Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 256, Decatur, Adams County, 27 October 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALK — Glow Boy cabinet heater. Francis Stults. 631 West Adams street. 254-lt FOR SALK —6 gilts with 13 pigs at their side; 1 O. 1. C. male hog, IS months old and 2 tows. Oeo. W. Cramer. Route 3. Decatur, Indiana. FOR SALK — Michigan apples. Grimes Golden. Johnathens, McIntosh. Bawldins. Price 60 cents an t Up. S. E. Haggard, mile north. 3’4 east of Monroe. 255-k6tx FOR SALE—Two day old Durham calf. Theo Bulmahn R. 2. Preble phone. 255-2tx FOR SALE —Two wheel trailer. 32.6 used truck tires. Porter Tire Co. Jll Win* heater St. 255-a3t FOR SALE - Globe boy heating stove, good as new, walnut finish. Florian Geimer. phone ,7918. 256k3tx FOR SALE or TRADE— 1 Dodge truck with all steel dump body. $35 cash. 229 Grant St. 256-a3tx FOR SALE — Will buy or sell bicycle parts of all kinds Baker's Repair Shop South Eighth St. 354-a3tx — d W ANTED WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf WANTED —Sewing, all kinds. Lining coate a specialty. Mrs. Leota Beery, 227 S. Third St. 355g2tx FOR SALE — Registered Ayrshire cow, fresh, also grade heifer, for heavy producers. Also 2-year-old mare in foal, and breed gilt Henry Aeschliman, Berne. Phone 4823. 255-2tx WANTED —To rent 1 or 2 rooms for light housekeeping, partly furnished or unfurnished. Phone 0601. -.st>-g'.t WANTED —■ Seed Corn and Oat Salesmen. Liberal Commissions. Write full qualifications to Mr. Earneu care of this paper. Ort 25-30 RED BAR ga Storage K& BATTERIES S $3.95 up MR exchange t ENGLAND’S g AUTO PARTS ijl Ist Door So. of Court House W Phone 282 I TRUCK TIRFjS and TUBES All Sizes —Lowest Prices. Porter Tire Co. Dist. 341 Winchester st. Phone 1289. Dullness and Genius No genius ever a dull child, and no dull child evnr became a genius or ever will.—Albert Edward Wiggam. Q AOTItK OF FIX 11. “ETI I.EMISX I OF ESTAT E Ao. :WIT Notire is hereby given to the < i editors. heirs and legatees of J >hn It, Heok, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana. «»n the IHth day of November, 1934, and sltvw <*au-«e. if any. wh\ the KIN AL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent sin uld not be approved; and said heirs are notified then ami there make proof of heirship, and receive their distribu- — tire glares. Hay Hook, Administrator PetaUur, Indiana, October 25" 1934. Attorney L. At alters oct 27 N UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY For man with livestock and poultry experience to secure good paying, permanent connection with widely known, progressive feed company. Establish yeurself in the feed business in your community handling a well k.iown brand of cost-cutting feeds guarantoed to mate a profit for farmers and poultrymen. Immediate returns, fine repeat business, no investment needed. Cash in now on your experience and ability. Murphy Products Co., Burlington, Wisconsin. Sand inquiry to A. H. Bozarth, state manager, Wabash, Indiana.
