Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 23 October 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED i ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE * FOR SALE Kiev, n . wrs. Inquttv of (’loli f Brant. Mile north an I mile and half east of Monroe. FOR SALE or TRADE -1927 Pontine roadster in goal londitlan. Will take motoriy lo in tra iv Ed word Gauge. N. rth ast of Decatur by Dent achool. 251-gßtx ; FOR SALE —'7 bttrk sheep. K n noth Mitchell, route j. IM'tatur. | - gut; FOR SALE — 3 Holstein cows. I frealt In Feb., also one l-horue j wa#t<m. and coal oil cook stove, j pood a* new. Fred Stelstueyei , It ! It. No. 5. 251a3tx j FOR SALF -Good heating stove, j stove board and pipe, used 31 months. Inquire Cartnolcrisp j Shop. 251 t : FOR sai.k Model T Ford sedan In good condition. Cheap. liny Johnson, phones IC*I and 1033. 251a3t FOR SAI.E— Mrs John Durr. Decatur, route 6. I 251-St FOR RALE Fifty white and barred roi K pullets. Daniel Stepler. One mile south of Peterson. 231 kills ] FOR SALE— Mixed pullets, 50 cts. j eaih. Mrs. Marion Michael- j Route 4, Decatur. 351k31x j ! FOR SALE — (loon hand picked apples. 65c per bu. and some pears. Call Wm. Illeeke. phone | 694-H. 261t3x — FOR SALE or Trade for Livestork j Good used Model T truck w ith j transmission suitable for beet hauling. Phone 77. Voweu Stock-1 i yards. Willshire. Ohio. 251k2tx ! FOR SALE — S real prod quality ; Shorthorn ateer calves; weight . 600 lb.*. each. 3 stock bulls, weight . 630 lbs. each. Dnhrnvtn and eligible to register Guernsey; pair of go d ■ light sorrel gelding pelts cantina two and three year old, well marked and a good pair togeth r; cm- . ing 4 year old light mane and toil sorrel mare, weight 1600 lbs. to < j , first in her class at Van Wert fair a good worker; 3 Chester White j beards, weight 175 lbs. each. Inquire of H. P. Schmitt Meat Market.
FOR SALE 6 room semi-modern residence, near north ward school. SISOO. j 6 room semi-modern residence. I near U. B. church. SI4OO. 7 room modern residence on brick street near high school. S3OOO. 6 room semi-modern resident >. I brick street, ornamental light ! posts, SI2OO. 7 room house, hath room. Areola ' heating plant, double garage. | S3OOO. Prices on Decatur Real Estate | are advancing. Better buy now. : A. D. SETTLES, agt. FOR SALK We have a few U'< ;1 i prices. Can he seen at Vitz Oift j shoppe. Repair work an i supplies Phono 925. 251-g3: WANTED ' GRAND PIANO BARGAIN — Kelt j abW piano dealer has baby I grand piano which can he purchased at a bargain. Will take I „ your old piano as part payment. Balance $6.00 per month. For par-i titulars write Credit Adjuster. Daily Democrat. WANTED —Housekeeper, more for home lhan wanes. Inquire Mrs. Dora Merita. 5*44 High st. 251g3tx WANTED —For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellas { Miller, phone 025. Member Radiol Manufacturers Service. MilletRadio Service. 226 X. 7th ,■ 231tf WANTED —Girl to team complet line of Beauty Culture. For full I details write Box B. C.; turn ot' I this paper. 251 t I WANTED TO BUY—heating stov in good condition. Adi-rets Box A. S. in care of this office. 251-k2tx J MALE HELP WANTED Y want 3 men for lo< al Tea and Coffee Routes paying up to S6O *' week. No capital or experience required but must be willing to give prompt service to approximately 200 steady customers. Brand-new Fords given as bonus Write Albert Mills. Route Mgr.. 6620 Monmouth, Cincinnati, Ohio. ltx MAN WANTED-'Get into the oil . business without investment. Moke immediate, etea y income—s2s to SSO weekly, taking ord rw for nationally known line of Super-Re-fired Motor Oila on easy credit terms from farmers, auto air i truck owners. We deliver ai*l collect. Everything furnished. No ex pc r- • ience necessary. Write P. T. Webster. Gen. Mg; 63“0 Stanford. •iltx Oct 24 o Dance, Wednesday, Sunset.
MARKETREPQRTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Craigvitle Hoagland Corrected October 33 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, 350 to 300 lhs $5.25 200 to 250 Ihc. $3.15 j 100 to 330 lbs. . |4.05 | 160 to 200 lhs. S4.MO I 130 to 140 lhs. .. . $3 S 5 ! 140 to 16 ' lhs. ... $3.95 100 t, 120 lbs. $2.60 ' Roughs $4.00 i Stags $2.00 down I - s7.o' J Ewe and wether lambs $5.50 ' Ruck Kiitibs $4.60 — CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Ihc. May July : Wheat, old 97S 97k* 92% j new . 97^4 Corn, old 75% 76-% 77'i new 74% Oats, old 60% 45% 43% new 30% FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, lnd . Oct. 23.—(UR'’ j —Livestock: Hogs, steady: 250-300 lbs.. $3.60: ! 200.250 lbs. $5.45; ISO-200 lbs. j $5.30: 160-190 lhs. $5 20; 300-3501 lbs.. $3.35; I*o-160 11-.. $4.75; 140150 lbs. $ t. 50: 130-140 lhs. $4: 120-' 130 lbs.. s3..*ti; im>-12ii lbs s3:l roughs. $4.25: stags, $2.50. Calves. $7.50-»-. lambs, $6 25. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 600; practically nothing dom : asking fully steady: | bidding weak to 10c lower; few j 155-200 lbs. sold $5.90-6; holding 2D* tbs. above *O.IO and 225 lbs. $6.25. Cattle receipts commercial 10*): mixed yearlings steady. $6.25; i common kinds around $4: low cutters and cutter cows #l-2.25. Calf receipts commercial 30; vealers unchanged $s down. Sheep re. ■ ipts 100; lamb - ! strong to 16c higher: few ew - and wethers $6.73: mixed offer-! ing $6.25: m diem kinds and j strong weight* $5.73-6.00. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Com- ted October 23 N"o. 1 New Wheat, 60 lhs. or
j «***«■ " fj' • N 2 New Wheat (5S Ihs.i SS Oats. 32 lbs. test 43c | i Olts, 30 l!>a*. 4SC 1 Soy Beans, bushel t>Sc**•»*•( j White or mixed corn ... LOST AND I OL’NP ! LOST OR STRAYED—White bre. d ‘ w. about 2 weeks ago. Weight t August Bohnk . phone -Ti-M 250-3-a lire on U. S. 27. Reward. Edwin j j DOST Grey Persian female kit ! ten. Please return to or notify | ■Mrs. Addic Andrews. 403 N 7th; st. 251t2x j STRAYED Brown horee. g t out nf I pasture. Any tie seeing him non- ! j fy C. H. Harvey. Monroe. Reward. | 251-g3tx j |FOR SALE—Special tiar-a'- in I new furnitur . Three • ieee velour ! living room suite $45.50. Eight pie; e j bed roam suites s3S.s<‘. Stn ii.i | dining room suite $65.50. Four piece I ouches $22.50. Four p -tier bed s j j >8.50. iron beds s6.on. Mattr sse; $6.95. Bed -prints $3 New play- i :r pianos $116.00. M inv bargains in used furniture and pianos. Sprague , Furniture . 152 South Sr; on; | Street. Phone 199. 262-k3t j First “Sea Newipaper” Marconi Inaugurated the first daily newspaper published at «*a, ! the Cunßrd Daily Bulletin, In 1004, | on the R. M. S. Campania. I HOT WATER HEATERS $4.95 U1 ’- Thermostats for all makes of cars. ENGLAND’S AUTO PARTS 1»t Door So. of Court House Phone 282 I TRUCK TIRES and TUBES All Si^es —Lowest Prices. Porter Tire Co. 241 Winchester st. °hane 1289.
