 21 other inmates and three gu rds wen injured. Damage was estimated at $23,000.

scribed the profit as a nest J I pointing out that one "ukiinJ • uses’’ a nest egg. ■ The profit now is under ’ and key in the treasury, as yj i genthau explained, practically f I of it being held in the torn ( ! gold and silver. In addition I . debt reduction the secretary e : plained that the money also won] •be used in balancing th badget.