Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

COMMIMNIONBRN CLAIM* TO HK ALLOWED MAHCH I. 1V37 Mln<*ellant*oua Carroll C. & C. Co 1190.75 Fort Wayne Ptf» Co, Os. exp -15.07 Decatui Democrat Co. Hup. Adv. 49.45 City of Decatur light & power 232.06 (’ltizens Telephone Co. 'phone <56.00 Fern E. Blerly Deputy hire .... 75.00 Mildred Rumenhlag elk hire .. 50.00 G. Kemy Blerly postage .. 42.00 Mary Cowan deputy hire . .* 75.00 Mary K. Tyndall elk. hire .. 50.00 John W. Tyndall postage 10.00 A Ilea Lenhart deputy hire .... 76.00 E. 11. Kauffman do - - 76.00 Huth HollingHworth postage 5.00 Leo T. (iilllg deputy hire 100.00 paUas Brown mileage ... 29.22 IWCaa Brown do 52.20 Sturgia Signal Light Co. exp 21.17 R. G. Delninger deputy hire 83.22 Krick Tyndall Co., Ditch exp 9.84 Clifton E. Striker salary 148.30; Margaret S. Myers Salary 60.00 CJifton E. Striker mileage 39.38 L. E A.rchbold salary .. . 83.33 L. E. Archbold op. exp. 44.14 Mildred Koldewey deputy hire 75.00 K. J. Worthman salaiy 90.00 Dr. F. L. Grandstaff salary ... 30.75 Will Winnea assessing 8.50 Phil Sauer mileage 44.20 Frank. Linlger comm exp 22.90 James A. Hendrb ks Co. Council 10.00 l)ean Byerly do 10.00 August Conrad do 10.00 Chris Eicher do 10.00 Invert ‘ Banter do .... .. 10.00 E. J. Kenney do « 10.00 Henry Dehner do 10.00 Henry - B. Heller salary 50.00 Win. Schumaker salary 125.00 1 Mary M. McClure salary - 36.67; The Schafer Hdw. Co. Ct. H 1.35 The Schafer Co. do & highway .91 West Disinfecting Co do 13.50 The C.«B Dolge Co. do 7.20 Decatur Electric Shop Ct. H. I. 22.30 ' J. ra Roop matron supplies 14.20 ffiarlea H. Houck Ct. H. Rep. 73.45! Chas Robenold do 370.00 jfanaw-Brown Bd. Prisoners 63.20 ‘Dallas Brown postage , 5.00 ‘Finvlafr Refining Co. jail 7.25 Carroll C. & C. Co do 129.66 ,Herne*Witness Co. legal adv. 31.74 Bierie & Yager Inc. Soldiers B. 75.00 Irene Byron Sanatorium .. .. 270.00 County Infirmary If. P. LaFontaine salary 150.00 ’Clara l&Fontaine do .... 33.33 ; Jlefpert LaFontaine labor .... 40.00 [ Florence Lengerich do 37.50 Dorothy I«aF<>ntalne do .. 37.50 Calvin Falb do 37.50 Martin Gilson Op. exp 8.15 Burk Elevator Co. do 129.50 I Standard Oil Co. do 30.88 I Mis ado Mfg. Co. do . 95.21 J •Fl*. Wayne Implement Co. do 30.00 National Mills Supply Co. do 7.65; Welfare Fund I ny Smith Knapp salary 100.00 iSernice Nelson salary 75.00 I Fay Smith Knapp postage 11.00 Ft. Wayne Ptg. Co. op. exp .... 10.65 Dorothy Christen do - 1.45 Faye Smith Knapp telegram 92 Faye Smith Knapp mileage .. 29.65 Bernice Nelson do 4.30 Highway Repair District \o. 1 Hugo Tl. Gerke labor 94.00 Glenn Merica do . 44.70 RobertGerke do 32.7 W K. K. Fleming do - 29.40 Elmer'flerke do 34.20 Arnos Gerke do 1.50 August Witte do 2.70 • Chauncy Sheets do team .... 4.00 Harold Strahm do . 4.00 Phillip Strahm labor 2.40 i DiNir.Vt \«». a. Herfnan S. Pieman labor . . 115.00 Harold Sauer do . 101.70 .Clarence Durkin do . 103.50 ’ 3Lee Fleming do 100.35 . Ralph Martin do 104.40 JL F. Sauer do 100.80 Jake Musser do .. . 92.25 . George Loshe do . 79.10 ; Ralph Shady do 78.05 Al Laugerman do 2.40 Aschliman do team 9.00 Boy Aschliman do 9.00 TSzra Kahr labor 6.30 Fam Lyse do 3.15. .jftalph Lyse do team .. 4.501 do _ 4.30 JliMtrlct \<». 3 Dr. Eugene Fields DENTIST X-RAY LABORATORY Phone No. 56 127 N. 3rd st ‘ ‘ = 1 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST I Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted HOURS ' 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. i Telephone 135. it ' I