• ♦ Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ' ten que**'ans? Turn to page Four for tha answers. ♦- ■ ♦ 1. Who said, "We must speak softly and carry a big stick?” 2. What does the Hawaiian word lei mean? 3. Os which family of tish is the haddock? 4. How many women have served in the l' S. Senate'’ 5. What was the name of the
ftIIRJLnNTHE FAMILY* * BY BEATRICE BUR.TON *
CHAPTER XXIV The eager adventurous look died out of her brother's face as it hardened. A muscle near his jaw knotted itself. "Don’t lie a little sap,” he said. ‘‘But, Susie, what do you suppose they've been doing with all the money that Grandfather Broderick. left them?—You’ve heard them talk about the time when they had five servants and two electric runabouts in the family, and how Aunt Edna and Lutie used to go to New York twice a year to buy their clothes. They must have been wild with money then—and even five or six years ago we weren’t poor the way we are now.” ‘‘Well, the rents at The Broderick Arms have been falling off, for one thing,” Susan began, and then stopped abruptly. There was no conviction in her voice or in her mind. She realized that the decrease in the rents was very little compared to the difference between the old days of ease and plenty in the house and the lean days of the present. "No, they had more than just the apartment,” John said. “They had government bonds — the safest things in the world. They used to talk about them but they never do any more. What I think is that they’ve been selling them for years. Spending everything that Grandfather left them until there's nothing left but this house and the apartment—and this place is mortgaged to the hilt. They all ought to have a guardian, if you ask me.” "But Uncle Worthy—isn't he supposed to be their trustee or something like that?” asked Susan who, like the majority of women, knew practically nothing about business. "He’s always handled the estate.” "Yep.” said John with sarcasm sharpening his tone. “He has. With the result that we have a roomer in the house instead of a cook and are trying to rent our garage instead of keeping a car of our own in it. You know, Susie, there’s a saying that goes something like this —'History is filled with the sound of wooden shoes climbing up the stairs and satin slippers coming down.’ Well, I think the Brodericks’ satin slippers are coming down in a hurry these days. This house will be a boarding house yet.” That was what had happened to the Taylor house in the next block when old Mr. Stuyvesant Taylor died. Susan remembered. The Van Dora house, around the corner on Stilwell Street, had become a music school when the Van Dorns moved out of it to take possession of their new house in Chagrin Valley, and almost all of the other proud old mansions in the neighborhood had been torn down to make room for two-story business blocks or ga--ages or four-family houses. "If I go to Omaha. Uncle Worthy will rent my room. I imagine, and he'll do the same thing with Dad’s when he moves all of his things over to Mrs. Hopper’s place.” John’s voice ran on in the quiet room. (None of them ever called the new Mrs. Morris Broderick anything but “Mrs. Hopper.”) “Oh, well. 1 suppose it’s none of my business. When I tried to suggest to Uncle Worthy the other day that he sell the house or lease the land for a factory site, he shut me up.. . . Let's gn over to the Cullens’ and see what's doing, Susie.” But for once the Cullens’ house had no lure for Susan. Upstairs, behind the closed solid-walnut door of the front bedroom, Allen was busy with his law books. And so long as he was there her old family house was the only place on earth where she wanted to be. • * • Early Monday morning Aunt Edna took the 1931 edition of the Social Register down from its place on the parlor book shelves and began to check off names for Susan's wedding invitations. “Goodness gracious. Edna! Why do that now?” Lutie wanted to know. “There won’t be any wedding for five or six months! I thought we were all going to pitch in and do the housework this morning.” "Well, I’m going to check off these names now,” Aunt Edna declared. thrusting out her lower lip determinedly "June isn't so very far away and there are all sorts of things to be done before then, and I'm going to get at them as I think of them. Some day we'li have to see
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DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBKH 23, IM4.
