Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 265, Decatur, Adams County, 7 November 1934 — Page 3
Page Two
BE*-. " 11111 .■■■' F classified” j ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE * FOR SALE)—Good Guernsey bull, eligible to register. K. E. Bragg Mlle west of Willshire on 124. 263t.ix FXIR Jj,ALE -30 head of shouts and due to farrow February A*. ttrquire at Frank Wrecking *n»pany. West Monroe street. X-” 263g3tX -l.' 1 ■ ■ ——- +H>R_S.ALE - Bed springs and mat- : Irese-flaby chair. Mrs. G. A. Thoms , 514 North Second street. 263-g3t ixiß JJALE — New Remington “typewriter. Phone 1275. X~ **"■’ 264t3x KOR..SALE—Nine shouts at Charlies Teepic farm, first house south *n Monmouth, on V. S. Highway J7, —- 2C4.3tx •FOR .SALE—Barred Rock pullets, White Wyandotte pullets. JerseV White Giant cockrels. 4 miles --west, -\ south of Monroe. W. C. Oliver. 263t3x FOR SALE —Tliree-day old Guernsey heifer salt, extra good breeding. Phone J-866. John Walters. 263-3tx FOR SALE — Michigan apples. Grimes Gold-n, Johnathans, Mclntosh. Baldwins. Price 60 cents and up. S. E. itnucard. 1 mile north. 3% miles east of Monroe. 263-g6tx WAITED WANTED —Vsed gas stove. Must I be in go e condition. Mrs. Nichols. 304 N. Tenth. 264t3 WANTED To Let on Shares—lo or 12 h' • Os Ewes. Responsible party I’l,to. L. •clueferstein. R. 7. Decatur. 263a St x WANTED Beemeis. See Mrs. J. E Durbki. 1111 No. Second st.. Decatur. 263a3tx AV ANTED—Position ae housekeeper in city or country. Good cook. Berne phone 16 or write 268 East Main St. Bern 1 . 363-k3tx WANTED —For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf ■ 0 FOtat RENI FOR RENT—6 room house hear Decatur,* with electric lights. Large garden. Box 15, Daily Deni- ,.. ocrat. 264t3x FOR RENT—Furnished rooms lorated near Sugar Beet. Mrs. 3. E. Durbin, 1111 No. Second st.. Decatur. 263a3tx i o ; LOST AND FOUND ~ •'J.O’ST— Black and white lipotted } Walker female coon dog. Reward. ( Phone 876-T Dan Railing. .. . Nov. 73tx fl Model A Ford g 1928 to 1931 ■ MANIFOLD HEATERS | 95c ENGLAND'S ® AUTO PARTS Wholesale and Retail ~ st Door So. of Court House Phone 282 I«jew Gillette Tires Latex Dipped Process W? f now uncon ' » m-4 . iiujri ditionally laliiSilJ&ttiMl&W guaranteed for 18 mo. Soid on our new rental plan 25 weeks to pay. Porter Tire Co. Distributor 341 Winchester Phone 1289 Sirthmontl-. or Fames, Men Among the prominent people who were born during the month of September are Eugene Field. James Gordon Bennett. Prince Ito, Cardinal Richelieu, Marquis de La.ay ette. Jane Addams. Queen Elisabeth William the Conqueror, Dr. Waltet Reed, General Pershing, Janies Fgnirnure Cooper, William Howard TaTt, Louis XIV, James J. Hill, finrauai Johnson, Savonarola, Chief Juat’re Marshall, eachary Taylor Frances Willard, Clemenceau, Ad lniral Nelson, Shafidan (dramatist), Sudermann end Loi d Robert (Bobs'. For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m.
