Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Adams County, 2 March 1938 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
> f Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. What are the chief industries of Wyoming? 2. Which constitutional amendutentrrovides for woman suffrage? 3. Name the capital of Latvia. ■*4.- Who was Pierre Prudhon? 5 What is the slang term for a ten dollar bill? 6. What is the name of the string of islands extending southward from Miami. Florida? 7. tn what year was the steamship Titanic sunk by collision with an iceberg? 8. What is the harvest moon? ■ 9. What does the motto of the slate ut Colorado, "Nil sine mimine, ■' mean? 10. Name the U. S. Secretary of State. *• o • It is estimated that a million miles ,of territory in South AmerTea still await the eye of the ex- - KW SALE CALENDAR : Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Decatur Indiana • Claim your sale date early as I am. booking sales every day. ~ Mar. 3—Chas. Decker, 9 miles , Southwest of Ft. Wayne on Liberty ; Kills Road, closing out sale. • Marj 7—Luther J. Adams, 1 mile Jbut hand 1% miles west of Rockford, Ohio. • Mar, 8 —■ Sol Ternet, 4 miles North- of Monroeville, livestock gale. • Mar 1 . 10—Nelson Abbott, Peter--Bbn, Ind., closing out sale. H. H. High. auctioneer. « BOOK YOUR SALE EARLY. ROY S. JOHNSON . Decatur, Ind. ? Trust Company Building
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FOUR WOUNDED DURING RIOTS Strike Troubles Continue At Factory In Sterling, Illinois Sterling. Jll., March 2 (U.R) — Four persons were wounded, three by gunfire in a case of mistaken Identity, during intermittent clashes throughout the night between deputy sheriffs and more than 200 strikers at the Northwestern Barbed Wire and Rodmil) company plant. Authorities, fearing new outbreaks of violence, ordered protective forces strengthened and tear gas supplies replenished. Sixtyeight deputies and 15 policemen patrolled the scene. The officers fired a dozen tear gas bombs during fighting which resulted when non strikers entered the plant to start work at midnight. Several men suffered bruises and cuts from rocks and clubs hurled by strikers. Howard Scott and Robert Glass, non-strikers, were wounded in an exchange of gunfire with special I deputy James Cunningham. The deputy, who was wounded slightly, | said he mistook the workers for "strikers.” He encountered them j ! as they left the rear of the plant i to return to their homes. Glass said he and Scott returned the fire because he believed Cun- I ningham a "striker.” Scott was shot in the abdomen. : A physician at Sterling public hos- j pital said his condition was serious . During the fighting, strikers re- : trieved gas bombs fired into their ranks and hurled them at the deputies. One of the bombs struck and temporarily blinded special deputy Guado Paris. Nearly 700 men continued work
in the plant while the fighting continued. police said. Thirty four strikers were held . In Jails at Sterling. Dixon and Norrison. Six others were released on I; bonds of $2,000. Five of the men ■ were arrested early Tuesday when | rioting broke out for the first time. ! They were charged with Inciting to riot. Twenty-five were arrested a few •hours later when 100 workers who had remained Inside the plant attempted to rush the picket line. Five men were injured in the i clash yesterday One striker was struck in a leg by a tear gas bomb. ■ He was removed to a hospital - where the leg was amputated. Charles O. Guthrie, a company employe, suffered a flesh wound in
| “Love I Dare Not” coruss
CHAPTER XXVIII In that moment of letting her go, Alec felt he would never be quite a young man again. Some part of his youth seemed to go out of him . . . a wild tumultuousness quieted, a blinding I’ght dimmed, a swelling chord of music was forever stilled... He had asked for so much more than she could give; his need had been so much more urgent than her capacity to assuage it; he had hoped for fire and flame and she had offered him the gentle warmth of a . candle flame.... His voice stumbled with tormented uncertainty. “Come away with me, Caroline. It isn’t what I wanted, it isn't the way I planned it. But the play won’t last a week and I have a London opening next month and I should be there. Marry me, darling, and let me take you with me. I’ll get sailings tomorrow for the end of the week. ...” She stared at him, one hand flung across the lips he had so very recently kissed. She tried to think clearly. But she was so