! bodyguard of the Roman Em per | j or* ? 0. Where is the city of Tipper-1 ' ary'.’ 7. Which celebrated Danish w rit. lor was called the "Children's, Poet"? x. What docs the Latin phra"Dei Gratia" mean? 9. Wiiat Is haemophilia? 10. Which was taller. George j Washington or Abraham Lincoln'' Q Special Attention to Latlic* and Childrens Hair Cutting. Frank Young. Ist \ Monroe.
about having some new covers made I for all the old furniture in this house, and I’d like to have a new dress made for the wedding. I'd > thought of gray chiffon, or perhaps , a pansy-purple, but chiffon always I makes me look a* big as an elephant—” She talked on and on, I verbally spending hundreds of doj- . lars in preparation for Susan's . wedding to Wallace. "She'll spend hours on that non- , sense, just to get out of doing any . work—and she’ll leave even her bed I for us to make, you’ll see!” Lutie . remarked sourly to Susan as the , two of them went around the house, dusting, running the carpet sweeper over the beautiful old rugs, eol- ; lecting the part of the laundry that was to be sent out to the Imperial 1 Wet Wash, putting the rest of it to ’ soak in the wash tubs in tha basement. "She won't do any more [ work from now on than she did j ' when we had Anna. She says her 1 feet hurt, but so do mine and I’m | not complaining!” By Tuesday Lutie had lost almost all of her energy for housework, but ] her good disposition had returned. "The work isn't so dreadful hard after all,” she assured Susan in her accustomed cheerful manner as she walked around the lower floor of the house flirting a feather duster at the furniture and bric-a-brac and stirr.ng up a great deal of dust. She let Susan make all c f the beds alone, and when it was time to go down into the basement and wash the clothes that had been soaked the day before, she was having a long conversation with her friend. Jessie Bunts, over the telephone. Susan went down alone. An hour later she came to the head of the stairs that led to the basement and called down to Susan, “I think I'd better stay up here to answer the ’phone and the doorbell, don’t you. Susan, chlldie? It’ll soon be time for me to start lunch, too." But when Susan came up into the kitchen at half past twelve nothing had been done toward preparing lunch. The stove was cold, and on the bare polished mahogany of the dining room table a corded white silk dress was spread out. Beside it, on a square of tissue paper, stood a pair of white kid slippers with bright paste buckles. From them rose a dry dusty odor of age and orris root. “Your grandmother was married in this dress, Susan.” Aunt Edna waved her short plump hands over it. "Lutie and I thought you'd like to have it made over for your own wedding dress. It's so smart. I think, to wear bridal things that have been in one’s own family for a long time. “I never knew what your own mother wore at her wedding, for I wasn’t there,” she wound up with a sniff and a twitching of her nostrils, as if she were proud of the fact that she had not been there. “Well, whatever she wore, you may be sure she was the loveliest bride that any Broderick ever married,” Susan answered quietly, and with that she went out into the kitchen to get the lunch ready. On Wednesday morning Lutie went to a meeting of the Current Topics Club, which met every other Wednesday at eleven o’clock in the ball room of the Union Club downtown The members of it were the wealthiest and most prominent women of the town, and Lutie had joined it twenty-five years before when the Brodericks were among what Uncle Worthy called "the people of the city.” “And what do you think a little bird told me today!” she asked coyly of Susan when she came home at one o’clock and sat down at the luncheon table, still wearing her hat and her dotted veil and smelling faintly of the gasoline with which she had cleaned her white kid gloves. "That Wallace was engaged to Eleanor Kendall once upon a time!—And quite wild about her, too! Eieanor Kendall!” “Very odd that Mrs. Kendall didn't mention it to us when she was here on Christmas day,” Temarked Uncle Worthy, turning a ■ doubting eye upon Lutie as if he were saying, “Important if true.” i to himself. "Well, odd or not. the fact is that Wallace and Eleanor were enI gaged,” declared Lutie. She dropped ; a bit of sausage gravy on the front ; of her dress in her excitement and
Dedicate Gospel Tabernacle Sun da} The dedication of the Decatur! I (Lapel Taberna in w ill ■ie lift I Sun | | <;.iy afternoon at the tut* rtric'.e. I venter of Seventh and Marshall! i streets, at 2.3 * o'clock. The dedication will he in th*‘i charge of Rev. Howard I’Hschel and ! staff, f the ol 1 time religion tat* r- ' I mule of Fort Wayn . 4 program It j living arrange*! including special. i musical selecti, ns. The public ks in J 1 vited t attend the .service.
