Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 121, Decatur, Adams County, 22 May 1939 — Page 5

1) REVOLT” I Threat aired k Socialite TestiI in Before Dies ComI mittee ■ Mi, y ' UPJ • th. Imrilun KOK ih« Er.in, <> ..i i< KK .f ali-M'IA i<> " ■ ■ ’. .1 ■ '|. th.' ■MH t. leaders. ■ I <•(.•>> IM. to II- ■ H <&. ■.!> "" • ti-■«! '■• I" ■•'! S’ -tA <■ '■ > •>!. "I »■ i. Ilk** ■*■ ""“bl <••«■ -‘ 'i'ii left mid I thought IltS l''"l'lt »ouhl b.iv » red republic." ■ «U • •' '"tt.i '*'ltt»'n la-t ■ M-F "-• * Erwin t'ampn. | tto *.

DOCTORS BtKtWF

■ CHAPTER L sayci for a week. Chris, ' that «he had -ay longer. She had un- ■ *•#* a 1 hrr Mt Put lhe ,n trifles which were imB MB" to her. In the mornings, he '■ Mrs. Miller carry.ng up MB. • ’ — .rs aw-. ■ Mt ■ I k- * as there’s c‘ ■Wf’r your bath. Mrs. Arden today.” ■ ' am 11 The wash.ng .an I Mb- was c-ns'ent cons m- ■ such «m.i M MBH*'' > is the food y. i'v.- 1.. n - \ r i. t , n If ■ •S' t ■ ■ ■B'S " to worry him.” ■ tried, he knew. They b- th Rut the life was tew. ■ IMF:" : rg at the table, she w .’ talk of thia house party or one day out of a rl'xr skv she had seen He»e’ was that?" Mr Harbor. She wasn't g- :r.g •< touch. Just taking walks and like that.** dismissed Beverly then, as if not count; but aho could n- t this burial nine which was life now. She kept on trying One afternoon Amy and HF' " daughters-in law paid a cad, and Katie watched th. n. MM » -d»-w as they came »• r s, iH' comes the missionary sm jß' ry've been pretty good to me " laying up treasure n she did her best that MJB*° b" friendly, and it was not MT 1 ? her fault that she fa.l.-d | W»a'- there in Letitia's sftf jar-B-jM*’"' r k at her short hair, h. r makeup, and her painted |B|M r ’'-*'lv. and found little or i. •>. I W° «.V "> her They left w th.v. I f. and Katie ia;.. I •.•■.' »^M* r and lighted a cigarette. she said flippantly. i one examination I didn't ‘!»y Katie came home from a I " her stocking fee', r»-n nr M ,h ' "*■ « n ‘i 'h»t night ah., ti l (he was going. not made for this sort of Mt-’ she said. ”1 like lights and and people. Chris. And M" f ’n't really want me here, du ■ »»nt you if you want to stay.” ■jF" shrewish then. "You X ! take any of the responsibility. S**' you. That's what every one isn’t It?" gj l •'» It matter ao much what to you. I suppose. It never tpoved in his chair. "Katie." slowly, "why did you take letter of mine, years agd The ■ from Beverly Lewis?" looked terrifled. The color •'"•d out of her face. "What let M know what you are talk hen it doesn't matter," he said Br’.'y " w hon do you want to leave ■ Tomorrow V' was still frightened, ho knew, she went up to bed, and she ■ 'ho nest morning He know that ■ departure was final, that she M* ‘“king herself out of his life ■ good. He tried to feel some re T brn *” kl»s«d her. Tn a sense ■nd at that. She was the last tie Mtd tn hie former life. She had yr»y»d him. doubly destroyed but she was Katie, and oaee ■ had loved him. my dear; and ha haptt h * at h! * "■mrl" « h * •• Wyh my life knocked to I »t\ppoae 1 just don't under ■M you. Chna. Maybe 1 never A

obuinrd Gilbert dpnM tha| |w m«lH«ry dictatorship In ihl* <**,„. " l ?' d **• ■*« 'hat your group would have to ata n * revolution?'' WhSr y romm "”* “ h *- "No air." Mid Gl|hen. "No air.” Gilbert Mid -y,,,, bnvoit t read your history" Gilbert* letters Indicated hop., •hot • 'natloiialiat alate" might he established with th.- star* and alrlpca flying ovw .|| lhr ,„ rr) , from the Panama canal to th.. Arctic circle." Before the hearing opened. Gilbort Mid the committee had suminotied him to try to Identify a ’'.'n’T' 1 ’*•• Harmonic [ " b, I N ; W York • h " he gave 1 . '" f '’ rm *"on about the suppo*. *<l leftlut plot """ Q-o „ name winners (CONTINL'ItD FttilM PAOR (INkt number of award* ran from 4 to 7. Ait Increase of 1") mor.’ contestinta this year than last war reported In addition to the 200 scholar* '..anted. 1% won the honor of election aa alternate*. Eighty-eight scholar* will be freahmen n»M tall, while 112 are students now tn college. Men number In* and women >l. Miaa Mann la attending I. U. while the other three Adam* county atndenta will be entering for the tint time. Half of the XX freahmen stood firm In their high school graduating