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL > | AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur Berne Cralgviile Hoagland And Willshire Corrected November f No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs 15.35 200 to 250 lbs >5.25 160 to 200 lbs 15.00 300 to 350 lbs $5.00 i 140 to 160 tbe $4.10 120 to 110 lbs ’ $3.00 100 to 120 lbs >2.80 Roughs >4.35 Stags >2.00 down Vealers >6.751 Ewe and wether lamba >5.75 ] Buck lambe $4.75 I CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July Wheat, old 1.00 % »% 94% new ... 1.00% Corn, old 79% 80% 80% I new . . 78% Outs, old . 51% 49% 45% new 52 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK —4 - ■Font Wayne. Ind.. Nov. 7 —Live-1 stock: Hogs steady to 5c lower: | 250-300 Iba. $5.75; 225-250 Ihs $5.55; 300-325 Ihs. $5.40; 180-200 lbs. $5.25 300-350 Iba. $5.25; 150-160 lbs. $4.50; 140-150 Mis. >4.25; 130-140 lbs. >3.75 , 120-130 fbs. >3.25; 100-120 lbs. >2.75; j Roughs >4.50; Stags >2.75. Calves 7; lambs $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Hogs receipts 2.00 v; dependable outlet to all interests: Generally 1015 cents over Mondays average. De- | sitable 200-260 lbs. st>.lf'-$6.35: few- ; $6.40; 180-200 lbs. $5.864«; 150-170 ■ lbs. $5.15-$5.75; rpigs and unfinished underweights downward to $4. Cattle receipts -commercial 75; government 800; cows steady; low cutter and cutters SI.OO->2.15. Calves receipts commercial $l5O vealers rather slow, steady with Monday. 7.50 down. She'ep receipts 11:00; Lambs un changed; good <o choice $6 60: mixed offerings $6.00->6.25; strong weights auu medium kinds $5.50-. j >5.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected November (7 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 89c No. 2. New Wheat (58 lbs.) 88c Oats 32 lbs. test ? 7c Oats, 30 lbs. test 46c Soy Beans, bushel 68c-75c White or mixed corn SI.OO | First Class Yellow Corn $1.05 ' New Corn 70c to 90c ■ R ° y S * Johnson WTj Auctioneer P. L. 4 T. Co. Bl Phones 104 . and 1022. ’ Claim your date ! Av IV early as 1 se! ’' ’ every day. SALE CALENDAR Nov. B—HenryB—Henry K. 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 i 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 saleNov. 15. Theodore Luginbill. 3 miles south ami % mile weet of Willshire on the old Austin Evans farm. Closing out sale. Nov. 16—Decatur ami Chattanooga Sales. Nov. 20—(Harold Gillen. 1-4 mile south and 1-4 mile west of Maples. Nov. 22 r —John F. Sidle estate, 2 miles west of Van Wert on Ttoad 17. ! Nov. 23- Decatur and Chattanooga sales. Nov. 26—C. P. Foust, 14 miles north and 1 1-2 east of Monroeville. Nov. 30 —•Decatur ami Chattanooga Sales. Dee. 11—Dwight Wass estate, 3 miles east and 5 miles north of Decatur. Dec. 12—William Dottmer, % mi. .north of Echo. AUTOS BXFI3ANCED ON SMALtra BXTBA MONSV IT OVSIRTO ! FBANKUN SECURITY CO. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 * Decatur. Ind. . N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined, Glwseea Fitted HOURS: 8.30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8.00 p. m. Telephone lfs.
—M——ta—Ml lll—* ——— — * Test Your Knowledge * Can you answer seven of these ten Turn to peg* Four for the answer*. « » 1. Name the American jwtriot of the Revolutionary period. President of the Continental Congress, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and first Governor of the State of Massachusetts. 2. In what year was the Lusitania sunk? *3. Where is Antioch College?