stopped for a moment to rub the spot with her napkin. “She threw him down when she went out to Akron on a visit and fell in love with the man that she married. Jessie Bunts told me the whole story ! this morning. They were engaged only a week or tw o.” “Jessie Bunts!" Aunt Edna's | tone scorned Jessie Bunts and all ) her works. "If it wore true. Jessie j Bunts would have told us "all atanit | it on Christmas day She never misses a chance to make people feel uncomfortable and take them down a peg or two.” Susan satd nothing at all. Her mind had flown to the little jewelers' box upstairs in the drawer of her dressing table—the little box ; marked ‘‘Ludlow and Ludlow” . . 1 That was how Wallace had hap- j pened to have that little box still in ! his possession years after Ludlow and Ludlow had gone out of business. He had bought the ring for Eleanor Kendall and when she had I given it back to him he had carefully put it away for his second j choice. “For me!” thought Susan with j anger and bitterness. “For me!” She wondered what Mrs. Kendall i had thought on Christmas day when I she had seen it glittering on her en- ; gagement finger. She must have rec- | ognis.ed it as the one that Eleanoi had once worn. » * • The days jogged along. The house, dark with the fogs of January, was so large that Susan could not begin to take care of it properly. After the first few days Lutie fell by the wayside and did j nothing hut the work she had always done—changing the water in j the fish globe, walking to market ' sometimes and cleaning her own bedroom with its framed pictures i of Gibson girls, its curly maple fur- j niture, its eternal odor of mothballs and wintergveen candy and heiio- i trope perfume. The rest of the day she spent telephoning her few friends, reading before the parlor fire or sitting at the old piano to play the pieces of i music that had been popular in her youth: “I don't want to play in your yard, Idon't like you any more. You’ll be sorry when you see me. Sliding down our cellar door—” Sometimes she drifted into the kitchen and offered to peel the pota- I toes, which were usually peeled al- I ready, or sat down to keep Susan :] company whiie she went about her I work. Aunt Edna ordered the same stodgy meals that she had always ordered and did the mending between chapters of her murdtr stories and her long hard-fought game* 0 . Russian Bank or backgammon with Undo Worthy. In the afternoon all three of thorn 1 took naps, the two women in their chairs and Uncle Worthy on the ! couch in his study. It seemed to i Susan that their life wasn’t really life at a:!, but just an imitation—like the wax fruits in the bowl on the dining room table where they had stood for years. In the morning John made up the furnace fire in the basement and hanked it down the last thing at night. But during the day Susan went down into the furnace room every two or three hours to put more coal on the fire or to empty the ashes into the bushel baskets that stood on the stone floor. Two or three times during the first week she forgot to set the milk bottles out for Herbst. She did not find time to clean the silver and every night when she wont upstairs to bed she had an unpleasant feeling that something important had been left undone—the mirrors qpt dusted, the flowers not watered the cereal not parboiled in its double-cooker for tomorrow morning's breakfast. There simply wasn t time to do everything. But she managed to take exquisite care of Allen's room, dusting the buff-colored law books with hands that loved them because they i were his tomes, sharpening the pencils that lay on his table, tightening a loose button on the sleeve of his gray coaL Once she smuggled his ties down into the laundry in the basement and steamed and pressed them. (To Be Continued) Cocrrltht. 1133. ft 3 K in* F»«r«rm SradlotU. !»«.
