Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 262, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE" you SALK — Received new shipment 3.pc. Living room suite, s4ll. Ited room suite, $35. Mattress. $5.50. Double deck coll spring. $6. Lounging chair with nttoman. $14.90, Breakfast set. sl3 Oil stoves. $4.50. Heating circulating stoves, medium size, $39; large tile. $49. Kitchen rang-s. $lB up. Stucky and Co.. Monroe, lml FOR SALK or TRADE — For shrep: • 'hoice of three fresh cows. W. M. Kittson, Decatur, route 4. 262-k3tx FOR SALE— 25 Leghorn pullets. laying, direct from Gat-son Farm Dallas Goldner Phone 362. 1323 Monroe St. 260-3 t FOR SALE—Fresh cider and apple; several varieties. J. 0. Thicker, 569-H. ’-‘62-3t FOR SALE—Two good fresh cows with calves. Louis Reinking, quarter mile f Preble. 260-a3tx FOR SALE —44 new Louden drinking cups for cattle stanchions. W. A. Wherry, Monroeville phone, 3 miles north Bleeke church. 27dt3x FOR SALE —Girl's winter t at. size 14 or 16. reasonable. Phone 657 or at 369 N. Bth S;. 261-3 t FOR SALE or TIUDE-On city pr;perty—47 t* acres good farm land, well improved. A. D. Suttles -62-gst FOR SALE—Krick Tyndall stock. Will sacrifice. Write Box J. C.. Democrat. 262-g3tx FOR SALE—2 soft coal burners, t all 22 L. \V. Murphy. 271-3 t I 'I — FOR SALE —1928 Chevrolet coupe. in good condition. inquire at 1663 Winchester St 271-3tx FOTT SALE — Several good milk cows. William Kleuk, 6 miles -east of Decatur. 271-3 t "FOR SALE —Used Furniture. One dining room table with 5 chairs. 1 Davenport. 2 Hard coal stoves. 1 Oil Stove. Stuchy and Co., Monroe. Ind 257-6 t LOST AND FOUND LOST — Brown rubber raincape -and cap in rubber bag. Lost out wif car last week. Finder please retun to Mrs. It. E. Garard, phone 595. 271t3x oWANTED _ MAX WANTED — in this locality 'direct representative of well I oil company to sell small J town and farm trade. Big business i right now taking orders for hum-- 1-1 iate and spring delivery. Exper- i ■fence not necessary. No investment i reqtfred. Chan-a? for immediate, at adv incom . Write P. T. Webster, General Manager. 631 Standard Bonk Building, Cleveland, . Ohio 262a1:x MAN WANTED for service station. $33 weekly to start. Experience ’ not required. SBSO cash deposit requirejj on equipment. Manufacturer, 314-11-1563 Wesley St.. Wheaton. 141. 25T.6tx WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellas Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service. 226 N. 7th st. 251tf FOR RENT .FOR RENT —Rooms for ligut housekeeping. furnished. Phone 124 inquire at 122 E. Rugg St., 262-a3: I A C Oil Filters Bj and Percolator §| Cartridges ■ ENGLAND’S ■ AUTO FARTS *3 Wholesale and Retail Ist Door So. of Court House N§ Phone 282 Latex unconfor 13 mo. So'd on our new rental plan 25 weeks to pay. Porter Tire Co. Distributor 341 Winchester Phone 1233 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12.30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telaphone

'MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS . 1 Brady's .Market lor Decatur Berne Cralgville Hoagland A,nd Willshire Corrected November ! 1 No commission and no yardage. , Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. . j 250 to 300 lbs $5,10 200 to 250 ills $6.00 J 160 to 200 lbs $4.75 , 300 to 360 lbs $4.80 j • 140 to 1(0 lbs ’. $3.85 | 120 to 140 lbs $2.80 j 100 to 12u lbs $2.66 i Rough.- $4.15' Stage $2.00 down j Vealers $6.75 j Ewe and wether lambs $5.75 Huck lambs ... $4.75 | FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, lnd., Nov. 3.—tU.Ri j —Hogs steady to 10c higher: 250-1 too lbs. $5 75; 225-250 lbs.. $5.55; 200-225 lbs, $5.40; 180-200 lbs.. $5.25; 160-180 lbs.. $5; 300-350 lbs.. I $5 25; 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 50; stags. $2.75. Calves. $7; lambs, $6.25 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N, Y., Nov. 3.— U.R>—Livestock: Hogs. 600; market active, steady j to strong: mediums. $5.75-$6.00 Cattle. 125; better grade steers j and yearlings 25-50 c lower during I tlu week; steers. SS-$S 50. Veals, $7.50 down. Sheep receipts, none; lambs steady to 25c lower during the week; good to choice ewes and wether. $6,75: mixed lots. $6-16 50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected November 3 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better SBe j No l'. New Wheat (58 lbs.) 97c j Oats 31* lbs. test 47 1 j Oats. 30 lbs, test 46c ' Soy Beans, bushel 65e-75c ; White or mixed corn $1.60 First Class Yellow Corn $1.05 New Corn 70c to #oc Get the Habit — Trade at Home AMERICAN LEGION URGES ALL VOTERS OUT NEXT TUESDAY FROM PaOEONE) J tical; it is non-©eetarian: it is made I up of men wbo served in the Great War regardless of belief. The prij mary purpose of the organizatiDn j to he of service to community. State ami -Nation. Members of the Legion | grave service while they were ine-m---j bers f thr armed forces of the ■ United Slates. The Legion was organ izei that they might continue to give the same service in time- of peace a.s they gave in war. Standing upon this platform, The American Legion urges every good citizen to familiarize himself with the candidates for the several •public offices to be voted for. and with the issues involved. With this infor- s mation well in mind you w ill be able j to vote intelligently. Mint k or »*in %i %i:tii!.mi vi or l>| \TK No. :M$4T Notice I.- hereby given to the ereditors, heirs and h*Kat»-*» of J«*hn K. j Hook. deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit <’ourt. held at Decatur. Indiana, on the 19th day of November, 1934. and show oau a e. | if anv. why the FINAL SETTLE- j M EXT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified | to then and there make proof of heirship* and receive their distribu-j live shares. Kiiv Hook. Administrator I>ecat«r, Indiana, October -5" ll»34. \ll4»r»ie.' 1.1.. Walter* Oct 27 Sov. 3 | | NOTH’K TO TAXPAUdbi Notice is uereoy given that M nday, November •>. l‘*34 will be the last day to pay yaur Kail instaUnicnt of taxes. The county treaaarer's office will be open from * A. M. to 1 p. n.. during the tax pay A t .v.aAll taxes not paid by that time w:!l become delinquent and a ■ , penalty will be added. Also interest j at the rate of *% wilt be charged from the date of delinquency until . paid. Those who have hoJifht or sold j property and wish a division of j taxes are asked to come in at once. t ail on-the Auditor for errors and! any reductions. The Treasurer can 1 make no corrections The Treasurer will n t be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the oinnii«fion 3>f tax-payers to state definitely on what property, they desire to pay, in whose name it may he found, in what township or corporation it ia situated. Person owing delinquent tax.es should pay them at or»ce. the law is such that there is* no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. The annual sale of delinquent lands and lots will take ptu'-e on the second Monday in February at 10 00 A. M. County orders will not t** paid to anyone owing delinquent tao.es. All persons -are warned against them. No receipts or checks will be held i depository law* requires the Treasurer to make daily deposit. Particular attention. If you pay taxes in more thau oue township mention the fact to the Treasurer, also see that your receipts call for all your real estate and personal property. In making inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do not fail to Include return postJOHN WECHTE.R Treasurer Adams County, Indiana Oct 11 to Nov. a

l» - — » Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer aeven of these ten quecHont? Turn to page Four for the answer*. ♦ • 1. Who wrote the novel "Anna Karenina”? 2. What Is lyddite? 3. Na:nt the cupifa! of Nova Scotia. 4 Who was Sir Henry Clinton? 5. Who aald. "Sir, i would rather lie right than be President”? [ 6. in which o ©an are the Tonga ! lelania? I