tired. So confused. She had wanted to give Alec everything in that minute before he kissed her. But beneath the violence and necessity of his kiss, her lips had refused to come alive. She sensed dimly that she had failed him irreparably . . . not once, but twice, in the same twenty-four hours. Somehow, she had to make it up to him. “I don’t know, Alec. I’m so tired. I can’t think that far ahead. We’ll talk about it tomorrow ... I mean, later today, after we’ve both had some sleep. If you still think it’s best, I’ll do whatever you say." Alec said, his voice only faintly bitter, “But I don’t want to take you that way, Caroline. I don’t want you to marry me because I think it best i for you but because you want to. .. .” Her eyes, meeting his swiftly, were more darkly distressed than before. “I didn’t mean it to sound like that, Alec ... it’s just that I’m so terribly tired. . . .” “I know.” He was at onee overwhelmingly contrite. “And I’m a brute tc keep you talking like this ... to even think of making love to you. Good-night, darling, have a hot bath and try to get some sleep. We'll talk it all out sensibly tomorrow.” He went then, turning once in the loorway to look back at her. She stood where he had left her, pressed jack against the window frame. He •ouldn’t see her face clearly ... only he outline of her slim figure and :hat bright cloud of heir ... and he :new she was crying softly. But not for love. At the end of the week, THE apple orchard closed, ’nd Alec went to London. But Caroline did not go with him. She went into rehearsal for a new Sam Bernstein production instead. When Sam came to them and offered her the second woman lead, saying brusquely, "Just beiause she failed in a part that was utterly unsuited to her present experience and ability doesn’t prove she can't act.” they both agreed that she should stay in New York and take the part. So, the second week in November, she found herself saying good-by to >
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2, 1938.
• ] his left leg when shot as he re-! I portedly leaped on the running I I board of an automobile driven by j a plant guard. i The strikers, members of the i ! Amalgamated Association of Iron, i I Steel and Tin Workers, committee . I for industrial organization uffll- ; I iato, walked from the plant at mid- ! night Monday, allegedly because | the company refused to renew a > * contract under which they had j worked for a year. Company officials and a union ' I representative failed to reach an i 1 agreement in a brief conference 1 yesterday and ft was Indicated the II national labor relations board I would be asked to call an election ! O. H. Mills, union official, said I he would confer with union heads !
Alec on a boat that was to sail at. midnight. In the few minutes they had alone together before the cabin was crowded with reporters and camera men, he said to her, “Be happy, sweet, and miss me a little, but not too much, and work very hard . . . in the end that will make the time go faster than anything.” He had been deliberately gay with her ever since that night a week ago in the apartment on Tenth Street. If he felt anything at the moment, it was that he was very tired and that it was probably a good thing they were going to be away from each other for a short time. His senses had betrayed him badly that night, and he wanted a little time to get control of himself and the situation. He was, he knew, as much in love with her as ever . . . but some urgency that had flamed up that night, to burn brightly for the length of half a kiss, had gone out, leaving him for the moment, a little numb, a little washed-up emotionally. As for Caroline, she was definitely relieved that things had worked out the way they had. She would, she told herself, surely have married him and gone with him had it seemed wise. But it hadn’t seemed wise, and so she was glad to be staying in New York with a chance to make good in this new play. She would miss him, of course . . . but not so much as she would have missed the chance of redeeming herself in this new part had she gone with him. So she kissed him good-bye now, feeling intolerably lonely as she did so, but knowing that presently, by tomorrow or the next day, she would have adjusted herself to his absence. And then the reporters were upon them and a camera man was asking Alee if they would pose for one picture together. Alec said, “Why not?” and smiled at her, and Tommy Gale was standing in the doorway. “Have you anything to say about the