. MtTK'F «*!' It'd will II t:»ll N't or i.* i \ 11: no. aiMN Not Ur I* In t «-!»> urn'll lo the < *'"* ltiii», liriiw amt legatee* of I'h'-oib >• H. 141-user, .1." . to I til, Adunt* t’lrrult Court, held at ***'• 1 .iitnr, Indiana, on the IMth day vj I November. I**34. and *how cau.* .11l ony, why ttie l-'IS *l, KI-. t M.l'-Ml'-X 1 | Al'('(lt'.NTH with tile i«la(i "t -anlj I decedent ehonia not tie a|»l*ro\i t.j .and sold heirs are notified to'then j and there make pc of of he!r»hll*.| ami receive their di*trlbutlve ulmriM. I’l-ed 11. I Home r AOmlnlutrator liciotur, Indiana, (letoher ••* - * l ei,hurl, Metier and *ehnr«er. \||>* Ol t , - J-*io I \ nnoint tneiif of \dliiinUtrsitnr \„* 11 ,■ is hereby uivFM, That th. hu* twt a Appoint.ml An - i iiilnlidrat-i <>f the .-state of Austin ! T Kroner lot. ..f Adams i mint', deI ceased. The estate Is probably »*»!• j ' " \\ X Wells, Adnilnstiotoi ( . 1.. Waller*. Mturwej ——————— Sec me for Federal Loans and Abstract* of Title. French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract t o. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined, Glasse* Fitted HOURS: g:3O to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 4*5.
- - 1 ’«( ■ ■ i hi— -£-.<B^l “REGAL” WARM AIR CIRCULATOR THIS CIRCULATOR is not only beautiful in de.-ijrn but is efficient r at*7 B * The outside is enameled in walnut finish, doors and Irimmi 't:- ire *■ 1-1 making a very beautiful combination. Th*’ Inner Unit or He;; v strutted of heavy cast iron with an oblong fire howl ribbed to give ilt n® radiation which means more heat wiih less fuel. I ;* r ge Heavy (irate liars ;*nd is cspecialU built to burn either wood joints are interlocked and air tight sealed with cement. These Stoves Come In Two Sizes. 3 to 5 Room Capacity sl7 'H 1 to 6 Room Capacity $57.50 HARDWARE a&{ HOME FURN*iTHI
MiWK or nnnihMDM ha svn 111 Mi 'i KNTATI Nothv lx herchx tfiv* H, that lh* urHU'rMiirnctl t‘on*i*ii**iorw>r l appointed i t»y the Adams Circuit Court, to imik* j wale of real ordered aol*i in tin* crtMO of Wilfred S Smith, ( iKor of til* 1 la t will and ~f Oliver f T. Hi ndi u ten. d»*(•s*(»** d j .ttfains* Maria L. H •ndrick.- t ill, Lij nil r. *p» * U ,4«T*M’n\dt» te* th* order! «»f ?*nid uiii'i in th»- matter of * .im, ! * il(< ON SA Vl' ill >A Y, November Jlth, i hum, between th»* hour* of ten •*' | .|m k A. M ami four oMih H IV M at tin* » d or of the Court Hems I in the olty *»f IHM tttur. Indiana, vviiJ) I offer i'*»r N«lt\ at public Kali*, t«» the} I hlffheat and bent bidder for not le* * than two third* of tha appratnodj value the following described ivail i estate, no ordered moLI and situated i iin Adatna County, State of Indiana. 1 to-wlt. 1 titot number siv In the town efj Monroe, Adam* County. India ta. TKtm* One third cash on day of sale. One third In one >e»r* and One third in two years from date! of sale. 1 Deferred payment* to be evidenced by promissory note*, bearing sivj I per rent interest from day of salei ! and secured by a first mortirasre :»j the real estate, sold. Sueh notes t"| I be exeeuted on the usual blank! j Hank form of note. Provided, thej purchaser or purchasers may pa\ all of the putt base money in cash,! if he so desires. Said real estate will he sold free **f ! liena except taxes payable in and subject to the approval of said rau ft. James T. Merryman Commisxiont r Oct I’T.tu N-«. 13-20 . \p|Hdnintent «»t Idmintstrnfnr Notice is hereby given, That the? undersigned hits t urn appointed Administrator of the estate of Klimi-i in th kraner, late of Adams I’nuntv deceased. The eetntft is probably aoiI vent. \Y. A Wells, Administrator ( . 1.. Wallen*. %tt«*me> Oil,.!** !■ .’J. 1 I <>*t \-*.
I I I - I M I ■ I * ■ ■ * ■ I I j th" Ti. I ■ I H \- ; S B ■ T* . ; B B ■ j propen I i - igi ■
