Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 8 January 1935 — Page 2

Page Two

NOTK.W To the officer*, depositors, eroditore and all others Interested In 'the Matter nt The Liquidation of The Penplea Loan and Truet Company ot Decatur. Indiana. You and Wil <>t you are hereby notified that pursuant to an order made and entered of record In the Adiitne Circuit Court of Adame Ctunty. state of Indian*. In the cause there la pending entitled In The Matter of The Liquidation of The people* Loan and Truat Company" and numbered 14721, upon the docket* of mid court the Department of Financial Institution* of the State of Indiana. In The .Matter of The liquidation of the aald The I rnplra Ixiaii and Trust Company, has filed In raid eauee an account In partial settlement in the llquldati 'll of said (rilat company, setting forth nil receipt* and diabur»eim-nt«, credits and chargee to date of aueh account You are further notified that the court has fixed and set 1 sth day of February 193 S as the day and date when th* court will hear and determine any objection In writing which may be filed against said report and Will pass upon such a count. | I*«ted at Decatur. Indiana this .th, day of January 1916. The Dcpartment of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana. by .LARK J. Lt TZ Special Representative , Herman 11. M>rr», Attorwj Jan. 8-15-2 J. W-HEMHEM><»TH H In thr %dam« circuit < otirt, Xoirmbrr Term. IOH-4 STATE <>F INDIANA. COUNTY OF ADAMS, Kb I Harry cam. Plaintiff v* Daniel D. Chicken, et al. Defendants Now ome. the plaintiff by Fru hte and Llttcrer. Its attorneys, ■nd tiles its complaint herein together with the affidavit of a competent person that the residence, upon diligent inquiry. Is unknown of the following named defendants, towlt: Daniel D. Chicken, D. D. thicken David D. Chicken, William I>avid. E. Woods. Charles M. Franc-. Martha A. France, Jesse Niblick, John Crawford, 1-rank Stanford John Niblick. Niblick Crawford and Pons. G Bombye. George Bombye, F. N. Deen, Perry N. Deen. Albert Kindel, Sarah E Klnrtrl, Daniel «. Elaev, Daniel Elzey, Pheoa K. Elaey, Borun Kun Ditching Association, Daniel Yager, Magdalena Bremer-, kamp, Henry Bremerkamp, H. Brem-| erkamp M Bremerkamp, WlUiam David Harrison Sudduth, Sarah r. Leßrun. Alexander Leßrun. Jeremiah G Mallonee, Susan Mallernee. Harvey Carpenter, Marla Carpenter. Joseph’ Carpenter, Annie Carpenter, Elias Carpenter. Clara Carpenter,, Epnriam carpenter, Susan carpenter Jane Cady. Harry A. Cady. Pearl: Beavers. William Beavers, George Lambert. Frances Lambert, James Campbell. Jr., Ada E. Barnett; that the names of the defendants are un- ■ known and they are believed to be non-residents of the State of Indiana i sued In this action by the following ■ names and designations, to wit: the ; unknown husbands and wivm. r»- . pe.-tlvely. of each of the following named persons, to wit: D» ni< ‘ 1 D', Chicken. D. D. Chicken. David W Chicken. William David, E. Woods Charles M France, Martha A . France, Jesse Niblick. Job:, SftV ford Frank Crawford. John NlWl< K . Niolick Crawford and Sons, G. Bom-, i bye, George Bombye, P N. Deen. Perry N Deen. Albert Kindel, Sarah E. Kmdel, Daniel W. Elzey, Daniel Elzey. Pheba R. Elzey. Borum Run Ditching t Association. Daniel Yager, Magda.ena Bremerkamp. Henry Brem.r- . kamp, H Bremerkamp. M. Bremet-il kamp. William David, Harrison bud- : deth. Sarah E. Leßrun. Alexander. Leßrun. Jeremiah G. Mallonee, Susan , ■ Mallernee, Harvey Carpenter. Mar.a, Carpenter. Joseph Carpenter, Annie; Carpenter. Elias Carpenter, Clara Carpenter. Ephriam Carpenter. Susan Carpenter, Jane Cady. Harry Cadv Pearl Beavers, W illiam Beat -1 ers 'George Lambert. Frances Lambert, James Campbell. Jr., Ada r.. Barnett, the names of all of whom are i unknown to plaintiff: the unknown: widowers and widows, respectively.. of each of the following named, deceased persons.to wit: Daniel I Chicken, D D. Chicken. David D Chicken William David, E. Woods, Charles M Fran -e. Martha A. France. : Jesse Niblick, John Crawford. Frank , , Crawford,John Nibßk.Niblit K C ta* ford and Sons. G. Bombye, George Bombye. P. N. Deen Ferry V Deen. , Albert Kindel. Sarah E. Kindel. Daniel W. Elzey. Daniel Elxey, Pheba | R Elzey. Borum Run Ditching Association. Daniel Yager. Magdal-I ena Bremerkamp. Henry Bremer-A It a mp, 11. BremerKamp. M .Brrmeij

PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public auction at my residence one mile north and % mile west of Monroe, Ind., or % mile west of State Road No. on WEDNESDAY, January 16, 1935 Beginning at 10:00 A. M. S—HEAD OF HORSES—S Red Road Mare 12 years old, weight 1600, sound, safe in foal, an excellent brood mare; Roan horse colt 5 months old, out of this mare, will make a good horse; Roan Mare colt will be 2 yr. old in June, out of the above mare. This is an extra good young mare. Pair of Sorrels coming 3 yrs. old, light msne and tails, well broke, sound, weight 1400 each. 9—HEAD OF HOLSTEIN CATTLE—9 Registered Holstein cow. 6 yr. old with calf by side; Registered Holstein cow. 4 yr. old with calf by side; Registered Holstein cow. 3 yr. old, was fresh in Ncember; Registered Holstein cow. 4 yr. old. with calf by -ido: Registered Holstein cow 4 yr. old. will freshen in February; Registered Holstein heifer 2 yr. old, will freshen in April; Registered Holstein heifer coming 2 yr. old, bred; two Registered Holstein heifers, yearlings, open. SHEEP 4 HOGS-6 extra good Shropshire ewes; 1 good Shropshire buck; 5 feeding hogs, weighing about 100 lbs. each; 1 pure bred Cheater White boar. FEED —20 ton of mixed alfalfa and clover hay; 3 ton of soy bean hay; 75 bushel of good yellow corn; 25 bushel of soy beans; oil large shocks ot corn fodder. IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS FORESON' TRACTOR & PLOWS; Tractor disc; Side delivery rake; Dain Web hay loader; Riding cultivator; Rollwer; Spike tooth burrow; Deering binder 7 ft; Brooder house, round galvanized iron; some seed corn; one bushel ulsace clover seed; many articles too uumorows to mention. TERMS—CASH. RALPH CHRISTY, Owner Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer. . W. Baumgardner, clerk. Monroe M. E. Indies Aid will serve lunch.

—, — ___________—— • * • wyjnaiii. mng Feature* rr»fllcate. In®. H NOW SHOWING—“LAUGHING GAS’* ' ——— n g- J pCSEt THAT ROOT CO(W\ pTHE TIW is FULL VJ6LL OOMPOOT tuat i ’ TH y|'LL BE SUSPRaeD O iVHENj (j —JT } t TH*§OOT CACTUS) STUFF AHD POuR CAUSED THE (MEN P 5 Y _ . g AROUND HERE JTvV > MJ®! T" PE THF A.NUJHEN THE MEN EAT ’EM VX. J TO BECOME l X TT ;:^^^uc e o/3^ ROaGH Jr THE'f'LL GET HAPPY AS HECK-)*?-< > . ? ' —i OUTLAWS.) Jv-z/E) ROOT j ——> AN UUHEN A MAN'S v — <— —4SI 1 'MfeW t'./s&u--I sn''' W-■ <J4s (uSXkt) Ccj q ii OL,. V°3) CM (sw&llj) y..-..- \ 'wb - z N'S. z'~?C' '—— -"47 ■ —— L'/"' "* ~ ♦ i X-nw ~~’ jK? > wtm r^ v C'fc AM// .£> n y „ i i L . 633"* jaj| i'i I iWb X NMBB' \Z2z r l''“~S \*'»- ~ M -x\ c, “' 6 >"‘ i " >■»>« >«■»•< eJ MB9 II 11 X. .■■■'/' >v__z _ * .Mg J V '>**»■ -' sjs3 E!E> ' XI ® IWS Kmx Fc*’urn SyniiaW, Jnc,.; : : NHV • (3^if •* 1C 1 -x. ✓ X \ — ■' —■ 1 s ■**' —XS—I_J3 E), >fiK<B,-8( ) $ M=§jst