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SALE CALENDAR Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Decatur, Ind.

Claim your sale date early as I am booking sales every day, a I Feb. 27 —Bert Marquaj-dt on Lin- t ,Voln Highway, North of Monroe- f , ville. Registered Chester White a Bred Sow eale. a Mar. I—Jim1 —Jim Dutton, Mendm, 0. Farm Implements. Mar. 2 —Joe McDaffee, 1 mile •.South of LaOtto on No. 3. 1 Mur. 1— Paul Bobay & Son, 1 • I Wile West amd 1 mile North Nine 4 Mile "House, closing out. Mar. s—Decatur Riverside Stock Sale. Mar. 6 -Otto Huebner, Monroe- | ville, closing out Dairy Herd. | Maj*.' B—Austin McMichaels and | j William Mauller, 5 miles east of | •Decatur on the Piqua road. <

- *• I■** 'W nym wa I '•*» m< THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING BLOWING” PAPPY TO DINNER’ By SEGAR (MT GORSH'. LUHA'S N THAI OLD RAT 6SO \ KhE PROPOSED TO ME \l MR.POOPDECK, SHE'S X| VJFLL \ VME POPPA DOIN' UP TOUGH IM HAVING A \ SIXTY-SIX TEARS AGO, GOING TO TRI TO STARVE f BLOU) MF ■ :( ON THIS CLIFF? HARD TIME TORTURING ) THEN TURNED ME DOWIN- TOO TO DEATH-BUT I'VE T T I DOUJNA HMTHi \ sd 7\ HIM—HAH' I KNOUJ A J HE MUST PAT-HE'LL GOT HER MAGIC FLUTE- O o r Y 5M' DO VE QIANT I AT TO MAKE HIM f SUFFER'?. I'LL LET HIM I’LL FLUTE TOO SOME n o z \ TO SELL THAT / . Z^ EEP? 7 SUFFER". y -(STARVETO ' CATCH PlxW\o//0/ ? UWSTLE.’ r< z-z'h 7 ■ J <jeep\<£> / —1 f f\V I \ k &. n ’JL Wts ■ 1 ■ * E-*™" 1 ■ » i ..' ',, C~J JM >■ .<>’ m, te 4 .v... j,„... * .*?