I in the FAMILY*| | »BY BEA.TR.ICE BURTON * fl

11 CHAPTER XXXrV On Monday night John left to go hack to Omaha. Susan wont with him to the station and, on their way downtown in the Fifth Street trolley car. he asked Susan what her plans for the future were. “Why don’t you come out to me and Connie when the girls go '• south?” he asked. He often referred to his aunts as “the girls,” and Susan never knew whether he did it with humor or simply because his father and Uncle Worthy had always called them girls. “No. I may go over to the Cullens' and get something to do—a job, 1 mean. That’s what I probably will do, John. I haven’t thought much about myself for the last few days—everything's been so topsyturvy," she answered. “I’ve been half expecting to hear from Alien, but evidently ne’s still furious with »» me. She had told John the whole Allen story from the moment w hen Uncle Worthy ordered him out of the house until the night when she had refused to marry him. “I know just how he feels,” she said now. "As if I’ve double-crossed him. But wi*at could I have done that I didn't do?” John was silent for a minute while the car slid along under the shining trolley wires. "Well, you Amid have walked out with him that first night when he asked you to,” he said at last. “Y’ou should have, as a matter of fact, when they wore virtually kicking him out. . . . You could have married him the night when he wanted you to—that is, taking it for granted that you really do mean to marry him sooner or later. You know, Susan, when a fellow asks a girl to marry him he’s offering just about everything that he has or is. He feels that she ought to take him or leave him. Instead of that, you kept putting him off. staying there with people vrho’d treated him like the dirt under their feet, seeing -Id Wallie right along. I can see just how he feels. I’d never come back, either, if I were in his place.” Susan seized his hand. “You don’t think he’s ever coming back to me?” she asked, the words coming out on a gasping breath. John’s eyebrows and his shoulders went up as he shrugged. "It would take a lot of nerve after the things you've handed to him,” "I couldn’t have done anything but what I have done,” Susan declared. “After all, we do owe something to Aunt Edna and Lutie. They brought us up.” John’s eyebrows knotted and a little muscle in the side of his cheek twitched. “As a matter of fact, they lived in the same house with us and that’s about all—as I've often pointed out to you,” he said. “They used to pick out your clothes when you were a kid, but if you think back, you won’t be able to remember much of anything else that they ever did for either of us except to tell us to run away and not bother them. If we ever had any real mothering we had it from Anna. Who else ever took us to a circus or a movie or trimmed a Christmas tree for us? Dad supported us, of course, and we do owe him something. But there isn’t anyone else for whom you ought to ruin your life, so far as I can dope it out. Y’et you’re going to marry Wallie pretty soon because the family want you to—and you think you owe it to them to do it.” He fini ished on a note of high sarcasm. “What makes you think I’m going to marry Wallace?” asked i Susan. "Nothing’s further from my mind!” “You’ll do it just the same. Lutie and Aunt Edna will wear you down about it just as they’ve always talked you out of everything that you’ve ever wanted to do. Alien probably through with you—and they’ll keep reminding you of it and advising you to take Wallace, and you’ll do it. But why anybody should take their advice about anything is a mystery to me. If ever a crowd of people did not know how to manage themselves and their affairs it’s our family. They’ve thrown away a fortune the | last twenty years—a big fortune. 1 too—like kids putting nickels in a ' slot machine.” He made a sadden outward movement with his hands to indicate just how they had thrown their money away. His , movements were just as awkward

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“NOBODY’S GOAT” BV SE^ it KiOSTf-* been U I whasax /good heavehsA] monev mnt\ /i oomt care\ U\ give ult* m llion a tearx" I thu~ •/ ( DARN BAD HEU/<>.TOO, MATTER?! / MAN. I'M LOSING IMPORTING- U ABOUT LOSING V TO CHARITY _l'M HO MISER’. \ -tu; « '■> NL ,j t o \ JOS LOOK AT Him r- CANT VA 11 MILLIONS IN GOLD VA GOT GOODS. THE MONET- Rut NOBODV'S GOING TO R 0& 1 c-t/Wt :, ' TLEO/ - ■> ,7 ROBBEO THAT B-I V VSfflv,' '^ > ti L TVvI

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1934.

7. Name the famous iiMthematkal | treatise In Latin by Sir lsaa ■ Newton. S. Who was Robert Southey’ 9. Name the capital of Maryland. li). Where did the MeunotiUe aect originate? Montpelier Man Is Fatally Hurt , BhtfTton. IbJ., Nov. 3—(CP>Fred Ferry, 55. farmer of n«ar Montpalier, died in county hCMtpifal here today of injuries received yesterday when he fell against a buzz I saw at his farm. The widow, four