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berns Craigvllle Hoagland Corrected O. tober 27 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 Ihs $5.00 200 to 250 lbs $4.90 160 to 200 lbs $4.65 300 to 350 lbs $4.70 140 to 160 lbs $3.75 120 to 140 lbs _ ._ $2.70 100 to 120 lbs $2.43 Roughs $4.00 Stage $2.00 down Vealers $7.25 Ewe anti wether lam be $5.50 Buck lambs $4.50 • FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Oct. 27.(U.R> — Livestock: Hogs, 5-10 c higher; 250.300 lbs.. $5.35; 200-250 lbs.. $520; 180-200 lbs.. $5.10; 160-180 lbs.. $4.95; 300350 lbs., $5.10; 150-160 lbs.. $4.50; 140-150 lbs. $4.25; 130-140 lbs.. $3.75; 120-130 lbs., $3.25; 100-120 lbs., $2 75; roughs. $4.25; stags, $2.50. Veals, $7.50; lambs, $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Oct. 27. — (U.W— Livestock: ■Hogs, 150; market nominally tin. changed; general trade 40-SOC lower during the week. Cattle, 250; market steady; good steers, $7.25-$8.50; vealers closed strong to mostly 50c over last week. $8.50 down. Sheep. 50; lambs rather dull throughout week; closing strong to 15c higher. Lambs. $6.60-$6.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected O', tober 27 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 66c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 85c Oats 32 kbs. test 48c Oats, 30 His. test 47c Soy Beans, bushel ®Be-75c White or mixed corn . 95c First Class Yellow Corn SI.OO Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answere. ♦ — — ——♦ | 1. On what river is the city of Prague located? 2. In Greek, legend, who was Priam ? 3. Name the village in Sumter County Ga., notable as the site of a Confederate military pris n during the Civil War. 4. What is the op-.site of Deism? 5. In the Book of Ged'eis, who was Hogar? 6. Is electricity visible? 7. In which state is the city of Pariarie du Chien? 8. Wha was Seth Low? 9. Name the great mountain chain of South America. 19. Who was S Ion? 1. What is the famous plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament in 1605 called? 2. Who wrote "Pilgrim's Progress*’? 3. In law, what Is a pease corn!-1 tattis? 4. Whnt office in the federal government ks occupied by Charles Evans Hughes? 5. Name the wife of Ananias. 6. Where is the Tigris river? 17. Among the Hin ius. what is a Guru? 8. Who was St. Chrysostom? 9. Os whom was it said that he was "first in peace, first tn w»tr, first in-the hearts of his fellow-citi-zens"? 10. What does the legal terra Locus Deli'll mean? —— o XPTKU TO TAMPAVKRM Notice Is nereoy given that Monday, November 5, 19:: I will be the last day to pay your Fall installment of taxes. The county treasurer's office will be open from 8 A. M. to 4 p. m. during the tax paylm season. All taxes not paid by that tinie will become delinquent and a 3% penalty will be added. Also interest at the rate of 8% will be charged from the date of delinquency until paid. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division of taxes are asked to come in at once. Call on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the onimission of tajc-payers to state definitely on what property, they desire to pay, in whose name It may Ire found, in what township or corporation it Is situated. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the law Is such that there is no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the oollection of delinquent taxes. The annual sale of delinquent lands and lota will take place on the second Monday In February 1933 at 10 on A. M. County orders will not be paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persops are warned against thorn. No receipts or c bec ks will be held after expiration of time, as the new depository law requires the Treasurer to make daily deposit. Particular attention. If you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer, also see that your receipts call for ail your real estate and personal property. In making Inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do not fail to include return postJORN WECHTER Treasurer Adams County. Indiana Oct 11 to Nov. 5