I kamp, William Davtd, Harrl»on Sud ■ doth. Sarah E. Leßrun, Alexander Le - Brun, Jeremiah G. Mallonee. Susai ■ Mallernee. Harvey Carpenter, Mar « ’ Carpenter, Joseph Carpenter, Annlr I Carpenter, Elias Carpenter, Clara carpenter. Ephrlatn Carpenter, Susan ■ Carpenter, Jane Cady. Harry A. Cady, Pearl Beavers, William Beavers i George Lambert, Frances Lambert ’ James Campbell, Jr.. Ada E. Barnett. I the names of ail of whom are unknown to plaintiff: the unknown children, descendants and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors and admin. Istriitois ot the estate devisees, legatees, trustees, and executors of the last will and testament, success,>rs I hi Interest and assigns respectively ' of each of the following named ami designated deceased persona, to-wlt: Haute! D Chicken. D. D. Chicken, David D. Ch! keh. William David. E. Woods, Charles M France, Martha A. France. Jesse Niblick, John Craw- ' ford. Frank Crawford, John Niblick. Niblick Crawford and Sons, G. BomIn e George Bombye, I’ N Deen, 1 erry N Deen. Albert Kindel, Sarah 4C .Kindel Daniel W. Elzey. Daniel Elsey Pheba It. Elaev, Borun Run Ditching I Association. Daniel Yager, Magdalena Bremerkamp, Henry Bremerkamp. 11. Bremerkapm, M. Bremerkamp William David, Harrison Huddeth. I Sarah E. Leßmrn, Alexander Leßrun. Jeremiah G. Mallonee. Susan Maller- ' nee. Harvey Carpenter, Maria Carpen. I ter. Joseph Carpenter, Annie Carpenter Ellas 1 •arpenter, Clara Carpenter, ' Kpitrlsm Carpenter. Susan Carpen- ' ter Jane Cady. Harry A. < ady, I eat I I Beavers, William Beavers, Georg'Lambert. Frances Lambert. James Campbell. Jr., Ada E. Barnett, the I names of all of whom are unknow n tn th" plHlntlff; All of the women once known by any of the names and designations above stated, whose names may have been changed, and who are now know n by other names, the names of all of whom are unknown to the plaintiff; the spouses of all Os the persons above named, described and designated as defendants to this action who are married, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiff. Al! persons and corporations who assert or might assert any title, claim or Interest In: or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint In this action by, under or through any of the defend-1 ants in this artion named described, and designated in said complaint,, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiff. That said action is for the purpose! of quieting title to real estate in the. State of Indiana; that a cause of action exists against all of snid defend.i ants; that all of said defendants are necessary parties to said action and that they are believed to be nonresidents of the State of Indiana. The following real estate in Adams County in the State of Indiana, is described In said complaint to wit: Th» west halt of the north west ouarter of the southwest quarter of section thirty (SO) township twenty seven ,2.) north ot range fourteen (14) east of the second principal meridian containing 20 acres more or lefib. Also commen-i cing at the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of th e quarter of said section thirty < 3o ' running thence south 8 rods, thence . east 20 rads, thence north 8 rods.l thence west 20 rods to the place otj beginning, containing one (1) ? cr o| more or less Also the east half of' the northeast quarter of the south east quarter of section twenty rive (25) township twenty seven (Zi) north of range thirteen <l3 4 east of th" second principal meridian containing 20 acres more or less, containing in all the above described real estate 41 acres more or less; 'This action is instituted and prosecuted by said plaintiff for the purpose of quieting his title to the real estate above described against all claimants whatsoever. Notice is therefore hereby given that unless they be and appear on thezTth day of February Term. l»3o. of the Adams Circuit Court being the 6th day of March. 193.4. to be begun and holden on the 4th day of February. 1935. at the Court House In the City of Decatur, and said Countv and State, and answer or de-1 mur to said complaint, the same Will be heard and determined *in their absence. In Witness Whereof 1 have hereunto set my hand th* seal of said Court in 'he Office of the Clerk thereof in the City of Decatur, Indiana, thii 4 day of Januarj. IM5 ' DAVID D. DEPP Clerk of Adams Circuit Court. Fruchte and bitterer Attorneys for Plaintiff Jan. ■*-!■>----

