Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1937 — Page 3

filN SOCIETY

■ anCIS eadv ■ „CLUB hostess ■ 1 ,| “ Eady was hostess to ■ , members ' x I,IP ~,noch|p ■ j one guest. Mns. Swager, Tues- ■ evening. Eight gamee were Led and prizes were won by Mrs I . 3< iv and Mrs. Jess Edgell. \ lovelv luncheon was served nt ( .io,e of Ibe games. The next Wl „. l)ng W ii| he held with Mrs. Hue,(.l Melchi. sorority has regular meeting x brief business meeting of the Tr] nappa sorority was held at the Fllji Home Tuesday evening. Plans . . Ihe bingo stand to be held fair . were discussed. Mrs. Deane parwin and Miss Helen Haubold ar( . co-chairmen of the stand. The ladles’ aid society of the Methodist Episcopal church will niw t in the church parl/ro ThursI jay afternoon. A good attendance ' fe desired. KUM JOIN-US class has regular meeting The Kuni-Joln-L’s class of the Evangelical Sunday school met I Tuesday evening at the church for ' t he regular meeting. Mr. and Mre. Arthur Hooten and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Farrar were the hosts and hostesses. After the business meeting a social hour was enjoyed, during which contests were held and prizes were awarded to Mr. and Mrs. William Davie and Paul Fleming. Lovely refreshments were served at the close of the evening.

I PSI IOTA XI | PICNIC SUPPER I Members of the Pei lota Xi sorI crity enjoyed a picnic supper at I Hanna Xuttman park Tuesday evenI tag. After the supper a brief busiI sees meeting was held and further I plans for the bingo stand fair week | were discussed I I WASHINGTON-STEELE I REUNION WELL ATTENDED I One hundred and fifty persons at- ■ I tended the Washington-Steele reunion at Sun Set Park last Sunday. | During the business meeting it was decided to Srdd the reunion next year at the fair grounds in Celina, Ohio, the third Sunday in July. R. J. Mann entertained with a number of readings. The following . officers were elected: Mrs. How-: irj Weller, president; Loren Horn-1 er. vice-president; Mrs. John Kess-: lar, secretary-treasurer; Miss Alpha' Stults, assistant secretary-treasur-er. — MISS KATHRYN HYLAND HOSTESS TO SOCIETY The Delta Theta Tau sorority met at the home ot Miss Kathryn Hyland Tuesday evening and completed plans for the bingo stand which the sorority is sponsoring for the street fair. Mrs. Al Schneider, delegate to' the national convention, held at the Spink-Wawasee hotel July 7 to 10. gave a final report. The opening ■

statement of Condition of the BISIAEBS mkv- asm rance COMPANY OF AMF.HK A Kansas City, Missouri 315 Pershing Road On the 31st Day of December. 1936 W. T. GRANT. President L. D RAMSKY. Secretary Amount of Capital paid up • t .■>oo.ooo 00 GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate Unincumbered Unci H. Q. Bldg. 11,200,000.) $ 1.982.958.16 Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) . 4,652.154.83 Bonds and St»cks Owned (Book Value) 4,498,630.02 * ash in Banks (On Interest and Not on In- , terest) . 616,034.15 Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 122,889.97 Other Securities Policy Loans 1,434,067.96 I'ue from Reinsurance ompanies 3,964.82 Cash Value of Company's Business Ins.. 49.831.03 Premiums and Accounts 'lite and in process of collection 676,034.69 Account otherwise secured 40,196.30 Accident and Health Department 39,148.11 Total Gross Assets $14,116,216.04 Deduct Assets Not Admitted | 177,478.30 Net Assets 813,938,731.74 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $9,257,621.27 uosses due and unpaid None Losses adjusted and not T ‘ ,ue 637.391.19 Losses unadjusted and in suspense 107,991.89 BI L ~a n<l Accounts unPaid 8,794.59 Amount due and not due yanks or other credi- $.? r . 8 *””• None and Health DeOth‘l r "V^ nt 2,200,377.27 Other Liabilities of the Company 379,456.99 p.T?. ,aI Liabilities .... $12,591,633.20 Total 313,938,731.74