NHEIIIFF * U.K tn the Wdnuis < Inuit t ocirt, Muir es ■ndiaiin. Cause- Xumber 14.T7.1 First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wtfyue v*. Shelby L. Vance, Lulu Vance, his wife Hv virtue of an order of sale to me directed ami delivered from the! Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court In the shove entitled cause, 1 have levied upon ami will expose to sale hy Public Auction at Hie Court Housei door. ea»t entrance, first floor, In said county, between the hours of 10 00 o'c lock A M. and 4:00 o'clock P. M. on Saturday, the 10th day of November A. l>. 1934, the rents amt profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following Heal Estate to-wit: The North West quarter of the South ITast quarter of Section 18, Township 30 North, Hangs 13 East,l containing' forty 140) acres, more op less, In Adams County, Indiana. And on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and costs. I wilt at the same time and In the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above described real estate . Taken as the property of Shelby L. Vance, Lulu Vanoe. his wife at the suit of First Joint Slock Land Bank of Fort Wayne. Said sale will be macle without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. Be.l Johnson, sheriff Adams County C. 1.. W niters. Attorney Oct 13-20-27 Ml EH IFF s U.K lu the lilanis Circuit Court. Slate ot Indiana. Cnune Xuinber 14,t)T8 The t'nion Central Life Insurance Company, an Ohio Corporation vs William laiininert, Elizabeth Lammert. Rhoda S. Lammert, Addie M. Gas*. The First State Bank a corporation. The Peoples Loan and Trust Company, a corporation. The Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana. By virtue of an order of sale to me directed and delivered from the t’lerk of the Allan's Circuit Court in the above entitled cause-, I have levied upon ami will expose to sale bv Public Auction at the Court House door, east entrance, first floor in said c ounty Icetween the hours of 10:00 o'cloc k A M. and 4:00 o'clock P M. on Saturday, the 10th day of November A. !>.. 1934. the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following Ileal Estate to-wit: The south half (Lj) of the southwest (14> and the south half (H) <if the north half < ’al of the southwest quarter < L > of section thirteen (13) in township twenty-eight (28) north, of range fourteen (111 east, containing one hundred and twenty (120) a. res. more or less, in Adams County. State of Indiana Ami on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and costs, 1 will at the same time and In the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above described real estate. Taken as the property of William Lammert. Elizabeth Lammert lUioda S. laimmert, Addie M. Gass. r lhe First Stale Bank, a corporation. The Peoples Loan and Trust Co., a corporation. The Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana, at the suit of The t'nion Central Life Insurance Company an Ohio corporation. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. Bur! Johnson. Sheriff Adams County t.rnhart. Heller and Sihurger. Illes, Oct 13-20.2 c Lead Kalamazoo Celery on Liberia Wav. Saturday. Oct. 27. Wheeler. 255-2 t See me for Federal Loans a»*d Abstracts of Title. French Quinn. Schirir.ever Abstract Co. Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Wop.? P. L. 4T. Co. BL Phones 104 , and 1022. A' \ Claim your date ’ t It- early as 1 Bell V every day. SALE CALENDAR Oct. 29—May Vickers aud Kenneth Carter, 1 mile south and 2 miles west of Eaton. Closing out saleOct. 30 —Joe Fredrick ft Walter Marhaugh, 4 miles south and 4 miles east of Chattanooga, Ohio. 5 miles west of Celina on Route 32, then 3 miles north. IMt north and % mile east of Durbin. Oct. 31 —Clayton E. Byrd. 1105 No. Second St., 2 houses at 10 a. mOct. 31.—Geo. V. .Mellott, JVj miies east of Willshire. Ohio, on State road No- 54. Horse sale. Nov. B—Henry R. Anspaugh, 2 miles east and 3 miles north of Decatur or 3 miles north of Dent school. Closing out sale. Nov. 9—Decatur Riverside Sales at Sale Barn Nov. 7—John Cross, 4 miles east and 1 mile north of Berne, or 3 miles north and 3 miles west of Chattanooga, Ohio. Closing out sale. Nov. 15 —William Lnginbil), 4 miles south and ’A mile west of Willshire, Ohio. Closing out sale.