I- ♦ > n Test Your Knowledge | a-- — a Can you answer seven of these | " ten questions? Turn to page «' Four for the answers. i.' > — - '♦ 1. Where is Samoa? n 2. Who is the reigning sovereign ''lot the Netherlands? -i 3. Which Indiana city has a famous motor race track? v 4. Who was Vice-President of ‘i I the U. 8. for one term and Preeti dent for two terms? 5. What is Indian Summer? ‘ 6. On what day of the week was . President F. D. Roosevelt inaug- ' urated? 7. Can copper be hardened? >’ | 8. What event does Christmas t - celebrate? 9. Does a sunken ship settle to the bottom of the sea at all depths? 10. Name the first Secretary of ’ the Treasury under the Coustitu- - tion ot the U. S. o STATE SCHOOL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i -—■' "■ i or local units should bear the cost. 1 McMurray proposed that school i corporations should furnish the ; texts with funds provided by speci ial tax levies. Governor McNutt is reported . strongly in favor of retaining the ! present taxes which are being used to support the schools. Through revenue of the gross income tax. the state is paying a part of the salary of each public school teacher in Indiana. The gross income, intangibles 'anti excise taxes have made JlO,000,000 annually available to the public school system. Free transportation of all school children under 16 years of age was another of McMurray's recommendations. He also suggested that free transportation be provided for all children permanently crippled. Bills affecting other departments of the state were being drafted rapidly today for presentation to the legislature shortly after opening. One of the most drastic proposes I that the legislature virtually vote i itself out of existence by consolidating senate and house, under a : plan known as the unicameral system of government. The bill will be introduced by Rep. Joseph E. Klein, Whiting. Democrat, and is modeled after the Nebraska law. In 1937 the Nebraska legislature will consist of but one chamber with a membership of 30 to 50. The governor will retain the right of veto but legislation by conference will be automatically abolishjed under the unicameral system. i One of the chief arguments for the single legislative chamber is

——will II II -a Roy S. " Johnson Auctioneer I* P. L. 4 T.Co. BL Phones 104 __ x and 10ZZ < .j‘l\ •_ * Claim your date j* \v II • ear ' y as sell wuj’ everyday. SALE CALENDAR Jan. 15th —Emmett Stripe, 2 mi north and 4 mile cast of Convoy. Closing out sale. 10:00. Jan 16 —Ralph Christy, 1 mile north & ’j mile west ot Monroe. Closing out sale. 10:00. Jan. 17 —Homer Blume, 9 mile east of Fort Wayne oh highway No. 14. Stock sale. 12:00. Jan. 18 —Decatur and Chattanooga stock sale. Jan. 21—Anna Jaeger, executrix I 3 miles east and 2 miles north of ' Zahesville. Jan. 24 Robinsnn Bros.. 4't i mi. west of Celiha, Ohio. Closing ' out sale. 10:00. j Feb. s—Walter Fetter, 7 miles south. 1 mi. west of Rockford, O. Closing out sale. 10:00. I Feb. 11 -Byerly & Alden. 1 mile i south Fort Wayne on state road ■l. Closing out sale. Feb. 14 — Everett Lake Stock Farm. 14 mi. west of Fort Wayne. Closing out sale. Feb. 16—Wm. T. Jones. 1 mile north, I’j mile south of Monroeville. Closing out sale. 10:00. Feb. 28 —Bert Marquardt, 3 mile north of Monroeville on Lincoln highway Chester White hog sale. 12:00.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, IANI 8, LU>.

i economy. Thousands of dollars I will be saved the Nebraska tax- , payers annually, it is predicted. 11 Soldiers Killed When Hit By Plane ' iKarachi, India. Jan. 8-(lT»— Eleven Indian soldiers were killed and 11 were seriously injured today when an Indiana airs. rce plane none dived into a platoon of troops nuneuvering near the Hub river. The nirplane, practising a ma-h---ine gun dive, failed to straighten out as It neared the ground and swooped into the platoon, belonging to the fourth Baluch regiment. The men were bowled over like