OflhI E , OP . INDIANA, , e >t* Insurance Commissioner le , undersigned, Insurance rerH?! ’J?"" of Indiana, hereby ronv < h ?’ the above Is a correct dltlrL 0 .A* Statement of the Connsnv~of Ji 1 * a °ove mentioned Com°P **’<• 31st day of December. stai» m as . Bh<>w n 'by the original "Jlemc’it and that the said originoffice atement is now on I* l ® ln t * lis t o l 2..i* ati ." lon y Whereof, I hereunofflclal . rlb . e m . y name and afflx my 1837 Bea *' th,s 9, h day of July, Ht u . . GEO - H - NEWBAU.&R i Mutual Company so state. July 21

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 a. m. Fanny Macy Phones 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Evangelical ladies, Church. Phoebe Bible Class, Zion Reform ed Church, 1 :30 p. m. Decatur Home Economics club Mrs. L. E. Archbold, 1:30 p. m Girls- Choir, Zion Reformed < hurch, 1:30 p. m. Thursday Zion Reformed Ladies’ Annual Garden Party, Mrs. Ben Schroyer, 7. p- m. Pleasant Grove U. B. Missionary Meeting, Mrs. Arthur Berger, 130 p. m. Evangelical Loyal Dorcas Picnic Supper. Memorial Park. 6:30 p. nt. Methodist Ladies’ Aid Society, Church Parlors. 2:30 p. ni. Friday Ice Cream Social, Union Chapel 7:30 p. m. Pocahontas, Red Men’s hall, 7:30 p. m Legion Auxiliary Social Meeting Legion Heme, 8 p. m. event of the convention was the marine banquet, with the banquet! room representing the interior of a ship. Three hundred and fifty gueets attended. Other social eventa were Delt' Show Boat, Bank Night, Mermaid Frolic, National Cruise and the Skipper’s Ball New national officers are: Imogene Reddell, Indianapolis, president; Opal Starr, South Bend, vice-president; Eve Brock, Middletown, Ohio, secretary; Ane Mae Conley, Pine Bluff, Ark., treas-

I urer; Elizabeth Cornwell, Spring- ■ field, Ohio, eastern inspector; Doris Derre, Lob Angeles. Cal., western . Inspector; Dorothy Mallory, Pennville, philanthropic secretary. The board of trustees includes El eanor Krug, Bellville, 111., Bobbie jHonn Sweeney, Detroit, Mich.; MarI tha enry, Marion, Ohio. The 1933 I convention will be held at Indiana- ■ polls. MRS. IRA FUHRMAN HOSTESS TO FLOWER GARDEN CLUB The Decatur Flower Garden club met with Mrs. Ira Fuhrman at Beli mont Park Tuesday afternoon with eighteen members and one guest. Miss Martha Erma Butler, present. Mrs. Fred Hancher read a splendid paper on “Native Trees of Indiana.” A flower garden contest was ; enjoyed and the >prize was awarded to Mrs. Noah Bixler. During the business meeting the | club decided to have a flower show 1 during the street fair. The next i meeting will be held at the summer : home of Mrs. E. S. Scott at Lake James. o Indianapolis Model Signed For Movies Hollywood, July 21 —(U.R) — Dis- , covered by film scouts while work- ' ing as an Indianapolis store model ' pretty Marge Brullow went to work in the movies today under a contract paying her S6O to S7OO a week. The girl, who played in an amatenr film ‘‘Rhythm and Romance” in Indianapolis a year ago, was cast