as his jerky way of talking; but , they were emphatic and full of , meaning, just as his conversation , was. Susan looked at him sidewise . through the tears that were beginning to blur her eyes. It was very , easy for her to cry these days. , Something about the way John’s . mouth was set made her think of 1 Allen’s face. He had worn that , same grim, exasperated expression , the night she had told him to finish I his course at night law’ school and then came back and talk marriage . to her. , “And now that you've done everything that they wanted you to do, what do they do for you?” John was asking her now. “Why, they . make their own plans for a grand getaway to some warm spot where they won’t need you, and if you don’t want to marry Wallie, why, it’s just too bad. but you’ll have to shift for yourself.” It was true, Susan admitted to herself. Not for one second had they stopped to ask her what she was going to do. Their whole thought had been for themselves, for what they could save for themselves out of the wreck of the family fortunes. “I’ll get along. The Cullen girls can show me how to go about getting some work to do, and I’m vot going to marry Wallace,” she said. “If I’d just had some kind of practical training. John!—” Susan's hands, which had been linked over her knee, fell apart and hung at her sides in an unconsciously helpless movement. “Well, it’s your own fault that you haven't had any,” John answered. “You’ve talked around for years about a business course, but you never had the crust to stand up to the family and and tell them that you were going to take one. You’ve had money from time to time. You could have saved it. and have done what you pleased with it—if you’d just had the spunk to do it. You’re too darned easy with people. Susan. Y'ou let them walk ail over you with hobnailed shoes—twice on the soft places.” At the station, just as his train was pulling out, he spoke to her again about coming out to Omaha to him and Connie. “We’ll send you the money when you want it,” he called from the platform as she walked along beside the slowly moving coach. “You know we’ll be crazy to have you—” And then he was gone. Susan stood on the windswept platform until the train was just a red pinpoint in the darkness. A train, eastbound for New York, came thundering down the tracks on the other side of the platform, stopped for two or three minutes, and w’ent thundering on. Still she stood there, thinking over what John had told her It was all true. Through some flaw in herself—some weakness, the thing that John called “the soft places” in her character—she had let the family keep her from the things that she wanted most in life. . . Friends, when she was a little girl at school. .. . The business course that would have made her independent, later on.. . . And now, last of all, Allen— She had been made to give them all up because they weren’t “just the people for her” or “just the thing for her.” in the family’s opinion. Because of their silly family pride, their feeling that the Brodericks were a bit better than the ordinary run of nice unassuming people in the world—the “hoi polioi.” as Uncle Worthy had always called their neighbors—they had spoiled everything for her. Well, it would all be different from now on. Susan promised herself. She would lead her own life, make her own mistakes and her own successes, do the things she had always wanted, to do—and somehow she would get Allen back, make things clear and right between .herself and him once more. That night Mary Cullen telephoned her and asked her to come over for dinner cn Tuesday. “You’ve heard the news, haven’t you?” she asked when Susan had told her that she didn’t want to leave Aunt Edna and Lutie in the evening until they were better. "News?” Susan repeated. There was always some sort of news at the Cullens’. The girls might be having

daughters and a son survive. Three | of the daughters are Known m ‘The ; Ferry Sisters" singers who appearregularly on radio programs. FRED SCHURGER IS NOMINATED (OONTINfED FROM PAPE* ONE) farmers for production purposes. The association provides a pro-j liuctive credit system of a permanent sourse f credit available to I farmers in periods of stress as well! as in times of prosperity. It pro-1 vidfs production loans to fanners! a* th a tual cost of the money,!

; Sunday night supper and Inviting ! Susan, or Uncle Art might have 1 i traded in the old car on o new one. The Cullens’ news was usually the - pleasant kind. “Yes. Allen’s living here with 1 us," came Mary’s answer. “He’s taken Connie’s old room. We’re so glad to have him here." Her own satisfaction at having him in the i house was in her voice. She had always been half in love with Allen. | Susan reflected as she said goodby and put the receiver back upon its j hook. It was Mary no doubt who : had asked him to go to the Cullens’ j to board. “Well!” she said aloud to the empty hall. She was so astonished that it was two or three minutes before she began to realize what Allen’s going to live with the Cullens had done to her own plans. .. . She couldn't go there now while she looked around for something to do, for some way of supporting herself. That was “out,” as John would have put iL Not onlv was there no room for her at the Cullens’ now, but she would not move one step in what would look like pursuit of Allen, who was certainly not purseing her these days. He might, she t leught, have at least telephoned he at the time of Uncle Worthy’s dec :h. He must have heard about it fnm the Cuiiens. From Mary— She went back through tht house to the kitchen where she was finishing the dinner dishes. Through the hall where Allen had been talking to her the other night while Wallace watched him from the darkness of the old parlor. Through the dining room where Allen had held her in his arms the night Lutie found them together. The house was no longer the place of enchantment that it had been during the weeks when Alien > had lived in iL It was once more j the same shabby old place that it had always been, as far back as Susan could remember. * » • On Thursday afternoon Anna j Ooerg came to the house, wearing a new suit of pale and Spring-like I green and bringing a large coffee cake of her own making for the i family. Lutie and Aunt Edna were sitting at the dining room table, counting the flat silver, when she knocked on the kitchen door, and Susan sat at ; the other end wrapping the pieces ; of Grandmother Broderick’s Crown Derby tea set in tissue paper. Everything in the house except the ; clothing, the family pictures and , the monogrammed articles of silver and linen had been sold the day be- | fore to a vtoman whom Wallace had 1 sent to the house—a businesslike aggressive woman named Vera Whitt&ll, who owned the Whittall Galleries—" Modern and Antique Furniture”—downtown near the Public Square. All her life Susan had seen the place from the windows of the Fifth Street car, never dreaming that some day her own bed and dressing table would be there on sale. It was hard to believe it even now. It was unthinkable that on Saturday the old piano and the Oriental rugs and the long dining room table would be carried out of the house. That the statue of the Greek Slave would no longer glimmer from its shadowy corner in the front parlor and that the glittering 1 prisms of the crystal chandeiiers in | the back parlor would never tinkle again as hurrying footsteps passed across the second floor rooms. That the three armchairs would moved away from the white marble fireplace at last— It was impossible to believe that soon the old house would be gone, too, to make room for a modern store building or apartment house, according to Wallace. Susan had only half believed him It seemed to her, somehow, that the house would always stand there, guarded by the elm tree, where it had stood so long with its plate-glass windows turning blind eyes to Center Street in which it had had no interest since Center Street ceased to be fashionable. It had stood there, but it had never been part of the busy noisy life that went on in the new little shops and the new crowded little houses that sprang up around it ... A snobbish old house. (To Be Continued) Coojrtfbt, 1111, by Slo# fei*ar« gjoitctU, !•«. |