28EACH BEAUTY Is

CHAPTER XLVHI Pete Ryan was the first of Harrow’s guests to reach the study after the shooting. He found the two women bending over Harrow. The gun lay on the floor. “Kayl What’s happened?” ‘‘He’s dead!” Carlotta wailed, •gain and again, a wild, sorrowful chant. ‘‘He's dead ... he’s dead ... he’s dead . . Pete knelt down quickly. ‘‘Drag her off,” he ordered, and Kay began tugging at Carlotta’s arm. Pete took out his watch, rubbed the shiny back on his sleeve and held it close to Harrow’s lips. With his other hand he felt for the man’s pulse. In a few seconds he looked at the back cf the watch, then at Harrow's face, then at Kay. “Anybody phone the doctor?” he demanded. Kay shook her head. “Do it, then,” Pete said. Within a remarkably short while Harrow, still unconscious, was being rushed to a hospital accompanied by the doctor; Carlotta Vestra was in bed. having beelh given a heavy sedative, attended by one of the maids; Kay and Pete sat in the library, Pete listening to her story. “Poor Kay!” he said gently, taking her head on his shoulder. She reached instinctively for his hand, held it tightly :n both of hers. “Pete . . she sighed. “Oh, Pete . . .” He kissed her tenderly on the forehead, then on her closed eyelids, and was surprised to see that she lifted her half-parted lips to him with the gentle helplessness, the trust, of a child. His own lips found hers. • • • Next morning Spike had assumed charge of everything. “Not a peep of this gets out,” he said. Both Kay and Pete agreed, the assembled servants nodded solemnly. and Carlotta Vestra—heavyeyed, haggard and quiet, entirely a different person from the mad woman of the night before—nodded with them.

“I don’t know why I’m giving you this break, Carlotta,” Spike said coldly, “but I am. Not that it’s for your sake. Earl’s got things to put over. And he’s going to be up and around putting them over in a little while—no thanks to you. It was only by ail the luck in the world that the little slug from your gun slid off a rib and went up into his shoulder. Otherwise it would have drilled him right through the pump. As it is. it didn’t so much as nick a lung. If it weren’t for that you’d be in jail right now rehearsing your speech for the hot seat." Carlotta winced and closed her eye . s - Strangely, Kay found herself feeling sorry for the woman this morning, tremendously sorry. She put her hand on Carlotta’s arm. Later that morning, Kay and Carlotta had a long talk in which they really began to know each other. Kay had only pity and admiration for this crushed creature of fierce passion and Carlotta seemed to understand Kay perfectly. “J don’t care what happens to nie, ’ Carlotta said. “The only thing is that Earl must get absolutely W’ell and—and I’ll do anything, go anywhere, if it will make him forgive me at least. That’s ail I ask. I must have been insane last night. I had gone off to France in pique and everything that happened from then on merely made the breach wider and made me more anxious than ever to show him how little he meant to me. I would never have allowed them to print that about me and that moron of a Prince otherwise. It was all right until I read about the yacht fire in Florida and saw your pictures together and then, when I began to read the things in the New York papers, I couldn t stand it any longer. I came over as fast as I could. But I was too proud to go see him and all I heard and read kept making it worse and Worse. . ' Y ou .. X' er ? 80 y°ung and lovely— Carlotta smiled ruefully ‘and I can’t tell you what was going through my mind. I felt old and ugly and horrible— cast-off. Im vain, naturally I’m vain. I’ve been somebody. I’ve had lots of

11 ten pins. They were unaMe to break i ’ranks and get out of the way ami , were crushed under the plane, I I which left a path of nsiimed and dyI lag men In if* **** * reaper i I;n a a icatfleld. > ■ _ Fifty-One Enroll For Church School i •I The prowpects eff an enrollment . I Os 60 in the community leadership I ti'ilning school which . pens tonight i at 'J:3O o’clock in the Decatur high 11» hool building are indicated by an i advance enrollment of 51 in tlie city :; of Decatur and the surrounding teri rltory. '| T:is is better than the apoimors

men in love with me. But suddenly I looked at myself in the mirror ami decided I’d reached the end of it. I was growing old. You were getting him because you were young. All my gesture of running away and of trying to hurt him through the Prince had been useless. He didn’t want me anyway. He was glad I'd run away. And. staying alone in a hotel with those thoughts .. . that was too much. That was what brought me here last night in that condition.” Kay soothed the noted actress as tactfully as possible and somehow they got through the day. The one thing Kay dreaded was the inevitable re-opening of her situation with Harrow. If the man. lying wounded, asked her now to marry him at once, she was afraid she would agree without further thought Why she didn’t know; refusal would he impossible. And there was no tellingwhat that would do to Pete, to Boris, Ida and Carlotta. All their lives had come together at a crucial time and there was no backing now; things had to plunge forward just as the world had to turn, and the course of eternity move its slow, irresistible way. • * • But within a few days Harrow was home and the public was none the wiser. He seemed to have accepted his injury as a little gesture of a whimsical, humorous fate, and obviously bore no grudge against Carlotta. He insisted that she remain in the house as his guest. And to Kay’s relief, there was, so far, no reopening of the marriage question. All efforts went toward the opening of the play. Boris had finished it, actual rehearsals had been put well under way, and Ben Leschin seemed pleased with Kay’s work. The papers were full of Spike’s stories and pictures. Work was the program for everybody. Pete, with his knowledge and skill at electricity and the design and construction of almost anything mechanical, was back in the theater, really delighted with his job as a technical adviser and handy-man. * • • At last the opening came. For the first time Kay knew what it was to face a New York audience in a real professional production. How she managed to conquer her nerves and get through that first performance she never later was able to understand, but she did get through it, and she managed most of the time to lose herself in the task, one idea in her mind—perfection—to the exclusion of her worries about herself, about Harrow and the faith he had put in her, about the audience, the critics and the fact that Carlotta Vestra, Harrow’s star of stars, sat out front watching every move she made, listening to every nuance of inflection.