Statement of Condition of the (ESTHAL LIFE ASSIHtXE M»< IETI I Mutual I Des Moines, lowa sth & Grand Avenues On the 31st Day’ of December, 1936 GEORGE N. AYRES, President (Deceased 1-29-37) F. G. WOLFINGER, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up .... * $ Mutual GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate Unincumbered $ 4,978,691.32 M*» ’teare h»an« on Real Estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) 10,291,132.68 Ronds Owned (Book Value) 17,420,004.22 Cash in Ranks (On Interest and Not >n Interest) 1.169.166.50 Accrued Securitiest Interest and Rents, etc.) 338,963.35 Other Securities Policy Loans 7,210,753.57 Premium” end Accounts due and in pro ess of collection 778,864.44 Accounts otherwise se- ‘ cured 194,896.10 Total Gross Assets $42,382,472.18 Deduct Assets Not Admitted $ 119,142.59 Net Assets $42,263,329.59 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding- risks $35,567,157.58 T«osses due and unpaid None Losses adjusted and not due « 149,969.55 Losses unadjusted and in suspense 55,000.00 Bills and Accounts unpaid 37,127.53 Amount due and not due banks or other creditors 2,343,650.83 Other Liabilities of the Company - 705,196.92 Total Liabilities Capital $ None Surplus $ 3,405,227.18 Total $42,263,329.59 STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner I, the underpinned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1936. as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In Testimony‘Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my •official seal, this 9th day of July, 1937. (Seal) GEO..H. NEWBAUER Insurance Commissioner. ♦ls Mutual Company so state. July 21

xECATtm DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1937.

tln Universal Picture’s -One Hnn<lred Men and a Girl." Because she ** .0 and a minor, the contract was brought Into superior court for approval. —— o~ Mr. and Mrs. William Bell and daughter Nancy will attend the circus In F/vrt Wayne this evening. Mrs. Ward Calland and daughter Martha and Mise Helen Haubold ■left Monday morning for Morpeth,. Rondeau Park, Ontario, Canada, • i for a two weeks' outing. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Maddox and I family, Mine Ruth Winnes and Mrs. | Elizabeth Markel have returned I from laike James, where they vis- ’ I Ited over the week end at the E. S. . Scott cottage. ■A. R. Ashbaucher and son, Rob- ’ ert, have returned from a visit to 1 Orville, 0., where they inspected the Will-Burt stoker company, which they report is operating at I capacity to fill orders. Mr, and Mrs. Clyde Beery, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Engie and son, Jim mie, have returned home from a four day vieit in Canada and the aerthwest. The local party visited several places of historical interest on the tripv t «f Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyer have i gone to Detroit to visit with the former's brother, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Meyer F« vm there they will go to Toronto, Canada and other points of interest. They will return later ; this week. Word has been received in Decatur of the birth of a dughter to Mr. and Mrs. Windfield Maddy of Pontiac, Mich- on July 14, Mrs. Maddy I wae reported ae having taken ser- !. -uely ill in the past few days. Mrs. | Bess Erwin of Anderson was called to her bedside. No further word has been received here.

The Misses Bernie, Stella and Naomi Ruth Franklin, Genevieve Light, Eileen Porter, Julia Rose and Fern Passwater are spending thie week at Manitau Lake. The Misses Dixie Dale Haines and Ruth Winnes of Portland are visiting here with Miss Fern* Bierly. Mr. and Mrs. D W. McMillen, Jr., will arive in Fort Wayne Thursday after a six weeks redding trip in Alaska, Canada and Wisconsin. They will be at home at 508 North Third street, Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lichtensteiger and children, Frederick, Karl, and Dean of Wren, Ohio visited with the O. T. Johnson family recently. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sproul and son Albert, of Spencerville, Ohio were guests Monday at the O T. Johnson home. o '< | Condition Os Purdue Coach Still Serious Lafayette. Ind., July 21 —(U.R) — Physicians at St. Elizabeth hospital early today reported the condition of Noble Kizer, Purdue university athletic director and head football coach, still is serious. They said, however, Kizer had shown some improvement and gradually was emerging from a semi-conscious state. Kizer was brought to the hospital tvi', days ago after sustaining a relapse from a nephretic ailment which earlier this year sent him to a sanitarium for extended treatment