! and gives cooperative management J and the utllmate control and owner-; ship of the association to the borrowers. Loans are given to: finance grow-1 Ing, harvesting or marketing (arm, j orchard or truck crops; buy Block- 1 er am! feeder cattle, sheep and hogs j brood sows; finance poultry gtroduc- j tion; to pay debts origlnaUy_m^[ VOTE FOR THE MAN AUBURN F. HAGG A R D For CLERK Harry Moore of Wabash Tow nship Republican Candidate For Commissioner District of Adams County Amos Burkhalter of Berne, Indiana Republican Candidate for JOINT REPRESENTATIVE of Adams and Wells counties Against extravagance and for lower taxes and support of the Constitution, Your vote w ill be appreciated pol. advt. — VOTE FOR FOREST ELZEY Republican Candidate for COUNCILMAN at Large City of Decatur Pol. Adv. VOTE FOR Frank L Johnston REPUBLICAN For COUNCILMAN at Large City of Decatur Pol. Adv ___________________ SIM BURK FOR CITY COUNCIL Republican Ticket Your Vote will be Appreciated Vote for FLOYD ACKER Republican Candidate for COUNCILMAN at Large City of Deeatur Pol. Adv. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■

jcurred for agricultural production;' ! finance all genera! agrirultural pur-

Clarence R. Smitj 'i AUDITOR j Os Adams County Cashier of Farmers State Bank of Freble the past fourteen years.. World War Veteran, IS month I overseas, 8 months in the States, 2tt months service in all, I solicit your very kind consideration when c a s t i n g your vote Tuesday, November 1931, I critical Advertw I DAVID HOC, The election of David Hogg to rep . Congress will mean the resuming of the evct s■ ent ard ca | j service which he gave while a memoer of the National 41 of Representatives, A vote for David Hoga a »otes clean, energetic representative. VOTE FOR HOGS. DO YOU KNOW? Did you know that 65° 0 of the tota spent ostensibly for relief work goos for c-erheadania I spent for relief? Elect David Hogg to congress and l c p. -event tnaq ! on waste of ycur money. » The Federal Government is today sp£ : , i j and according to William Green. ’ ? t eration of Labor there are actually more 1 | one year ago Do you realize that many men now er ” p ‘V the Government wilt be out of work afte \ em “ er Do you know that David Hogg was ' - i years of age and that his services in Cor-.- e! ' - 1 j the Federation of Labor and an Kailwa) ’• : 4 Do you know that Indiana farmers - ' , cessing taxes and received $1,441,939 dur Do you know that Texas, Jack Game “- e p “ j, processing taxes to the total of SIO.O C $54 933.768? That Arkensas pa,d in $569 $13,792,399. Why not a fair deal? Do you know that the Brain Trust is ■) c< i into debt four billion a year and to raise ' ing interest bearing non-taxable bonds to Wa : stre Do you know that in the last 16 mont ! rato" * j been employed to help run the Govern.' - •{ ,hi I their salaries are more than $400.000 7-0 -’ • - , hey a stopped the corn borer waste of money. ?• away the Veteran’s pay. . •onto''" David Hogg stands tor human re e ” rnril ent wS I j and the aged and infirm, he stands aga --- ■ v He is for a fair deal. , ELECT DAVID HOGG TO REPRE-S" V ° p ,^

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