IftlRIL in toe I'kJ »BYBE AT RJCE BURTON » |
CHAPTER XXXVII She did not let th* Cullens know where she was, and she had written to John only a week before and cent him her address. Soon she had a letter from him. “Aunt Nell’s written me twice to ask where yon are,” he wrote. “She wants to know whether you’ve gone 1 down south with the aunts, and wonders why you didn’t go to say say goodby to her. Better go to see her right away, Susie. . . . Why don’t you come out here to Connie and me? I might be able to get you some sort of place on the paper. There are women in the editorial department, on the woman’s page, and downstairs in the business office. If you think you’d like to come out I’ll send you the railroad fare —” Thera was more of the letter, ail of it encouraging, but Susan shook her head over it. No, she was going to stand on her own feet, she told herself for the thousandth time. She had done nothing that was right in her life so far, as she saw it, through her own weakness; and from now on she was determined to take no help from anyone and ask for no advice. She felt somehow that the success or failure of the rest of her life depended on what she did now and hew she stood up under her present unhappiness. For she was extremely unhappy these days, as well as discouraged. She hated Anna’s clean little house with its mingled smells of boiling cabbage and stew meat, of yellow kitchen soap and the tar tonic chat Herbst used on his mouse-colored hair. The stench from the near-by stockvardx filled her with nausea and she felt certain that her lungs must be jet black with the soot that she took in with every breath. Every night she was roused from time after time, by the scund of the dry hacking cough of old Mrs. Herbst who had chronic bronchitis. Shortly after midnight the clatter of milk bottles began to sound from the back yard where Herbst and Joe were loading their trucks. The motors would rumble, the garage doors would bang and they would drive away, one behind the other. Then at six o’clock the sounds of the day began—the opening of Anna's bedroom door that was the signal for Susan to get up, the gurgle of water in the bathroom pipes, the ringing of an alarm clock somewhere in the neighborhood, the six o’clock bells of St. Theodosius’ P.ussian Orthodox church, the shrieking of factory whistles. On Sunday afternoons the little house was always filled with people, friends and relatives of , the Herbsts’ who laughed and talked and drank home-made beer in Anna’s brightly upholstered living room. Susan always took refuge in her own room upstairs on these occa- ‘ sions, mending her clothes, doing her nails, reading or just lying 1 across the bed resting. She was ! tired most of the time lately. The i work of the house was net very heavy and Anna did more than half of it. But there were the milk cans to be washed out with boiling water and soda every morning when the two brothers brought them home empty, and there were hundreds of bottles to be sterilised and filled and capped with the capping machine that Susan soon learned how to use. She helped with this work every day, taking the place of Elva who had done it before her baby was born. However, it wasn’t ths heavy work that bothered Susan. The thing that wore ner out was the worry over the job that she could not find, the knowledge that her money was going, and the feeling of defeat that came over her at the end of every day’s fruitless search for work. Sometimes in the morning when the sun came shining through the smoke that lay like a pall over the whole South Side she would feel hope and energy surge up within her. . . . Surely she ought to be able to manage so small a thing as her own life when the whole great world managed itself so easily end beautifully from sun-up to dark, year after year, century after century 1 Thit feeling of high hope ana sclf-reiiance would slowly dwindle as the day wore away and she went from this place to that looking for work and not finding it.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934.
,! 4. Which Is th- rinallaßt of the . i three Scandinavian kingdoms? 5. In whl h Testament of the ! Bible is the Book of Proverbs? | 6. \Vha< is the terminal iporliou ■ ' of the superior limb of nirtn? , 7. Which country first recognized ’' Soviet Russia? 8. Os which county is Antofagas-1 •ita i province i i 9. What language ia spoken in i ’ i Brazil? I 10. In which State Is Luray Cav-1 . i ern? J*t the HaLit — Trade at Horn*
One morning Hart’* department store advertised that it was in need of an elevator starter and that it wanted a young woman “of neat appearance” lor the plae*. Months before Susan had promised herself that she would never step inside Hart’s again, but she set out now without even remembering her vow. By the time she had taken the fortv-minute street car ride to the heart of the city the employment office was crowded with girls who had eome in answer to the advertisement and the employment manager, a middle-agvd woman with gray hair, was just telling them that she had picked a girl for the place. As she turned to go back into her office Susan pushed her way through the crowd and stepped up to her. “Is there any other opening in the store?" she asked quickly. “Anywhere?—Even down in the bargain basement?" The woman shook her head and began to close the door. “There isn’t a thing,” she said. "We’re cutting down in every department, turning off some of our best and most experienced people every week." Experience. Training. Those were the two things that every employer seemed to insist upon. Susan was more down-hearted than usual as she went back to Anna's in time to set the table with the thick white china and the bone-handled knives and forks for dinner. How did other untrained, inexperienced people like herself make a living, she wondered that afternoon as she worked in the creamery, taking Anna’s place behind the counter for an hour. The women of the neighborhood came in, asked for a pound of cheese or a quart of milk and laid their money down upon the clean white counter. Susan looked at it from a point of view that was new to her. . . . Somebody had had to find a job in order to tarn that money. Everybody, everybody but he i self, seemed to know how to go about getting work and the wages that went with work. What quality <jd the people who earned money have that she apparently did not have? “Times is hard,” she heard Herbst remark one night to Anna