I Statement of Condition of tlie (EVIHtI. LIFE INSIHANCE CO. OF ILLINOIS 720 North Michigan Avenue . On the 31st Day ot December. 1936 ' ALFRED Mac ARTHUR. President S. B. Bradford, Secretary , Amount of Capital paid up . • $ 200.000.00 GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY ' Real Estate Unlncumb,ered $4,270,702.95 ' Mortgage Ixians on Real Estate ( Free from any prior incumbrawe) 1,332,232.13: Bonds and Stocks Own- ' ed (Market Value) 1,702,459.11 , i Cash In Banks (On 1n- ■ I terest and Not on Interest) 236,022.71 I Accrued Securities! Interest and Rents, etc.) 727,284.86! ' Other Securities Policy •. Loans 3.054,460.28 I Polley Liens ... 773,685.64 Premium Notes 1.682.61 Premiums and Accounts dim and in process of collection 283.604.51: Accounts otherwise se- • ■ cured 77,319.45 Total Gross Assets $12,459,454.25 Deduct Assets Not Admitted $ 138.043.89 Net Assets 812,321,410.36 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks 810,880,020.00 Losses due and unpaid None Ix>sses adjusted and not due 44,1 54.86 Losses unadjusted and In suspense None Bills and Accounts unpaid 15,977.70, Amount due and not due hanks or other creditors None Other Liabilities of the Company 955,401.43 : Total Liabilities «11,895.553.»9 Capital * 200,000.00 Surplus .... $ 225,856.37 Total #12,321,410.36 STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner j I. the undersigned. Insurance! Commissioner of Indiana, hereby; certify that the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Con- , dition of the above mentioned C>m- . pany on the 31st day of December. 1936, as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file Tn this office. In Testimony Whereof. I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 9th day of July, 1937. (Seal) GEO. H. NEWBAUER Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. July 21

gXßehind Ute Scenes.Sjl

By HARRISON CARROLL <op> right, 11137, King rc*iurr> H>ndir«tr. Inc. HOLLYWOOD — Whoever got the idea of having the "Tovarich” company work at night and sleep In the daytime certainly put Claudette Colbert on the spot. The star had just let a contract to have her house remodeled and carpenters were all over the place. It was a question either of changing things around or giving up the idea ’of sleep, so Claudette had to pay the carpenter* to work on night shifts. Sounds Lke an interesting house party planned next month by the American bull fighter, Sidney Franklin. He lives on a ranch in Acapuloo and has invited Ernest Hemingway, Nancy Carroll, her daughter, Patricia, and a number of other well-known* to be his guests. The stretchers handily present on sound stages are not there just as ornaments. Despite every care, accidents are always happening on movie sets. The most expensive, of course, are when stars are hurt in the middle of a picture. Directors have nightmares even thinking of it. Al Santell, for instance, refused to shoot a scene of a toy balloon exploding near Herbert Marshall's face. He found it was filled with hydrogen gas and was afraid that a spark might set it on fire. R-K-O searched all over town for helium gas, finally managed to buy some from Universal. Then they went ahead and popped the balloon. Some of the accidents are comical. In "The Great Garrick”, Edward Everett Horton had to make a frightened, dive into a chest and pul! the top down after him. But when they shot the scene, the lock jammed and Horton was imprisoned with practically no iir to breathe. His muffled shouts were so insistent that they didn’t wait tc call a locksmith but sawed >S one end of the chest. To on-,

Adams County | Memorial Hospital * Admitted: Mrs. Leroy Beer, De-1 catur route three. Dismissed: Master Keith Oakley | McCollum. Geneva; Lewis L. I Smith. 318 South Third street, i I city: Robert Eichhorn, 731 Mercer j avenue, city; Donald Waite. 804 i Madison street, city: A. J. Delling-j er. Willshire, Otjio, and Mrs. Ber-| nard Kruse, Decatur, route four. j 0 Two Indiana Men Are Killed In Accidents Indianapolis. Ind., July 21—(U.R) —Louis C- Wilson, 34, was killed I instantly late yesterday when hie 1 automobile crashed into a stone abutment and guard rail on a bridge over the White river here. He was vice-president of the A. J. Wichman & Co., an investment company. Kokomo, Ind., July 21 —(U.R) — Luther D. Rust, 50, waa killed last night when he drove his automobile j into the (path of an Indianapolis-j bound Indiana Railroad passenger 1 car. o Mexico To Try New Crops Berkeley, Cal. (U.R) —Mexico is ' out to become a second Callfor-