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DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT SATI'CRDAY,
SOCIETY i The Carpe Diem Club will meet with Mrs. Rusiell Owen*, Tuesday night at ••van-thirty o'clock al which time the members will entertain their httkbands. Mrs. J. Bush will he the assisting hostess. MANY ATTEND PEP CHAMP DANCE Approximately two hundred fifty partons attended the annual Ibratur high s.hool Pep Champ dance held In the Masonic Hall, Friday uight. • A -program wa» presented during
IfillßlL in the FAMILY*! » by BEATRICE BUR-TON »
CHAPTER XXVIII “I haven’t had any dinner,” Allen said. “I think there’s a restaurant a couple of blocks away.” There was. It was a small hole-In-the-wall sort of place, as white •nd shining ns snowy enamel and polished nickel could make it. Steam came hissing from the gleaming coffee urn on the white counter and on the wall above the high stools were placards that read: “Oyster Stew. 25 cents”—“Swiss Steak with Onions, 25 cents”—"Coffee With Real Cream, 5 cents.” “I’ll drink some eoffee with you,” Susan said, glad that it was only a nickel. She felt vaguely unhappy when Allen spent money on her. knowing how little he had for extras like tea at the St. Vincent or even a fifty cent bunch of violets. “I thought I ought to tell John about you and me before he went away, so I did,” she said taking out her vanity case and powdering her nose and ehin. “He told me that he knew about us.” Allen was looking at the wall placards as she spoke. “I’ll have some fried ham and celery and a baked potato," he said to the dark haired waiter behind the counter. "And bring two cups of coffee.” “What did John have to say to you about it?” He turned again to Susan. Susan snapped her vanity case shut and tucked it into her coat pocket. She looked carefully at her reflection in the wall mirror opposite her and pushed a strand of golden brown hair behind her ear. It took her a long time to answer. “He thought I ought to tell the family about breaking everything off with Wallace. He wanted me to do it before he left. He said he was afraid that if I didn’t tell them ! then. I wouldn’t do it at all. You i know he thinks that they rub me ” Alien took two ussue paper napi kins from a little stand on the edge i of the counter, unfolded one and - gave it to her. “It isn’t your family that’s tm- ! portant right now,” he said. “It’s - your friend, Steffen, and what ; you've said to him.” Susan nodded, drooping in her ! high chair and stirring and stirring her steaming coffee. “Did you give him back his ring. Susie?" "Oh. yes.” She had done that much, at any rate, and the thought that she had comforted her. “And his watch bracelet, too.” “Tell him everything was over?” Susan’s troubled glance flashed up at him from under her lashes. Her color, deep rose from the a:r outside, went a shade deeper. "He was simply impossible. Alien,” she said, shifting in her chair. “1 spent a whole hour trying to make him understand that I’m really through with him—and he sat eating lunch just as calmly as if he’d been discussing the weather—’’ "You had lunch with him. Susan?" "Why. yes. I couldn’t get out of it. You see. I went to the bank at noon and after we’d talked for a minute or two he decided to go out somewhere to talk over things— But we didn’t get anything settled at all. No matter what I said it didn’t seem to have much effect on him—" Her voice trailed off. Allen was staring at her in blank astonishment, just as John had stared at her that afternoon. "You mean you aren’t through with that guy. yet?" be asked after a long silence. Susan nodded. “That’s what 1 mean. Cm sorry." she said. “Allen, you just don’t understand what Wallace is like! He’s one of these people who really won't take ‘No’ for an answer—and so I’ve decided that every time J see him I’ll just have to go on telling him that I'm through with him—like ‘letting the old cat die.’ when you’re stopping a swing. You can see that’s the sensible thing to do. can’t you?” “No.” The word came, sudden •nd short and heavy. “You could have said everything you had to say to that fellow in ten minutes. You promised me you would. Instead of that you had lunch with him—and you’re talking now about every time you see him. It looks