as he read his German paper, the “Wachter und Anzeiger.” “Lots of people out of work. We should think ourselves lucky.” “But I ought to find something, anyhow,” thought Susan. “I have a good head and I’m just as good looking as a great many people. Neat looking, at any rate.” She thought about herself a great deal more than was good for her, lying in her hard bed staring out at the steady serene stars that seemed to be asking what all the fret and trouble was about. Looking back, she saw that for almost twenty-two years she had been a good obedient child, moving this way and that at the bidding of the family. When she had wanted to be trained to be a paid worker they had behaved as if it were a disgrace to want to be a working girl instead of a “marriage girl” who war, to marry not. the man she wanted but the man they wanted her to marry. And then, when she had given up Allen because of them, they had gone their own way, leaving her utterly unprepared to face the world. They had left her high and dry. She remembered what John had told her on Christinas night at the Cullens’—“You'll have to grow up some time, you know, Susan.” Well, she had had to grow up almost overnight, to learn to stand alone, to walk alone, at last. * * * On a Monday morning of wind and sunshine, Susan went to Mills Road to see her Aunt Nell Cullen. After the grime and ugliness of Clay Street, Mills Road was the most beautiful and cheerful spot on earth to Susan. The snow had been washed away by a rain the night before and every puddle was as blue as a little lake, reflecting a cloudless sky. Susan had decided to go to the , Cullens’ early in the day when there would be very little chance of seeing either Allen or Mary, and it was just ten o'clock when she ■ stepped from the car at the corner ; of the street. Aunt Nell, in galoshes and an old leather windbreaker of Howard’s,
THANK YOU It is needles* tor me to say that I I appreciate more than I can tell I you the support you gave me in J Tuinday* election. It will be my I aim during my term as auditor to i attend to every duty to the very j best of my ability and to serve you ] as efficiently as I can. 1 tlwink the j voters inset sincerely. JOHN W. TYNDALL -—o Naw York Sun Led The New York Sun wn* the firs: newspaper to be sold on the street* 1 Id this country.
was in the side yard beating a row of bed pillows that wer* pinned in a row on th* clothes line. Her galoshes flapped around her ankles and her apron puffed out like a sail in the wind as sh* came hurrying across the flattened wet grass to Susan. “Well, Susan I Susan Broderick I Where kavt you been? And why didn’t you let u* know where j'ou were?—Why did vou do this dreadful thing to us. ’ Her features were all puckered in the middle of her rosy face by her distress. “We have worried and worried and worried!” “I'm staying at Anna's." said Susan with her aunt’s arms around her. holding her tightly. "Anna, our old maid, you know. She married Herbst, our milkman. I’m boarding at her house.” She spoke in a perfectly matter-of-fact way as if it were the most natural Uiing in the world that she should hide herself from the Cullens and go to live in Clay Street with Anna. Her aunt did not answer ner, and her puzzled eyes went on searching Susan’s face as she led the way into the house and made her a cup of cocoa. The house with its white painted book shelves, and its sun shine and its Boston fern* in the window, wai more like home to Su san than the house on Center Street ever had been. There was a certain welcome, a feeling of homecoming, in the very smell of the place;—the , smell of cleanliness and pine pillows and savory cocking that was as much a part of the house as the big Oriental living room rug that it had taken Aunt Nell two years to pay for on the installment plan. “We didn’t know you’d all left the house until Mary tried to call you up and found that the telephone had been disconnected.” Aunt Nel! ( said when she had made the cocoa I in a blue-flowered cup that re- j minded Susan of the "dunking’ party. “We waited for a day or two, thinking you’d come ovar to sec us, and when you didn’t, I got Howard to drive me over to Center Street. And I simply couldn't be- i lieve my eyes when I saw the house ' standing there empty and a great big 'For Sale’ sign on the front of I it! I went straight home and wrote to John to find out what had hap ; pened and where you were—ano last week he wrote to tell me that | he’d written you and that you’d be i coming to see me soon. Susan, what . did you do a thing like this for?” “I came to see you one night but . no one was at home. Didn’t Mr. ! Jennings tell you that I stopped in ; at the store?” asked Susan. “Yes, but why didn't you come . again? Or why didn’t you cal! us ' up when you knew your own tale- j phone was disconnected and we couldn't get you?” pursued her aunt. “I don't understand all this. ' Susan. You must have had some good reason for staying away. You weren’t angry with us over anything, were you. or hurt?—You must know bow much we all think of you.” “I thought I wouldn't let anyone know where I was until I was all straightened around,” murmured Susan, telling a half truth, and knowing that she could never explain things to Aunt Nell* satisfaction unless she told her about herself and Allen Sholes. And that, she told herself, was the one thing ! she would never do. “Well, now that you’re here, we d better make some plans for your 1 staying here.” her aunt said briskly. ! her face clearing a little. “I’m 1 never going to let you stay »t your ■ hired girl’s house, now that I know '■ you’re there. Allen Sholes has been > staying with us. Re has Connie’s room but I’ll explain how thingr are to him and he'll give it up. 1 “He and Mary have struck up • such a nice friendship," she add»<i. • “We all think so much of him: he’s ’ just like one of the family already. ! I think I may be able to get him a 1 room back here on Edwards Street 1 with a Mrs. Taylor who rents 1 rooms—and then be can go right - on taking hi* meals here with us.” “No, I'm not coming here." Susan answered with each force that Aunt - Nell pushed her glasses up above 1 her eyebr- -..s to icok ’-.ore closely ’ at her. i'l.e "’■•.rys raid that she t had to take <><.* her glasses when - she war to I to *t« % tt.-it was really r going no “I’m aU sefi I*4*l Anna’s, and I think I’ 1k- ;rr sw»y thera." 1 <*i’o flu Ccnt’rucd) ,] OhhiH i, ,»!». W C.M SWlurw Sr-4'o-, IM.