Work on Memorial Progresses —w ■■■ r < < I OK S’ z M A i MT _ ~ t fX, J - * ’ View of project ————— Working under direction of Gutzon Borglum. noted sculptor, skilled stone cutters recently started carving from the living granite on the side of Mount Rushmore, in western South Dakota, the features of Theodore Roosevelt, last of the four presidents who will be commemorated 1 by the memorial. Work has been completed on the likeness of George Washington and the features of Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson are nearly finished.

looker*, it was very funny. T"> Horton, it was far from IL Answering Your Questions! L. L. C., Lynn, Mass.: Ida Lupino is supposed to have sold four of her songs to a British musical comedy producer. Anyway, she definitely has one under consideration at R-K-O. It accepted, it will go into the picture, "Fight for Your Lady”. Adrian will bring trunks full of peasant costumes back from Europe. He has 50 now, complete from shoes to hats, and will buy 15 more in Vienna and in Italy. M. G. M. would like to have some of them back in time for Joan Crawford's picture, "The Bride Wore Red”. Grace Moore and Miriam Hopkins have become such pals that they are living in adjoining trailers at Malibu. But very fancily, for i that kind of thing. They even have the trailers surrounded by latticework, to insure privacy. Chatter. . . . P. J. Wolfson, the scenarist and producer, is improving in the hospital, but the spinal operation was not complete . . . Gail Patrick’s mother is paying her a visit in Hollywood. . . . Steffi Duna, looking very swell, was dining at Travaglini’s the other flight with Husband John Carroll. . . . Very funny about Fred Stone. He always forgets the date of his wedding anniversary and, this year, Mrs. Stone has refused to tell him when it is. Fred's even wired to the Rex Beaches in Florida trying to find out, but they are in on the gag and won’t help. Note to Fred: We know che date. . . . Anne Nagel, widowed so tragically by Ross Alexander's suicide, was at Sardis with Gordon Oliver. ... On a diet, Shirley Ross eats nothing at lunch but cottage cheese, flavored with chives and caraway seeds, and canned apricots. ... Vi Bradley, whose singing always lures the local stay-up-laters, will open at Lindy's cocktail room next week. . . . And Betty Furness, the poor gal. had her bathing suit ccme halfway off in the pool at the Westport Beach club.

| nia, according to Miguel Brami hila, chief of the Mexican National | Commission of Irrigation. He has I just completed an exhaustive : study of soil conditions in this i state with a view to establishing !in Mexico those California crops ' best suited to soil conditions : there. Cake Racketeers Appear Pasadena, Cal. (U.R) The “cake racket” is the latest in local | racketeer annals. The system • consisted of persuading citizens : to advance sl2 for a year’s supply lof cakes, one to be delivered l monthly, and the profits to go to underprivileged children. WhethI er the children got the profits or j not, the police do not know. o “Pocket Park” Laid Out Minneapolis, (U.R) — The second , "pocket l park” being built in the neighborhood of Minneapo'is by N YA workers has been plotted and ' landscaping is to start soon. The 1 park, bordering part of a new high- , way, is only one-sixteenth of an acre in area. o Elephant Defiant in Bath Philadelphia (U.R) — Lizzie, a big I elephant at the Philadelphia Zoo, : took a bath during a hot spell and it I was more than two hours before attendants could persuade her to quit the tank. They had to drain it.