I the - veiling. Including a doll dance 11 by Nancy Bell an J Catherine E.lwards, an exhibition waltz by Irene |i t'osner amt a tong by Winona Fleinling. Martha Elizabeth Gillalid did I'a tap dance. Miss Iranise Haubol I was the accompanist for the numbers. Hal Te T rs furnished music for t|ie dance. The hall w<ts decorated in keeping with Halloween with corn stalks, ja h-o-lantern», and other Halloween effects. ENTERTAINS PINOCHLE CLUB Mrs Jess Eitgeil was hostess to the members of the Pinochle Chib at her home. Friday night. Mrs. William Lister. Mrs. Francis Eady and Mrs. Carl Hammond received. the prises. ’ A luncheon was served by the |
to me as if you haven’t changed " anything very much. You’re still - engaged to him, aren't you?” " “Not in my own mind, Allen." “Why. of course, you're still en- ? gaged to him.” Allen got up front 1 the table and walked across to the t cash register to pay his bill. They ; went out, leaving their coffee and 1 Allen’s plate of food untouched, t A block away from the station he r bought a newspaper, and all the t way home on the street car he read i the first section of it, handing Susan the section containing the woman’s ’ page. But he maJ“ no pretense ' of reading it and sat with his hat ' pulled down over his straight nose, . his eyes fixed on the advertisements above the windows. In silence ’hey left the street car, and neither of them spoke until 1 they stood before the little Shoe : Fixery with its shadowed door- '■ way. Then Allen said. “You'd better go on ahead now so that your ! people won’t know you've been out with me.” And there was extreme i bitterness in his tone. This was the place, just out of 1 sight of the house, where he always stopped to give her a last kiss. But tonight, although the street stretched dark and deserted ' on both sides of them, he did not 1 try to detain her. “Goodnight,” he said, and that was all. "Goodnight.” Susan started away and then came back to him. "Wallace said he’d be out to see me soon,” she said, raising her face to his. longing to have him stoop suddenly and kiss her. tell her that he knew ‘ she really meant to end her engagement and just didn’t know how ' to manage the thing. “And I’ve made up my mind not to be at home when he comes. That will convince ; him ’hat I’m through with him better than anything 1 can say will do it. . . . I’ll go over to Cullens ■ for dinner that night. We’ll both 1 go. You and 1." Allen made an impatient movement with his shoulders. “Why go 1 to all that trouble? Why don’t you simply tell him how you fee) about him? That is, if you want to —I’m not sure that you really do want to.” He sounded almost indifferent. “You know I want to.” She left him then and ran across the snowy yard to the front door. The family had gone to bed and the dinner dishes were still piled on the sink in the kitchen just as she had left , them. . Trust Aunt Edna and Lutie not to touch them I Presently, as the water began to ; run hot from the faucet, she heard Allen come tn at the side door. The floor of the rear hall creaked under his feet. There came the tiny faraway sound of his bedroom door ' opening and closing. The house seemed very still after ; that, and Susan had a feeling that , it must be the dead of night, although the kitchen clock said that it was not quite half past nine. She , put the pans away, hung up the dishpan and loaded a tray with the dishes she had washed and wiped. ‘ As she put them away in the china ■ cabinet in the dining room she ' glanced uneasily over her shoulder at the black doorway of Uncle - Worthy's den and the parlor door--1 way across the wide hall. In the 1 winter both rooms were a little like ' caves, she found herself thinking, 1 where the family hibernated, shut away from the bracing cold and the J clean wintry smell of snow that she loved. . Above her head a board cracked and she glanced nervously into the • hall once more Someone was com- ‘ ing very quietly down the stairs. ; She could hear soft slow footfalls —and then, in another second, she saw Allen come around the turn ‘ from the landing. J He stood in the doorwav and she ■ saw with a thrill of pritie tn him > that he seemed to fill it with his ’ height and the width of his shoulders. ) “Susie!" All the anger was 1 gone out of his face now He was > the smiling confident young man . who had stood in his dripping • clothes before the parlor fire a week ) before and told her that she was t in love with him "Susie, come here s and kiss me goodnight.." he said.
OCTOBER 27, 193-1.