When the curtain finally went down on the third act Kay felt as if she would collapse. She was herself again, Kay Owen, the amateur actress, the little girl from Daytona Beach who had found herself in the midst of all this excitement. The let-down began, the worries sterted to penetrate once more. But they were Jost in the thunder of applause. What happened from then on hay scarcely knew. There were curtain calls. She was out front bowing. Boris Warren, in an old, unpressed flannel suit and blue tur-tle-neck sweater, was there with her, holding her hand, bowing awk-w-ardly at the blur of faces, clapping hands, shining white shirt fronts, etc. And then, finally, the seclusion of her dressing room. But it was seclusion for only a few minutes. As she started to change from the duck trousers, canvas sneakers and dirty white jersey she had worn in the last act, the knocks began to come at the door and she was forced to put on a negligee and receive. Harrow did the honors and she managed somehow. It seemed as if all the people of the smart world that once had been only a dream to her had decided to come one after another into the little dressing room . . . they kept coming until she was dizzy. Meanwhile, Pete stood back and watched proudly, his eyes not on the distinguished callers, but on Kay.

..tlcipatod. Several Sunday erfioote have not yet reported but will probably be represented. The scho.:l-s which iwve reported and their enrollments ar.»: Evangelical one- Presbyterian, three. Christian, three: Vnited four- Zion Reformed, six; BaptiM. .seven; Church of God. seven; Unlion Chapel Vnit d Brethren, nine and Methodist Episcopal, 11. - O—- • Mice Stop Fire Bolivar. N. Y - (U.K -When the heating apparatus in the Holm i theater failed, investigation disclos- • etl a mouseland tragedy. Suffering .from cold, live mice crawled into the mechanism of the oil burner i and put out the tire.

\ And in the morning the erittes announced that Harrow’*, Boris war ren’s and Kay Owen’s "Hurricane was one of the successes of the season. , . . is ■ few days when the excitement was over and the show was running smoothly, Harrow had a long talk with Kay. “I’ve something ' to tell you,” he began, pausing to bite his lower lip and look into her eyes. “Yes?" “I know when I’m licked. Ive seen it now for some time. So has Boris. As for me, I'll admit it. You might marry me and we might get along for years, but you’d never love me. You may not even know it yourself, but you’ve been in love with Pete Ryan a long time—since down there in Florida if you’ll only study yourself and reflect. So . . . and he shrugged gracefully . here’s what I have to tell you: I’m going to marry Carlotta.” Kay was not really surprised. “I’m glad, Earl. She loves you. And I can tell you something. I’ve known a long time that you never had gotten over loving her.” They looked at each other quietly then began to smile. “We are friends!” he said. “We’re the best in the world!” she agreed. And they kissed, as really good friends, man and woman, might kiss. • ♦ • Months passed. Nick Caspar and several of his gangsters were in Sing Sing; Harrow was busy with plans for a new show for his wife, the former Carlotta Vestra; Boris Warren was in China, somewhere in the neighborhood of Peking, searching sadly as usual for something he never expected to find; Ida Campbell and a party of friends were on an around-the-world cruise; and “Hurricane” had just closed in Mew York, the hit of the season. During those months Kay and Pete had come to a perfect understanding. It was surprising to Kay how clear it had become quite suddenly. There had been no more doubt, no more pressure, no more barriers. Her career was begun in glory, Harrow had found his happiness with Carlotta and a complete realization of his friendship, for that it -was, with Kay, and nothing mattered anymore, not even money, nothing but—Pete. So two days after the show closed, she and PeSe slipped away from their friends and were married in the Little Church Around the Corner. They took passage on the New York to Jacksonville boat and in the warm sunshine with their beloved Atlantic ocean around them were happier than either of them had been in months. In Jacksonville they took the train to Daytona Beach. So far they had told no one. none of their friends or relatives of their step, and they took a childish pleasure in the secrecy. At last the conductor called out, “Day-tona Beach!” Kay squeezed Pete’s hard-mus-cled arm. “Won’t it be grand!” she whispered. "Won’t it!”