I Elmer Beer labor .... 90.00 Kenneth Beer do 5.40 Milo Fuchs do 3.60 Fred Llechty do team 13. NU Ed Neaditine labor 4.0 u Lee Lindsey do 3.50 True Foreman do 2.50 District No. 4 J. C. Augeburger labor 82.00 Edwin Spiqhlger do . 106.20 Chris Roth do 11.40 Chancy Reynolds do 1.20 Amos Steiner do 10.20 Sam E. Kaehr do 11.00 Roger K tehr do . 3.00 A Habegger do 82.50 Fred Mathya do teaip .... 9.75 Iler man Mathya labor 3.00 s.\lvan Haun an d » .. .. 7.50 Misrellnneoua Ed F. Berling Op. exp 701.60 Fulton Machine Co. do 13.09 Riverside Garage do 8.35 England Auto Parts do 14.23 Krick Tyndall Co. do . . 46 49 Jahn He a <i»> . 31.00 Runyon & Son Garage do .. . 3.75 Dltrkes Auto Parts do 5.04 Leo Kirsch du 3,095.33 The White Motor Co. do 3,077.72 The White Motor Co do ... 43.54 W. H. Gillion do .. 27.50 Decatur Electric Shop du - 3.45 Gottschalk Sup. Co. do 50.70 Sinclair Refining Co. do 50.63 National Cylinder Gas Co. do 1.60 Main St. Filling Sta. do 690.00 Main St. Filling Sta. do 991.75 Standard Oil Co. do 342.61 E. H. Baumgartner do 15.00 I Butler’s Garage do 70.07 , W. Q. O Neall Co. du 423.81 1 The Mossnian Yarnelle Co. do 166.50 R. G. Delninger do 16.67 W. H. Gllllom salary 135.02 Dick Tunneller material 204.88 John W. Karch Stone Co. do ....1219.04 Blue Creek Stone Co. do 1058.27 Meshberger Hrua. Stone Co. du 444.15 Johnson Repair Shop Op exp. 11.02 1 Yost Bros, material .... 456.16 Certified thia 25tb day of February [ 1937. John W. Tyndall Auditor Adams County Feb. 26 M-? o - ■ Ml Eli IEE SALH In The \flnniM Circuit Ceart« Mate of Indiana* iniiMe Number 15*0SS The Federal Land Bank of Louisville a body corporate vs. Adams A. Reef, Ruth Reef, his wife, Harley J. ' Reef, Ella Reef, his wife, Eloise J. i Butcher, Paul Butcher ,her husband S. Daniel Reef, Mabel Reef, his wife. By virtue of an order of sale to me I directed and delivered from the I Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court in the above entitled cause, 1 have lev- | ied upon and will expose to sale by public auction at the Court House ; door, east entrance, first floor, in I said County, between the hours of ' 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. M. I on Wednesday the 31st day of March A. D. 1937, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following Real Estate to-wit;. The north half ($4) of the north west quarter (14.) of section sixteen (16) in township twenty five (25) north, range fifteen (15) east, containing eighty (80) acres, more or less in Adams County, and State us Indiana, and on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and costs. I will at the same time and in the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above describ--I*4 Real Estate. Taken as the property Adams A. Reef, Ruth Reef, his wife, Harley J. Reef, Ella Reef, his wife. Eloise J. Butcher, Paul Butcher her husband. S. Daniel Reef, Mabel Reef, his wife at the suit of the The Federal Bank of Louisville, a body corporate. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. The purchaser at said sale is hereby restricted from selling or encumbering said real estate without the further order of the District Court of the United States, for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. Dallas Brown, Sheriff Adams County. Feb. 26 Meh. 5-12 ♦ < | Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these > ten questions? Turn to page I ; Four for the answers. | 1. Which novel by Charles Dickens is said to be partly autobiographical? 2. Which four women have been pictured on United States stamps? 3. In which city is Montana State University? 1 4. Os what is catgut made? 5. In the cabinet of which Presi- 1 dent was Henry L. Stimson the Secretary oi State? 6. Name the state flower of Delaware. 7. Os what country are the Shetland Islands a part? 8. Which famous racing yachtsman was awarded a silver cup for being a good loser? | 9. What is the National Anthem 1 of Canada? 10. Is hard-boiled properly a hyphenated word? Card of Thanks We wish to thanh Rev. Thompson and also Mrs. Thompson and Miss Helen Jean Kohls for the music, the pall bearers and the many friends for their floral offerings and kindnesses during the illness and death of Mrs. Ida Chronister. Mrs. Mary Durr. Elmer Siglin. — o ; Trade in a Good Town — Decatur * TODAY'S COMMON ERROR *i Never say, "He has nothing | I and never will have;” say, | "never will have anything;” or | | "He hasn't anything and never | | will have.” ♦— *