THREE OF ONE FAMILY KILLED Three Connersville Persons Are Instantly Killed By Train Shelbyville, hid.. July 21. (U.R) A family of three persons was wiped out today when a Big Four rail- , road train struck their automobile iat a crossing here and hurled it 1 150 feet down the right of way. i The dead are: Omer Glenn Platt, 42, principal of the Connersville Junior high I school. Mrs. Jessie Platt, 38, his wife. Glenn Eugene Platt, 16, his son. The family was on Its way to Chicago where Platt recently bad | received a scholarship at the University of Chicago. I Mrs. Platt was driving, witnesses said, and steefed the car directly into the path of the speeding passenger train. Mrs. Platt was killed instantly, her body hurled from the car. The son also died immediately as did Platt, who was caught in the front seat of the car. Both bodies were badly mangled. Roy McCannon was the engineer and Frank Teagardin the conductor of the train.

ARRIVALS Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fuhrman, of Moline, 111., are the parents of a baby boy, born at the Adams county memorial hospital at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The baby weighed nine pounds and five ounces at birth and has not been named. Mr. and Mrs. Van Lucius Miller of Convoy, Ohio are the parents of a baby girl, born at the Adams WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWithout Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed is the Morning Rarin' to Go The liver should pour out two pound? of liqu id bile into your bowels daily. If this bila is not flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You get constipated. Your whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. Laxatives are only makeshifts. A nr.er’? bowel movement doesn’t get at the cause. U takes those good, old Carter’s Little Liver Pills to get these two pounds of bile flooring freely and make you feel”up and up”. Harmless. gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25c.

fy fOß air"ll I&& a • ZavCV !H La/xI Sir Mi II iI i /A I iw ’i ' 'ft Hl < ilI r~ —ll ) Mii It- I ’ 1 \ .X '4 111 • More fun than many a table game that costs money. Pick up “The Red Crown Game” at any Standard Oil Dealer’s. It’s free! It’s exciting!—And it’s an interesting, easy-to-take, review of the driving tactics that can save you dollars on V__ --Wl**' * the road. Let your friends and family play it! Thousands of drivers are discovering new mileage J”* economy this summer. They’re using the simple, practical facts found in the book, “How to SAVE AS YOU DRIVE” (free, while they last, at all Standard Oil Deal- JVo gaioiia* you can ers). They’re keeping track of their gasoline mileage on i “»’ miin* par the handy “ score card” in the back of this valuable book. ’ an ° a /hao "? ol,dor “ Red I Are you? There s money in it. Start today at any Stand- "it b»ati tham all." ard Oil Dealer’s. Do it when you stop for your free Red Crown game! THE STANDARD OIL CTiMT] IP FUnWII DEALER NEARBY SELLS J lArlllAllll llliU LIIUH W GASOLINE

I county memorial hospital thin morning hl 7:45 o’clock. The baby I weighed seven pounds, three and I one-half ounces hi birth and bss i i not been named. —O Telquilla Display Arranged Dallas, Tex. (U.R) - Pan-American i Exposition officials consider pulque brewing "educutiomil," and as a | result tequllla distillers of Mexico! iare going to have an eye-opening! 'exhibit at the Internationa] fair' here. They plan to show the first ' processes of making the vinous liquors of the maguey plant. o Suit For $265 Costs $459 Mt. Vernon. O. - (U.R) Arthur Phillips went into court with a! $265 lawsuit against the Knox Nut-i ional Farm Loan Association. To-1 tai costs fn the case, assessed I against him after Federal Land] Bank attorneys had appealed successfully to the U. S. Supreme

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PAGE THREE

i Court, amounted to $459-—not Including attorney’s fees. - ■■■ — Sit-Down Delays Rodeo | Electra. Tex. (U.R) — Rodeo cow. I boys, who muike their living sitting aboard bucking horses and eteeiw, delayed a rodeo here by a sit-down I strike against the jiidgee' decision. Kick Saves Ring Cleveland (U.R) Miss Marlon , Lewis eaved her turquoise ring during a holdup in a night club by drop- , ping It on the floor and then kickling it under the table. Phone 300 1315 W. Adams