They stepped down upon the familiar platform of the little Spanish-style railroad station when suddenly a man and a woman rushed up to them. “Kay!”

“Motherl And Bud!” Mrs. Owen was crying and laughing all at once, and Bud—brown and looking well and strong—was grinning broadly. “Tried to get away with something, didn’t you?” he challenged. It wasn’t until they were on their way home in a taxi, crossing the sparkling Halifax river, that Mrs. Owen reached suddenly into her purse and brought forth a telegram. “Kay—look,” she said proudly. Kay read the wire: WHEN KAY ARRIVES TELL HER METRO HAS BOUGHT HURRICANE WANTS HER AS LEAD STOP BEST WISHES FROM SPIKE, CARLOTTA ANI» MYSELF—EARL HARROW. “He must be a nice man after all.” Mrs. Owen remarked naively. “He surely is!” Pete declared, before even Kay could answer. THE END Copyright. 1131. King Feature® Vyadlcato. Inc

marketreports daily deport of local and foreign markets Brady’s Market For Decatur, Berne, CraiovHle, Hoagland and Willshire Corrected January 8 No commission and no yardagK Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs 200 to 250 lbs 300 to 350 Iba 180 to 200 lbs 160 to 180 lbs 140 to 160 lbs fti 40 120 to 140 lbs 100 to 120 lbs Roughs * BZ6 ! stags H-« 6 down - Vealers - — ; Ewe and wether lambs >8.50 - Buck lambs ' CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat . 51.01% .93% .92% j Corn »I'< -84% j Oats 54% .48% .44% j — ' FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind.. Jan. 8. —(U.R) I —Livestock: Hogs. 15-25 c lower; 250-300 lbs.,' $7.90; 225-250 lbs.. 17.85; 200-225 libs., 17.75: 180-200 lbs.. 87.85; 1601180 lbs., 57.56; 300-350 lbs., >7.55; i 150-160 lbs.. 56.90; 140-150 lbs.. , $6.50; 130-140 lbs., $6.15; 120-130 'lbs.. 55.90; 100-120 lbs.. $5.40; | roughs, $6.25; stags, $4.25. Calves. $8; lambs, $8.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y„ Jan. B.—(U.PJ —Livestock; Hogs, receipts, 1.200; holdovers. 200; weights above 160 lbs., active. 10-20 c over Monday's average; desirable, 220-250 lbs.. $8.35-58.60; new high since Ang. 1931; 160-180 lbs.. 5t.40-58.25; somewhat plainer kinds. $7.75-$8.10; racking sows. 56.50-57. Cattle, receipts, 75. mainly cows; i active, firm; low cutter and cutter, ls 2-$3.50; medium bulls. $3.50-$4. Calves, receipts, 50; vealers steady. $8.50 dofrn; sheep receipts. 200; lambs weak to lower; few good to choice. $9.25; medium and i mixed offering. $8.25-58.75. ‘ 1 CLEVELAND PRODUCE

Cleveland, Jan. 8. — <U.R) — Produce,: Butter, market steady; extras. ’ 36c; standards, 25c. Eggs, market steady; extra white. 29c; current receipts. 26bfec. Poultry, market steady; fowls, colored. 4>4 lbs. and up. 1819 c; ; ducks, light, 15c; ducks. 5 lbs., and I up, 20c; geese, 16-17 c; turkeys. | young, 20c. . Potatoes, Ohio mostly, 40-50 c per bushel basket. NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Jan. B.— W.R) —Produce: Dressed poultry, firm; turkeys, 19-28 tic; chickens, broilers, 17-27e; capons. 22-30 c: fowls. 10-20 c; ducks. 16 18c; Long Island ducks, 18-18>£c. Live poultry, firm; geese, 10-22 c; turkeys, 20-27 c; roosters, 10c; ducks, 1117 c; fowls, 13-21 c; chickens. 11-22 c; capons, 20-27 c; broilers, 18-19 c. Egg receipts 24,148 cases; market weak; special packs, including unusual hennery selections. 33-34 c; standards. 31-32 c; firsts, 29%-3oc; mediums. 25c; dirties, 25-25%c; checks, 22c. Butter, receipts, 16,419 packages; market firm; creamery higher than extras. 3444-3514 c; extra 92 score, 34Uc: firsts, 90 to 91 score, 32’433’4c; firsts. 88 to 89 score, 3031’4c; seconds. 28-28Hc; centralized, 90 score, 32*4-"2%; centralized 88 to 89 score, 30-3H4; centralized, 84 to 87 score, 28-28 *4c.

LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected January 8 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 92c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 91c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 90c Oats, 32 lbs. test gi c Oats. 30 lbs. test so c Soy Beans, bushel $1.12 Old Yellow Corn $1.20 I New Yellow Corn 80c sl.lß CENTRAL SOYA MARKET ' No. 2 Yellowbeans, bu $1.12 Delivered to factory faoisiii o<su[.iaun u) smjoo» qstiqmsa oj emu jgjy a 'U n:j ujSaq sa!)isao.i[un usailojna (HP JBAS p|4o,\\ at|; jays X|U(J Agoirtp uvjuamy,

iWhy run on smooth, worn Tires when you can rent e GILLETTE TIRE for as low as 20c a week. After 25 weeks the tire is yours. Porter Tire Co. CHfctHbutdr 341 Winchester Phene 1289

AD\ ERTISHniJME* BUSINESS C.fS ANi» \(>T|(jl FOR SAI.i: > I low ■ the gent. ' ■ FOR SALE ... mil" FOR SALE I Jersey ginm pni!,. lSi each. W. C Sir:, k.,.;. south on mtn! pi,,. . BMr - FOR SALE \. ,v slightly j n $6.95. 9X12 (in!,! Sr-ai ■ $4.75. Spragu; Co., Phone 199. FOR SALE 2 Will Monro,' — — X" ” 0. | Suttles, agent FOR SALE- < m bam calf. FOR SALE K> . • I route 2, Craigvili" 'your farm bin a T.B. ami al'm'n !".r : .tn II it : |B||| I phone 4823. I WANTEirI u WANTED — Fo: ■ • : • Miller, phone 6." Manufacturers Radio Service. FOR REM | ! FOR RENT mod m at 11'1 1 FOR RENT 17" ' .'-KI improved. Rent, t t-’ ped with horses. > 'action is desired. Mbit h. care Demo,'-a'

Ki.NT <. gßv with la. o-T,. to right party. M. ■ West Monroe St. Es # LOST AND i'OV'l I LOST Pair !■ MH Rimmed Glass. > near South 1.1 IST l-n.ll r ’ I ?l money. In . Finder pl< ■ this office. Rowa,' K a I LOST — Blue ticke bound. Tniuq-Root township wers to name in Hill. Not:!> Harold liar' i catur. — '■ — — H Fireproof Note US I Grotcn. Conn., — 'are useful f;r purpv.making comfortable ■ ••• ’'' ! M| low-. When Fletch.; "■‘•jM| iomnblle e'.tight fire -cn fire and •ipperatits "■> ■*jß| ‘riving. Da. >oll snat . <<l a pillow ft -vii th,- hie’, i»> n and tluint <ed th ’ the engine, emotin'!':: ■ 1 — " 1062C7 Cattle K Ted ■ Salt Lake City,’ Utah -M Cattle slaughtered in !'' rh of the federal gm er: • ■ vß| gta.m of drought, relief > !! ’ " atatw (staled 1€'6,207 ’oad. port by Frank A. Juglet <l:n‘ processing for the L'taii vealed. ■*

Hold Sleeping Aecorl Bats are awake only about ■ of the 24 hours daily. Orchestra Wednesday w at Riverview Gardens. ' -NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE* OF ESTATE NO. atl.-’O , ( Notice, is hereby given 'j-jii ditors, heirs and legate’’ 01 opej uel T. Haecker, deceased. t 0 in the Adams Circuit Cou’ , p Decatur. Indiana, on the •’ 1 e J February, 1935, and show any, why the Final Accounts with th-* esta’ ~o v e decedent should not , h t!i: and said heirs are n«tit”'(and there make proof • ' ] Vt r< and receive their distri lnJ \ Homer Neiderhauser. Adnun, De atur. Indiana. Deremb , r Attorney Ekkorn, Gordon

N. A. BIXLEB OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Gl«s ae * fl ' HOURS: 8:30 tt) 11:30 12:30 to 5 Baturdtye. 8:00 P ®- Tnlanhons I*s