; WANTED , ——_____ > WANTED — Woman for general 1 J housework. No washing or ironI lug. Steady job. Yagers. Phone 44. 48-3tx , - —————— > WANTED — Loans on improved J farms; Eastern money; long i terms; low rates. French Quinn. [ 2fi2 w&f ts ; WANTED — Middle aged lady to ' make home with and care for two aged ladies. State Experience and ' wages wanted. Address Box "Z” % i Democrat. 45-ts i Q MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS—Furniture repaired, upholstered or refinished ; at the Decatur Upholstering Shop, 1 222 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 26k30t MISCELLANEOUS—Battery charging. 50c —RentaJs 25c. We handle a complete line of new General batteries. Elberson Service Station. CONVINCED! ONE LADY ADniits she had no faith in Chiropractic, but she is now convinced of its wonderful results. Dr. Roy Andress, 315 N. 4th st.. Phone 265. When in Fort Wayne stop at Dave Hughes Beer Parlor, 421 East Lewis St. fTtSteodi i 0 Markets At A Glance Stocks: higher, rails strong. Bonds: irregularly higher. Curb stocks: irregular. Chicago stocks: irregularly higher. Foreign exchange: irregular. Cotton: 2 to 5 points higher. Grains: higher. Chicago livestock: hogs, cattle and sheep strong. Rubber: off 1 to 4 points. o NOTICE FARMERS —Treat your harness right. Get it oiled for | 85c per double set, including collars, halters. Joe Aschliman, south, 2H miles qast Craigville. Craigville phone, 1 on 6. feb.l2-19-26-m.sx NOTICK TO BIDDERS Notice i« hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Adams County, state of Indiana, will up to 10 o’clock A. M., Tuesday, March 2, 1937, at the office of the Auditor of said county and state, receive sealed bids as follows: (nunty Infirmary Eleven tons of 2-12-6 commercial fertilizer delivered at the County Infirmary in 125 lb. bags. Also 1 Rotary hoe for the County Infirmary. Ad.-inin County Jail One electric or gas stove. One sink and cabinet. Specifications on file at the Auditor's office. Each bid must be accompanied with bond and affidavit as required by law. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. John W. Tyndall, Auditor Adams County. Feb. 19-26 FEDERAL FARM LOANS Now At 4% The Adams County National Farm Loan Association, of Decatur, Indiana has received a Charter and bae been duly authorized and empowered to make farm loans in all of Adams County. If you are expecting to re-finance your farm loan, call or write this association at once. Office: 133 South Seaonu Street > Decatur, Indiana E. Burt Lenhart, sec’y-treas. Fred T. Schurger, investigator t ' ! WANTED Beef Hides. Sheep Pelts and fallow. We also buy Rags, Magazines, Newspapers, Scrap Iron, Old Auto Radiators, Batteries, Copper, Brass, Aluminum, and all grades of scrap metals. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 710 W. Monroe st. Plume 442

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1937.

Missionary Rally At Nazarene Tabernacle Mrs. 8. N Fitkin of Now York, City, national president of the Women's foreign missionary society of 1 the Church of the Nazarene will be the principal speaker at a nilnt»!on ary servcle to the held in the Naz-, arene Tabernacle this evening at 7:30. Mrs. Fitkin ie just back from a tour of China and Japan. The Rev. George Franklin, return- : ed missionary from India will give <