hostess. The next meeting ot the dub will be held in two weeks with Mrs Brice Roop. DECATUR ECONOMICS CLUB HOLDS MASQUERADE PARTY Twenty members and live gueste of the Decatur H-rae Economies Chi') met at the home ot Mrs. George Squiers, Friday night for a masquerade party. Mrs. ('harlte Hammon I received the .rrise for being the beet masked. The election of officers was held an I Mrs. Delma Elsev was tiaimeil president; Mrs. William Little, vicepresident; Mrs. F. B. Collier and Mrs. William Affolder, leaders; Mrs. L. E. Archbald an I Mrs. Robert Garard, alternate le-iders; Mrs. [ Chari a Hammond, secretary and j treasurer; Mrs. William Kohls, re-
f But it was he who crossed the 1 room and stood beside her, and the instant he was near her everything in the world was all right once . more for Susan. She thought, i “We’re mad about each other, and s that’s all that counts. Everything r else is just piffle." She wondered. | as he laid his hands on her shoulders and bent his face down to hers, . why she had been so weak, so unJ convincing, that day with Wallace. I . . . Ah. that was the difference bei tween Allen and everyone else on i earth: when she was with him he . could make everything soem clear ■ and simple. The world was heaven, and there were no real problems , after all—- " Even when you’re disgusted with me I’d rather be with you than [ with any one else anywhere,” she , whispered to him, her face buried in his shoulder. “But Susan, we cant go on like this, trying to keep everything secret for months. Let’s get out of this mess." His voice was urgent, and one of his hands made a sudden thrusting movement as if he were trying to push his way out of a place where he did not want to be. “Itet’s get married tomorrow and live like coolies on what I’m making I’ll soon be making more—" He went on, talking about himself as he never had talked to her before. Boasting a little as a man boasts only to the woman he loves. . . . He wasn’t going to stay poor all his life! Not by a long shot! As soon as he became a full-fledged lawyer he was going to tie up with one of the biggest law firms in town — Haggerty. Hedges and Harmon. He and Judge Harmon's son, Ellsworth, had gone to school together out west and they were very good friends. Two or three Sundays ago he had gone to their house out in Bellmore Park, and Judge Harmon had told him that when he was 1 through law school he would give him a position with his firm. “I won't be much more than an office boy at first, I suppose,” he said, “but in a firm like that I’m bound to get along fast. Your husband won’t be an ambulance chaser all his life, darling.” "Listen!" whispered Susan, her forefinger at her lips. “I thought I heard someone!" They stood without making a sound for two or' three minutes, only their fingers touching, but neither of them heard anything i more than the drip-drip of a faucet in the kitchen and the tapping of a twig against the dining room windows. “It must have been a mouse in the wall," Susan whispered. “This old house always has a mouse somewhere in it no matter how many traps we set—Oh. Allen, wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could be married—” She smiled up at him and he kissed Mer again. Neither of them heard Lutie as she came down the last flight of , the stairs, her hot water bottle in one hand and the other one clutching together the folds of her red ; and white flannel bathrobe. Her . feet stuck into straw Chinese "go- , aheads," made no sound as she came into the room. She stood just in- , side the door, her reddened eyes , staring at the two figures locked together like one figure, their arms straining each other close, the sym- , bolos everything that Lutie had , wanted and missed in her fortyseven years ~A life. I ‘Susan!” she cried out sharply, . and the two figures sprang apart at the sound of her shrill, shocked , voice. Her unpainted lips were sc i tightly pursed together that they . had almost disappeared. Her hair was wound up all over her head on old-fashioned kid curlers and »he . smelled of camphorated oil and i horehound drops. i Susan found herself trying to remember how many years Lutie had had those greasy old curlers, as i people will think of the most fool- > ish and trivial things at important i moments in their lives. Her eyes : wapdered to the hot water bottle in Lutie's hand. It was flat and i empty. i (To Be Continued) Cwrrizht, mt. k> KIM r>Mm Sradkau. Im.