apple orchard, Mr. Graham, and what will your next play be about?” a reporter asked. “the apple orchard ceased to be news when it closed yesterday, and my next play will probably be about the same thing that all my others have been about.” "And what is that?” asked half a dozen voices eagerly. “Love,” answered Alee, his voice only faintly cynical. “Speaking of love,” said a young man from one of the tabloids, “have you any other announcements to make? I mean of a more personal nature?” His eyes went boldly and ; significantly to Caroline.” “Yes, Mr. Graham ... how about you and Miss Hoyt?” Tommy Gale continued to stand in the doorway. His eyes, beneath the pulled-down brim of a gray fedora, were looking straight at Caroline. From across the distance of half the room, over the heads of all those newspaper men, whom she had ' never seen before and would never see again, they were remembering I and making hen remember, that twice he had held her in his arms and kissed her, and that each time i! she had clung to him and kissed him
lat Milwaukee before taking any' additional steps Spokesmen for uon-st filters said they favored the Twin City Labor ! union, an American federation of labor affiliate. Both unions have claimed a majority representation | among plant employes. The plant normally employs about 1.600 men. Boost Production At Newcastle Plant New castle, Ind., March 2 —(UP) Production schedules at the local plant of the Chrysler motor construction are up 25 per cent, it was learned today. The Increased 1 schedule is based on an increase at
I back. In an otherwise emotionless I face, those incredibly blue eyes of his were smiling at her deliberately, refusing to forget any of it, or to let her forget. And she was determined to forget... if she was to go on with Alec, if she was to find any peace or measure of happiness at all in life, she had to forget. So she said now, laying one hand quickly on Alec's arm, color mounting to her cheekbones, her chin lifted defensively, “Yes. You can say that we both wish to announce our engagement to each other . . . that we will be married as soon as Mr. Graham returns from London. ...” A gong sounded somewhere in the ship and Alec said, “That means, | I’m afraid, that you all have to leave. . . .” And it was not until they were up on deck with the band playing stridently and people pushing an<' jostling them, that Alec managed to say to Caroline, “Thank you. darling, that was the sweetest and most gallant gesture you could possibly have made. You couldn’t have sent me away happier....” Then he was saying to Tommy “See she gets home safely, won’t you, old man?” “I’ll be glad to do that,” said , Tommy. “Have a good time in London and give my love to Gina.” He said, "Come on, Caroline, or we’ll have to come back with the tender.” For a long while, it seemed to Caroline, she had been standing waving to a ship that was slowly moving down New York harbor. Now it wag much too far away to wave to any- j one, and suddenly she and Tommy were alone together. That is, they were alone in a crowd of hurrying, incurious people, all intent on getting away a.i quickly as possible from this cold, barn-like structure of a place whieh had become utterly desolate with the sailing of a great Silipa Tommy said, “We’d better beat it if we want to pick up a cab. . . . Better button that coat up, this place is like a morgue.” She buttoned her tweed coat up close to her throat. She thought that in this pushing, hurrying crowd of people he might have taken her a m. He didn’t. He said, instead, “Don’t you ever wear anything except those funny little berets?’ 1 “I don’t look well in most hats ... and I don’t think they’re particularly funny looking.” “All you need,” said Tommy coolly, “is a skipping rope and some red and white striped socks.” She didn’t answer him. There was nothing, she decidely, that you could say to a remark like that. She wondered, a little wearily, why he chose to be so disagreeable. She wondered, even more wearijy, if he had not shown up like that back there in Alec’s stateroom, whether she would have made that announcement. She thought that probably she wouldn’t have. And wondered dully why his ' appearing like that had disturbed her so tremendously . . . she wasn’t i feeling anything now. She thought, ■ “For the first time in my life I am with him and he isn’t stirring me at all ... I don’t feel anything ... but presently I will begin to again....” i (To be continued) I I Ctpsrlthl. 193 T. by King TMtarst SyodtaU. Ine.