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CHAPTER XXXI Th* second week was not so happy —although it began well. On Sunday, Luana and he drove in the funny little borrowed car to Jones’ Beach on Long Island and ventured into the water — which was chilly but exhilarating—and on the way home they had a delicious dinner of Long Island duckling at a roadhouse. and were very happy after their long day together. Tuesday night they dined again at the little roof restaurant on Central Park South. The baritone sang the same love songs, and the violinist played with the same fervor, and I the chicken was equally good. But Jimmy was worried. A pompous letter from Mr. Wallace Briscoe, received that morning, had informed him that the exchange to Paris had been arranged, and a second-class reservation had been booked for him on a liner scheduled to sail at ten o’clock on Saturday. That meant only three more evenings with Luana! He tried to tell her about it, but he was tongue-tied. “Jimmy, let’s go to a movie.” Dinler was over. “Darling, let’s go in the Park. I have to talk to you. I have an awful lot to say to you. Let’s sit by the Japanese Lake, and watch the reflections of the stars in the water.” “Why so poetic?" But she loved the poetry in Jimmy. Arm-in-arm, they walked under the trees and down to a secluded bench beneath a blossoming hawthorn. “Out with it, Jimmy! You look like bad news.” He drew a long breath, but didn’t look at her. “Saturday morning I sail for Paris.” An incredulous: “What?” He said dully: “It’s quite true.” She breathed: “You’re going to be away long?" “A three months’ course, Luana.” A silence that was heavy as lead lay between them. "Might I ask why you’ve kept this back? Why you didn’t tell me before?” “I did —the day I first met you, Luana. You remember? I said—” “That you hoped to go?” she #nished for him. Bitterly she added: “But never a word to me that it had been decided 1” “It hadn’t, not till—till— He stopped. She rapped out: “Till when? What are you afraid of?” “Till I met Wallace Briscoe the other evening.” An incredulous: “You asked him i for the transfer?” “No.” A miserable “no.” “He offered it to you?” He couldn’t lie to her. He remained silent That roused her susI picions. 1 “You met him the night you dined with Mrs. Vandaveer at her apart- . ment Was it—through her?” Wretchedly he nodded. “11l not go, Luana. I’ll not leave you. I’ll call it all off.” She ignored that She persisted: “Mrs. Vandaveer asked him? Was that it?” “Listen, Luana,” he said desperately, “I’d told her at her cocktail party that I was interested in studying this summer in Paris. In fact, I she brought it up first, if I ’ememi ber aright. But no, she didn’t—not then —but after she’d seen my draw- ( ings down at my studio—that was ’ the day on which I dined with her —” “After you’d missed your appointment with me?” Lnana interrupted ! him, shaken with jealousy. “I told you my clock had stopped—” “A grand excuse! Why not be open and say plainly that you were so busy discussing your trip to Paris that you forgot the time, and every- ! thing? I suppose she’s going too? Whv don’t you admit it?” Here was a facer. What could he say? I “Is she going?" Luana demanded in a voice hard and cold. “I—l think so. I mean, she says she usually goes over for the Races.” “Ha! I can imagine the plans you’ve made to see Paris together!” She drew a long, sobbing breath. “She asked Mr. Briscoe to transfer you, and he agreed to do so, and you’ve known it for eleven days exactly. and kept it under your hat all 1 this tinw ...

some interesting information concerning thie country. The Rev. J. W- Montgomery, district superintendent will speak ftom the subject, “A World-wide Vfeion." Mrs. Lena E. Burch, district president will preside. o Special Service At U. B. Church Sunday A praise and thanks service will be held at the First U. B. church Sunday morning. Sunday school will convene at 9 o'clock, with orchestra

"Luana, I only beard from him this morning. It—it wasn’t definite——” “But it was in the air? You knew it was as good as settled. You used Mrs. Vandaveer as—as a cat's-paw —because you wanted to leave me. You wanted to be over in Paris — with her!” Love knows no logic. There was no arguing with her. He put his two hands over her own. His left hand was uppermost. A beam of light from a nearby lamp gleamed on the antique ring upon his little finger. “She gave you that, too!” Luana shrilled, beside herself with a sudden, swift suspicion that was like the turn of a knife. “I was in her home this very afternoon, waiting for her in the Italian salon, and in a case I saw several rings as like that as—as two peas—” “It was gtven as a good luck talisman, Luana," he protested. “Good luck? Bah!” With a quick movement that tore her hand on its jagged edge, she wrenched the antique ring from his finger and flung ’ it in the lake. Jimmy was amazed at Luana’s exhibition of jealousy and temper, and of what amounted practically to an act of vandalism. But before he could say one word to her, angry or otherwise, she was off like a deer up the path that led to the highway. A taxi with its flag up happened te be passing. She nailed it, gave an address at random, and jumped inside. They were off, whirling along 59th Street towards Columbus Circle. In the passing light of a tall street standard, she saw a tiny red mark on the harder of her jacket, and glancing at her hand, she saw that her palm had a jagged scratch on it where the sharp points of the ring had torn it as she had dragged it from Jimmy’s little finger. She felt no pain, however. As a soldier in battle is supposed to feel no pain at the time of his wounds. She was furiously indignant with Jimmy and Mrs. Vandaveer, plotting behind her back to meet in Paris, and Jimmy receiving valuable presents from the woman! How dare he? Wasn’t he hers? All hers? She wouldn’t tolerate a division in his interest, in his affection. She wouldn’t be made a fool of—no, not by the best man in the world! “What are you going to do all summer, without Jimmy?” her heart asked her now. That made her still angrier and more resentful. Just when things were going so beautifully between them, on the very day that she had got the glad news of her annulment, this had to happen 1 She was glad that she had flung the ring in the lake, glad that she had left Jimmy flat Sne would punish him further. She would call up “Handsome” at the Yale Club and ask him to meet her somewhere, and let Jimmy hear about it. As the taxi swung down Broadway into the theater traffic, she had the driver stop at a drugstore, and paid him off, and went into a telephone booth and put her idea into practice. “Handsome,” however, was not at his club. She looked in the telephone book to find if his home number was listed. Hadn’t he an apartment in the Sutton Place area? He had. The voice of someone who probably was his valet informed her that Mr. Carew had not yet returned from a weekend at Montauk Point, on Long Island. “Tell him Miss Waters telephoned,” she said recklessly. She 1 would get even! She was glad to the core that she i had kept the brooch, and she would find some opportunity, before he ’ sailed, to let Jimmy know that she had deliberately misled him about i the "dollar shop,” that it was a valuable piece of jewelry that had come I from “Handsome!” Tit for tat. That was only fair. 1 pI W- ’ She sat at the counter and had a i soda, for it was a warm night and ' she was thirsty. . “Say, miss, what you been doing • to your hand?” asked the drug-clerk. I “Nothing. A little scratch, that’s ■ all.” I But it had begun to smart. “Bill, looka here a second.”