porter. i The program was presented by ! Mrs. Ora McAllwney, Mrs. Charles Keller and Mrs. Clarenoe Strickler. Contest# were enjoyed aud prizes won by Mrs. Feasel, Mr». Gerard, ! Mias Ruby Miller and Mrs. Ham-, mond. nefreehn(ente in keeping with Halloween were served by Mrs. ‘ Manley Foreman. Mrs. Frank Fish- ! er and Mrs. Ralph Roop. _ o Univerdty Building Fas,t 1 Austin, lex. —tUF) —University ’ of Texas’ builjlng program has been ' so fast that a lot of students are all mixed up. One freshman co-ed ap-1
THE EAGLET| The quiet hamlet of Hopewell, lay spread in th e datknenaj ■ 5 of night. ' ’’flHa At the loot of Sottrland Mountain, whence tin Une ed his flight; Where he had bullded his nest on its summit, there to reit iaß ! and his joy; ■MI The little Lone Eaglet of Lindbergh, his treasure; his bo M . J • haired boy. ' While the wind round the peak, moaned so lonely, dd . k ■ blotted the moon from view, ■-7 This bright cherub of earth lay sleeping; .1 I, -;,., mfaut, j a yet two; ■ His face mirrored the peace ot angels, as lie nestled in of soft down; ■ His sweet lips bore the smile of heaven, while his brow hB the trace of a frown. Alt! Safe, safe, in the hands of his father, who over the had flown: HP His dreams were of his dove like mother (,mg s sl , darling — her own Though the fitful breese at the casement, sought entrance isl nursery warm, JI Not a soul had a fear at the instant, that aught in the meant him harm. But. cruel, cruel, the fate, that came stalking or. Sourlaug that night, ■ For it was laden with sorrow that fell before the dawn had its light: ■! With ne'er a thought that some monster in hiding, een hand held his doom, B It was long e’er the hour of midnight, when the nurse his room. E For a glimpse of the well-cuddled infant or a bit of a But. the sight that dulled her senses, was the crib in the ggH the sudden moon, B Where she found to her horror, a set ibliled note aud the backward thrown. ■ "Gone. gone. oh. where is our Baby!" She anximtsly cried, spoken moan — B A plea that the culprit bring back lite nestling alarmed as it had flown: K Then a flashing of lights in the dwelling, till from attic it shown. ■ The household now roused to the fullest, sought wildly, the lmE heart had enthroned; B The halls echoing hurried foot-falls to the sad melody entoned. ■ No friendly hand could it be, that had thus torn the Eaglet so away; ■ For there at the window a ladder was stationed, and there it nfl to stay ■ Mute evidence this, of the vandals who had so stealthily eettniM room, C- ■ And then stolen the curly-haired youngster, while the shadowed the moon. ■ Careful search began in the valley — on the mountain-top-iti nearby town, Quickly spreading to far-distant cities, over < ans. to rodto renown. At t ve, each day returning, sad and weary, with lull meager W its fate, The "Lone Eagle”, untiring, faithful, sought still to comfort hish broken mate. Thus the hours dragged slowly, lengthening into soul -searing • weeks and months, When the poor loving mother, the meanwhile, all couceraei iel little one’s wants. Her pka sent o’er the radio, the news sheets; uh sought to to her disquiet. Broadcasting, beseeching the kidnapers to give Um Ba h e diet: J To restore to the arms of his mother, unharmed, this child tender years; Her rollicking blue-eyed Baby Boy, the unwitting 1 attse of octol tears The Heart of America was list'ning. hoping, praya.? soitie*ord’ come soon, ' But out of the silence, no answer was borne. > lift een>* •he gloom.. -j Fruitless the trips where false clues led — fruitless tie M by air and journeys on sea. , 1 off Os the Lope Eagle fate chained to the mountain. this bird air, swift and free. Alas! When word came of the Eaglet, it could only sadden all i> the more, . 1 For so rudely were forlorn hopes now shattered, as never t e been liefore: .. Some villain —a fiend incarnate, had ruthlessly taken the young life; Had thus fastened his fangs on the homestead, by a ciimc to rife. Like- the "Babes in tho Woods", it lay burled, 'm ath the k a,B l the woodland's tall trees, . f[ , ra i Where his brothers, those small feathered song, lets of n the fields and the leas, All gathered to do him homage, heads bowed, their ihants 1 wings ot the breeze: , :i x e irt "O come, all yon who pass by, and see, if a great sortu*. • your heart grieves." But. a Power that rules front high heaven, will in Hi* own ii |llc n the vile clod. .MirldW l While the dear little Eaglet of Lindbergh, has flown Heart of its God. . SoJ iK Thence Sourland Mountain, whence his soul soaieu. 1 Mount as of yore; ( . r ihisW Hence, it has become Sorrowland Mountain — sorrowing 0 evermore toXNEUI Decatur, Indiana, Muy 22. 1932. EMILIA
” dor.int ~, , " ,lor "»rt, -jl N 'A?BIXLqI| optometrist I 8 Eye. Examined, J ! hours '0 11 SO » m,.,8H Saturday,, j « 'Telephone I*4, K •