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.♦ RATBB One Time—Minimum charge of i 25c for 20 words or lees. Over I 20 words, per word Two Times—Minimum charge of 40c for 20 words or less. Over 20 words 2c per word for the two times. ! Three Times—Minimum charge j of 50c for 20 words or less. I Over 20 words 2J4c per word i for the three times. Cards of Thanks - Obituaries and verses • '- 00 Open rate-display advertising 35c per column Inch. FOR SALE FOR SALE — Farm lease blanks, three for sc. Decatur Daily Democrat, 104 No. Second St. 121' FOR SALE — 10 feeding hogs, weighing from 75 to 100 lbs. 1 Hugo Thieme, 614 miles northeast of Decatur. 50 '3t FOR SALE — Collie pups. Ernst Thieme, 7 miles northeast of Decatur. FOR SALE—Two 5.50x17 tires, almost new. Also 1 wheel. 412 Jacksou St. C. Marsh Crane. 52-3tx i FOR SALE—Two brooder houses, | 10x12, Bxl4. Built 1936. Good ' Yellow Corn. Elmer Gerber, 5 wiles south of Magley. 50-3tx 1 FOR SALE — Repossessed small spinet piano, walnut finish with i bench, latest design, excellent con- ; dition, can be had for small un- | paid balance of only $123.60, pay- | able $6 per month to responsible party. Address Box 443, care Demoi crat - . ! FOR SALE—S-year-old Jersey with j calf by side. 8-year-old sorrel ' I horse, white mane and tail, 1,800 . pounds. 3 quarters of beef. Lewis Yake, Decatur R. R. 2, Craigville I I phone. 50-3tx I FOR SALE — 2 quarters of beef.; Herman Weber. Phone Hoagland. II mile east, % mile south of Wil- : liams. 50-3tx FOR SALE—Semi-modern house; 5 rooms and cellar. Hard and i ■ soft water in the house. Priced $1,600. S6OO school loan available, j 710 Dierkes St. Inquire Rosie R. Baumgartner, Geneva R. R. E. 50-3tx FOR SALE or trade for feeding hogs: 1938 Dodge coupe, A-l condition. Hugh Gehrett, 3>4 > miles west of Bluffton, Ind. 47-6tx FOR SALE—S-year-old Jersey cow with heifer calf by side, a real one. 2 young springer cows, closeup; good stock bull; 4 Hampshire ‘gilts; 1 young male hog, double ' immuned. 6 year old Gelding, exI tra good worker. 20 head of Shropshire yoes, lamb in April. H. P. Schmitt, phone 967. 51-3 t FOR SALE—Thorough bred brown Swiss bull calf. 9 months. Henry Wietfeldt, Hoagland, Ind. 52-3tx FOR SALE —Fordson tractor. Excellent condition. William Klenk. Five miles east Decatur. 52-3 t FOR SAUE — Decatur Super-Qual-ity chicks; bloodtested flocks. !R. O. P. Leghorn males, also othjer breeds; insure bigger profits. Book your order now, some started chicks. See Decatur Hatchery. FOR SALE—Shepherd pups. Heel drivers. Halt mile west of Kirk- ' land high school. Sam Henscbeu. 53 2'x ; Detroit units of the company and i will mean some 200 men will be call- ! ed back to their jobs that have not I worked since last November.