'music, followed by an organ pre-1 iude Clausa will record their attendance and then re-aesemble. Sipeclal music will be provided by the robed choir Frank Bohnke will report on tlnances, telling of the reduction of the church debt and the progress of the church congregation. The Sunday school lesson will be 'aught to the entire school by Mrs. Lillie Hill. Following this lesson, Rev. H. W.j Franklin, pastor, will conduct the praise service. o — Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

A white-coated young man came from the prescription department. “Take a peek at the lady a hand, said the one at the soda fountain, jerking his head in the direction of Luana. ... Presently, and rather to her annoyance, she was behind the scenes, having a disinfccL*nt dabbed upon the scratch, and a strip of gauze wound around her hand. Thereafter, she walked down Broadway and entered a newsreel theater, which featured, jn part, some vivid travel scenes. . . . Jimmy was to travel, see the world? When he was gone, evenings like this were to be her portion? Anger died, and tears sprang to her eyes. j Why had she acted so? Why had she been so hasty? • • * Yvonne came into the dressingroom of the shop next day, during the lunch hour, to find Luana busily sketching rough ideas of her own in costume design. “Always you are working, Luana! Nev-air« do I see you anymore"' Yvonne reproached her. “My goodness, Yvonne, you don’t think I’m going to be a model all my life, do you? Haven’t you any ambition?" “Your hand—what is ze matter with it?” Yvonne demanded curiously as she came nearer, and saw the strip of gauze wound around Luana’s right hand below the knuckles. "I scratched it. Nothing serious." Luana went on with her drawing. Yvonne looked over her shoulder, her eyes as bright as a ferret. "Meester Quackenbush — you theenk he like you to do that?” she asked softly, insinuatingly. But Luana did not take in the real import of the question, unfortunately. “What’s it got to do with him what I do in the lunch hour?” “So? You don’t care, no?” Boldly, Luana was copying the models for her own use! That was Yvonne’s opinion. In the building where she lived, there was a “little dressmaker” extremely clever in carrying out even the roughest design. Yvonne drew badly, but together they had made more than one gown that was an exact reproduction of the S3OO and S4OO models in the House of Quackenbush, and these Yvonne had worn on week-end trips with Armand where there was no likelihood of “the boss” or any of “the girls” seeing them. ... To appear in “copies,” without authorization, would of course mean instant dismissal I Yvonne had been on the verge of ■ making actual cash money from the . “little dressmaker” by going even i farther in design-stealing. . . . But Armand had stepped in! “You fool! You could be sent to prison for that? Jailed for a few paltry dollars!” Anything illegal 1 on the grand scale “had reason” to 1 it, but anything less than the grand scale was asinine, because of the ; risk if one were caught Thus Armand’s logic. To be mixed up with a cheap, gossipy little dressmaker in one’s own . building was courting disaster, i wholetalcr, now? There i was one who could keep his own counsel, and yet pay handsomely, over on Eighth Avenue in the lower ■ Twenties . . . But Armand did not : tell Yvonne about him and his offer. I That was Armand’s secret. ■ “Madame Vandaveer—she do not come to the shop near-ly so of-ten ■ now,” Yvonne remarked, a new and 1 thrilling suspicion striking her as s'ne leaned over Luana's shoulder. ■ “Yesterday she send for you on the 1 telephone, Luana. You go? What • she want with you?” Worried about Jimmy and their ' quarrel and his imminent departure, , the name of Mrs. Vandaveer was one she did not wish to hear. Luana . did not reply. But a slow, burning red crept i from the V-neck of her gown to her 1 cheeks in an uncontrollable flush. Yvonne misunderstood its meaning, ' knowing nothing of Jimmy’s con- . nection with Mrs. Vandaveer. She i took this as proof positive of tomething elte.l (To Be Continued) Cepyricht. 1135. King rMtnrei Syndicate. la*