Nominations In Democrat's Club “And Votes Credited On Coupons"
, I .Belo* I* a ll»t of «U who b» ve • j been nominated in th* Daily Demoilcr&t's Christmas Club However , this does not mean that all will be active worker*. In fact only a very few have shown any indication thus far of wagin an active cam paigii. Therefore those who do not i make a report on or before Saturday night. November 17th will be removed from the list of active members. Andrew*. Geo. L„ Decatur... 20.000 Arnold, Mrs Floyd R., Decatur 30.000 Biggs, Homer. Route 7. Decatur 20.000 I Bleek*. Louis, Route 5, Decatur 30.000 Burroughs. Mr*. Lillian. Decatur 20.000 Collier. Mi»s Mina. Decatur 30,000 Dull. Miss Virginia. Wren, Ohio 20,000 Habegger, Mrs. Paul. Route 2, Monroe 20.000 Hollenbeck. Reginald. Monroeville 20.000 Houk. Mrs. Louis J . Route 7 Decatur 20.000 Htiston. Mrs. Esther. Route 7. Decatur 2C.WO Jones, William, Route 2. Decatur 20,000 Koenetnan, Miss Olga. Route 1. Decatur 20,000 . Kolter, Fred E.. Decatur 20,000 | Little, Mrs. W. 0., Decatur 20,000 | Lovellette, Mrs James. Route 3, Decatur 20,000 Maupin, Mrs. Mary R. Geneva 20.000 McMillen. Mrs. Bernice, Pleasant Mills 00.000 Teeple. Miss Mamie P. Route 5. Decatur . . 20.0'M1 Reynolds, Mrs. Olive. Berne 20.000 Rice. Mr*. Crystal, Route 2, Monroe 80.000 Roop. Mrs. M F. Decatur 20.000
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Runyan, Kenneth H„ Dera tor, 20,000 Shady, Miss Ethel J. Preble 20.000 Smith. Rev C. Emery, Pleasant Mills 20.000 Stoppenhagen, Erwin, Route 1. Decatur 2b.000 - .. o THAVK YOU 1 wish In this m-luner to heartily express my aincere appreciation to voter* for the wonderful vote given I me for Joint Benator. I assure you I I will continue to serve you to the ; best of tny ability. THURMAN BOTTSCHALK.. • -o — THANK YOU 1 want to sincerely express nty appreciation to all the voter* ami supporters of Decatur ana Washington township for your wonderful consideration and support given me lu Tuesdays election. JOHN M. DOAN i • To The Voters of St. Marys Twp 1 wish In this mauaer to thank i each and every voter in St. Mary's ! township for t'lie splendid support I
- — .. y■ w - Public Auction |I FRIDAY, November 9th—l2 o’rlwk sial J DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES 1 DECATUR. INDIANA I sd 35 HEAD OF HORSES—2S COLTS from ;to 3 years I °'. Goad rugged native colts. John Ruff, owner I A 20 HEAD MILCH COWS—3O HEAD FEEDING CATTLE. I SHEEP. HOGS and Miscellaneous Articles. I Consign articles you have for sale and get the cash a DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR—Managers—L. W. MURPHY ■ Johnson and Doehrman, auctioneers. R Tli
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