(In Our South Window) LIVINGROOMBEDROOM Studio Couch (Mulberry shade), Davenport hy day and opens to double bed at night. Beautiful Green, Reclining Lounging Chairs to add comfort and beauty. End Tables. Aladdin Bridge and Floor Indirect Lamps, Magazine Racks. Folding Bridge Set (Ivory table and four chairs), .Mirror and Ivory Metal Smoker, to complete the room. Other Combinations in our store. ZWICK’S Phone 61 We deliver. ■
FOR SALE — 2 S 12 McCormick I Deering Tractors with cultivate ors; 1 Fordson like new; 3 used Fordsonz: 1, 10-20 McCormickDeering tractor; 1 Caterpiller tractor; 1. 10-7 John Deere fertilizer drill; 2 Superior grain drills; 1 McCormick - Deering Manure spreader; 2 tractor discs; 3 threshing machines; 2 work horses. See the new Oliver on display. Craigville Garage, Craigville. 52t 5 1 MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE — Parlor Suits recovered. We recover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Decatur Upholsters, Phone 420. 145 South Second St. 30-30 t NOTICE—We make Federal farm loans at 4% interest. Schurger Abstract Co. 31-30 t WANTED WANTED—Two young men, white, light cars (o work with manager. Salary, commission, bonus. See W. B. Graves, 128 North Fourth street, Decatur, Ind., 7:30 to 9 p. m. 52-3tx WANTED —Girl for house work No washing. Must be able to go to work at once. Reply Box Y. Y., or inquire at this office. 52-2tx 1 WANTED—Loans on farms. Eastern money. Low rates. Very liberal terms. See me for abstracts ol title. French Quinn. 152-m-w f MAN, age 20 wants work. ButchBering. meat cutting or farming. In- ‘ quire Frank Hurst. R. No. 4. sL2tx WANTED —Ashes and light haul ing. Willard McConnehey, Kolt-1 I er's Grocery. Phone 320. 51-3tx I FOR RENI | FOR RENT —7 room house, hard wood floors, shower bath, fire i place; several clothes closets; j built-in-features. A. D. Suttles, Agent. 51-3 t | FOR RENT—Ten-room, all modern house, bath upstairs, down. Five ! rooms up, five down. Outtide entI rance to upstairs, recently remodeled. Located South Fourth St. Phone 937. 52-41 j FOR RENT —Country home nearj business section of Decatur. Mo-, tor plumbing, fire place, garden 1 and fruit. Ideal for tourist's rooms. A. D. Suttles, Agt. 51-3 t o Presbyterian Ladies Aid Bake Sale —Sat. 9 a. m. —Brock Store. o NO I’l< E or I’ETI I IUN TO SELL HEAL E*TATft) , STATE OF INDIANA ' COUNTY OF ADAMS. SS: In the Adams Circuit Court, January term, 1938. Iluie Garrett as administratrix of the estate of Mary Ellen Shoemaker, deceased, vs. Wilbur Whitaker, el al. Probate Vnuse No. 3454. To Wilbur Whitaker, Tida Sow- ■ ( do. Nettie Knowlton, Wilfred Mark- ! ley, Howard Markley.Devota Parki- ’ • son, Amos Markley. Luella Sturgis, . 1 Anna Hileman, Linn B. Sturgis, J<oel- “ :la Poorman, Grace Harrah. Harriett i Fletcher, Don F. 5b Farren, Euna Ru- • hi. Bonita Matlark, William D. Stur- | Fis. John T. Sturgis. Ella T. Sturgis. wife of John T. Sturgix, George B. Sturgis, Horatio S. Sturgis. Irene • Sever. Kathryn Smith. Stuart B. . I Sturgis, Elmore E. Sturgis, Alfred E. i Sturgis Ames Sturgis, Garnet Stur- ' gis. Amy Newkirk. Berman Henry, . \ intie Crowley, Alma Bartley. Lorna I Bartley, Fannie Bledsoe Hazel White daughter of William Lee White, . i deceased, and being a grand niere of decedent, whoseeurname is unkonwn, • Howard White, Roy White, Rc\ r i White, Gus White: , I You are severally notified hereby . ! that the above named petitioner as l! administratrix of the estate afore.l said, has filed in the circuit court of Adams county, Indiana, a petition. • making