MARKETREPORTS DAILY report OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur, Berne. Craigville, Hoagland and Willshire. Closed at 12 Noon. Corrected February 2«. No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs $7.80 1 120 to 140 lbs 7.90 j 140 to 160 lbs. 9.00 160 to 180 lb* 9.55 180 to 230 lbs 9.70 230 to 260 lbs 9.60 260 to 300 lbs. 9.30 300 to 350 lbs 9.10 j 350 lbs. and up 8.80 Roughs r - 8-25 Stags - 6.75 Vealers 9.25 Ewe and wether lambs.. 10.25 Buck lambs 9.251 Yearling lambs 4.50 INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis. Ind., Feb. 26.—f(U,P.) I —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 5,000: holdovers, 106; market 160 lbs., and up, 15c higher; underweights steady; bulk 160-180 lbs., $10.80; 180-200 lbs , $10.35; 200-250 lbs., $10.20; 250-260 lbs., $10.15; 260-275 lbs., $10.05; i 275-285 lbs., $9.95; 285-300 lbs., 1 $9.90; 300-325 lbs., $9.80; 325-350 lbs., $9.70; 350-400 lbs., $9.60; 155-1 160 lbs., $9.75; 150-155 lbs.. $9.50; I 140-150 lbs., $9.25; 130-140 lbs., $9; 1 120-130 lbs., $8.75; 110-120 lbs.,' $8.50; 100-110 lbs.. $8.25; packing sows, 10c higher; bulk. $9-$9.50; | top. $9.60. Cattle, 600; calves, 300; market mostly steady on all killing classes ot odds and ends; steers and yearlings. $7 $9; medium to good ' heifers. $7-$8.50; common and medium beef cows. $5-86: cutter grades $3.75-14.75; top medium grade bulls. $6.25; veals 5c higher; good . and choice, $lO-*10.50. Sheep. 2.500; supply mostly i choice fed western lambs around 25c higher at $10.75; few good and choice slaughter eWes steady at $4.75-$5.50. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Feb. 26. tU.R) —Livestock: Hogs, steady; 200-225 lbs., $10; 225-250 lbs., $9.90; 180-200 lbs., $9.90; 250-275 lbs., $9.75; 160 180 lbs., $9.80; 275-300 lbs., $9.60'300350 lbs., $9.45; 150-160 lbs., s*.4o: 140-150 lbs., $9 15; 130-140 lbs.. $8.80; 120-130 lbs., $8.55; 100131' lbs., $8.30. Roughs, $8.75; stags. $7.25. Calves, $10; lambs, $10.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat Corn. New. 1.07 1.02% .95% Old.. 1.04 .99% Oats 46% .42% .40% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 26.— I (U.R>-Livestock: , Hogs, receipts, 700: 25c to 40c higher; good and choice 180-250 lbs.. $10.60-$10.75; trucked-in $10.40 down. Cattle, receipts, 250; Arm; common to medium steers, SB-$8.50; mixture heifers an* young cows $7; low cutter and cutter cows, $3.75-$4.75. I Calves, receipts, 200; vealers strong to 50c higher; good and choice, $10.50. Sheep, receipts, 1,000; lambs strong to 15c higher; good and choice ewes and wethers, sll.lO to largely $11.25; medium and mixed grades. $lO-$10.85; aged ewes scarce, firm, quote dto $6.25. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Ohio, Feb. 26.—(U.PJ— Produce: Butter, steady, extras, 37%c; standards, 37%. Eggs, steady; grade 22%c; extra firsts, 31%c; current receipts 21c. Live poultry, firm; hens heavy, 19c; ducks, 6 lbs., and up, 19c; ’ small, 15c. Potatoes. 100-lb. bags, U. S. No. 1. Idaho, $3.75-$3; large size $4.10$4.15; Ohio No. 1, $2 $2.25; poor condition, lower; Pennsylvania, $2$2.25; Maine, $3, 100-lb. bag; 55c j 15-lb. earton; Texas and Florida, new |M>tatoes, $2-$2.10 bu. hamper. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected February 26. No. 1 W heat. 60 ibg. 01 . better $1.27 No. 2 Wheat etc ....J 126 • alB 46c. | Soya Beans. No. 2 Yellow 1.40 : New No. 4 Yellow Corn $1 to 1.36 R * e 90c CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beaus. No. 2 Yellow 1.40 —o Unwialdy “Currency” In ancient Cyprus, copper pota were ueed for D»nn*y. O ■ . Wanted: — Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machiniry. Underwear, curtains, silks h eav y rags not accepted. «'ll Pay 4c per lb. Daily Democrat Co.

i‘TsiM:t:sSWl ► - One Time— 8 25c for 20 WO rS r V h ‘ r 20 words, r’7* Two TimesLw' *° rl 40c for 20 WoX” ‘4S Over 20 word, 2> ‘ Or the three time,. P " _ FOR SALE g I SALE New playing ord,.. , er. A-l shat,, X, wh p""/ "■ wL street. K)R SALE— 80 acre tcrsoii tuwt.,,1,,, W.-lls att.l \, u „' ls O 1 line. Good . good investtn. tn i"'"’' w "'" ' Bank. Prebl., I;,, FOR SALE—Chi, poults from . flo , ks ‘ chicks. 7c; I.atb.rn-, uh,, hatching, Hat.hery s „’ shire, state t | . FOR SALE 7 011 N " 4l " ' m '!• Atlants St. $4 .. i list it with n. . ' 1 ■ FOR SALE-7, E. Decantr. FOR SALE —Pi'.. North , Bat can, S . Wes' Ac t'!. . . . .car -< j Phone BAUMGART . . , bl eeds. ■ .I.l' I lat. !:■ ■ Mg! SOl'tll Mot! Route 4. lilut't, \| FOR SALE coming 2 v. . ai Decatur rout. : FOR SALE and 3 yr . bl ■! April. 5 yeans old. Durham Marell. Tw o .1.1 out Habegg--Itavison. >.-< *' , mile east ot M : ..ul , r.r T: 1(B FOR SALE - U 1 Ra'ph Ro . ;r ..4:.,8| — . FOR SALE .'J B| Creel. Town'll.?. ’ well d:t. hod. , a I bargain. Andrews. Call Ini - | FOR SALE ■ ! colt, .ball f.t" itri'ice t Hatchery, am '!" ’Bl s Maytag v.a-: • 1 Kitihem 00k ...i- ’• !'!>’ !? ' FOR SALE - 'E'B blood tested . r flicks ■ with top-nested . j|<; , r.r.. .1 ends. 8001, your orders n>'*B Man It or Apia iia'.-B FOR SALE 1 !:! B Fifteen Shropth.' . ram Priced to sell. Er.- 1 't' lll ' Valley Church. K.loi anl SapM •| u-B FOR SALE-B.c loti ' '' " as ß Priced to sell i|itr k. E f, ' d K, B Photie 719-E ■ FOR SALE—Two fttb li'et'H B key tome and two hens. holtse smith of l‘ : ' ;| ■' FOR SALE 192 S Tudor E<B Good Shape. Cheap if tak«M I once. Roy Young. <>'■■' half ""' | .°B : one-quarter mile south s.t.' at. I 'B , M FOR REM, J FOR RENT—Front part of d'’B house- 119 Non It Th td ' call 613. May be .seen alter B FOR RENT—Near hetabir. U J| house with cel'ar. light-, house, truck patch, lb , Phone 869-G- a O-- S Honor B.long. »• The pioneer d* ll ’ £?‘ wO pull Uihed In England in I' o2 1 Killed by » womsn |