you defendants thereto, and I praying therein for an order and de- . cree of eaid court authorizing the . sale of the real estate belonging to 1 the estate of said decedent, »iescrib- - ed in kaid petition, and described as follows: Lot No. 393 of Joseph H. ' I Anderson's Addition to the Town of Geneva to make assets for the pay- , n-ent of the debts and liabilities of • said estate: and has also filed an affidavit that you and each of you are non-residents of the State of Indiana, or that your place of residence is unknown; and that said petition ro filed and which is now pending, is set for hearing in said court at the court house in the city of Decatur, Indiana, on the 25th day of April y*>3B. Witness the clerk and seal of said court this Ist day of March, 1938. G. Remy Bierly Clerk Adams circuit court by Fern E. Bierly, Deputy <’lerk. Nturgin, Stine A Sturgis Attoriie>N. March 2-9-16 Q NOTH K OF FIN AL SETTLEMfSNT OF EMT ATE NO. ZtSMfO Noth e is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of John Chronister de* eased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 23 day of March 1938. and >show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement A* counts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make prbof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Cal E. Peterson. Administrator with will annexed De<-atur, Indiana, March I. 193 X. Lenhart. Hrllrr A Rrbiirger, Attys. March 2-9 NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT of Estate no. Notice is hereby given to the creditors and legatees of Henry 1. Teeple deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 16th day of March, 1938, and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said <lecedent should not be approved: and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of hetndiip, and receive their distributive shares. Olhia Teeple. Administratrix De*’atur. Indiana. February 32, 1938 Attorney C. L. U alter*. . Feb. 23 Meh. 2.
WKEII« ‘ AND Body’s Mark.t 0 . Ctoied at 12 N ° Ji tn In || ls In 'll tn tn :l.nll Itn. Sprin; Bm k kiniiis INDIANAPOLIS LiVr s k m i 1 ' !■ ■ ‘-.■J . -‘‘’••'■l C ' -- i.r.in EAST BL FFALO . ■ LiVns'n, k - - ? i <• ’ weights '' si ' rs ami m- ■: . ■- >!• WM Sin • p luali' :■ his hnlil nil anil F : out > 4--W •. ■ CHICAGO GRA \ May July Wlmat ' ! ‘t HH Com >; A ' (,a,s '' ’’ ~ l| ‘ FORT WAYNE . Fort . i:.'l Mar. ■' —Livestni k Hm Hous -■< it'.i.;,",. •' lbs . #'< -I" il -- . 26b llis -' $8.10; ■ lbs.. $S V-. ' ■ 120 lbs , Rouths. Calvos l.m.iT. CLEVELAND • ■ , 1 Produce: ' Buttoi. s,rl, •’standards. BHj Eggs, st- ■ 'Via - 1 f ISLjc; , xua 1 ; >' : ;i receipts. Live pm.ltty J 19c; ducks. -'23c; heavy ' ami small. !'■ ( stags, heavy bn'ial. IJC. JI Potatoes. Hural " sl.2b-$l L’T 1“" i'i ha = . Ida’ ll ™ ; ISO; Mam" C" ' a M.-tt■ ' $1.60; Katahdm- H-*" ,! ■ ; i York Russets. - H or ’ n j No. 1. $1 25-?l.1". ■ local grain mask J BURK ELEVATOR 11 ■—‘ Corrected Man'lt ■ 6 I — —*• MgH No. 1 Wheat tl" Ihs. or r No. 2 Wheat. • ■' New Com. l 1 11” 1 1! "" dr ■ ’ I New No. 2 Oats ■ -1 New No. 2 Soy B f ' alis M ‘! Hye 1 CENTRAL SOYA CO ■ * I New No. 2 Soy I'a aiiS—MARKETS AT A GLANCO Stocks: quiet .ind I er. Bonds; - r SI J Is. government ioS |lei ’ ■ r stocks: irrc-’» lal ' I -I Chicago stocks: lower. Foreign exchange. ■ !iin relatlo" to the dollar • COtton: up aroitit a ’ Grains: wheat oK I * 10 | t: corn up fiactio , na ’' hog s in 3 Ji Chicago livestock- ■ - cattle steady. stl . eel ’ottcUß Silver iw in Ne»’J ce . | S edat 44X " e ut. I j Call money: one P I