She went away on that, not looktag back, leaving him alone in that dying garden, with hi* um !<•*» hand tucked in hi* pocket, with the wind ruffling hi* hair, and with a itrange, tormented look in the eye* which followed her until *h* was out of •ight. Now at last he was alone, stripped bare of everything, even his pride. That night for the first and only time since he had been appointed to the hospital staff, he drank himself into a stupor. Then and only then ho managed to sleep. sees Katie got her divorce in Reno that fait She wrote to Chris asking for it, and he drew against his rapidly diminishing bank balance to finance it. He sent the check and then went for a long walk through the bare farm lands. Ixing ago he had known that no man could travel two roads at once, yet he had tried it and failed. And long ago also he had walked through an autumn day like this, watching the leaves scurrying before hi* feet and thinking that Nature went about her business prosaically, and without emotional nonsense; that only mankind cluttered up its life with emotional disturbances—pity, romance, grief and passion. He was young then, or he would have added remorse to the list. He had let Katie go her headstrong way, too baay and too selfengrossed to check her. Thera had been good stuff in her. and he had let her go. Fourteen years. For fourteen years Chris had loved one woman, and for most of that time he had been married to another one. The human heart was a strange thing, he thought. It could go through the gesture* of love with one woman and yet hold the image of another. It eraved freedom and yet dreaded to be alone; and he who had craved freedom for so long now had it, and it meant nothing to him. Another phase of his life began that same night. He was ready for bed and about to take the final drink which would allow him to escape when he heard the banging of an old car coming up bis neglected driveway, and went down to the door. One of the village men waa there, a worried little man, to say that his baby had the croup, and would the doctor look at the child. “My wife’* seared. Doctor. I dont like to bother you, but if you'd come and take a look-" "I’m not practicing; but I'll com*, of course." He went upstair* to throw on some clothes, and on hi* table sat that bottle of hl*. He stood for a moment surveying it. Then he went deliberately to the window and upended it When he went downstairs again, there wa* a grim smile on his taco. “All right.” he *aid. “Let’s go.” He picked up his bag with hi* left hand and went out into the cool darkness. He spent most of that night by the child'* bed In a small village house., content to be there, to hem the long crowing Intake of air grow less stertorous and change into nor mal breathing, until finally the baby slept. When at last he emerged Into the dusk of a wintry dawn, his face showed fatigue, but there was a new act to his shoulder*. Once more he had made a fight —small a* it waa - •nd won IL He burled the empty bottle th*t day In I-etitia's garden, along with several of its fellow*. That phase wa* over, thank God' But if one wa* over, another »*> , beginning. The new* went around, the countryside that he was available. and little by little after that ] th* country people began to com* In. ’ Ha had no hours, there waa no, sign on that door of Davida. Bv' j they earn*, afoot. In ancient buggies in mud-spattered car*. At first he made no charge. Then ] finding that this hurt their pride, h«: let than pav him old Dav'd's priCM a dollar for an office call, two dol 1 ten for a viaiL At the and es tho i

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 22. 1939.

class** and all tat Uro ranked in the! • upper tan per cent. The average note of the winner* wa* approxln at«ly »6 per cent. ' The committee feel* that the rcbolaatlc ability of the srhotar* 'selected tills year waa uauaually high." said l»r. Prank R. Elliott, chairman of the committee, in anti ninclng the award*. He cited dal* , to ahow that atate scholars mainI tain auparlor grade* In the Unlver- . tally. On the committee of trlectlon J with Dr. Elliott warn Prof. H. T. I, Uriscoe, head of the t'hemlatery Der' partnirnt. and Prof. Edgar L. Yet- ' ger, paychologiat and chairman of ithe Two-Year Elective t’ourae. DIONNE QUINTS ICONTtNUKD FROM FAUK ONBI . I "by your leave. •Ire." she took I hold of hl* band and grinned al ! him. The king *toopod over and I whispered something to Yvonne. Thon they both laughed their head* off at their private Joko. Marie Dionne decided that her .: elater was having too much fun . with the tall man tn the blue , sailor anil, so she ambled over and handed the king a *mall ' bouquet. The rvat of the quint* gave '; their bouquet* to the queen. The HMnlnule ceremony opened 1 ’ with all the quinta standing in . ' ill!.' '. Dr. Dafoe, wearing formal morn-' 1 ' Ing attire that seemed a little. 1 tight In the seams. presented the I chNdren one by one. . [ k Each stopped forward, put her

first month he found ha had taken in twenty dollars, and was instantly back to those first day* of practice in the city, and his statement to Beverly that ha had made the sama amounL Noel, coming home that year for Christmas, found him cheerful and more talkative. His right arm at ill bung useless for all practical purposes, but he was increasingly •dept with the lefL The boy helped him in the office, interested and filled with importance. “Now watch this, Noel. Catch the end, will you? Righto. Hold it tighL That’s the way.” The bandage would go on, snug and sleek with the boy’s help, and like the bandage Chris felt his bold on life tightening. He added another Christmas to his list that winter, with Hiram and Noel cutting down a tree in the wood lot, and Chris Joining then* to carry it home; the horse* brisk with the eold air, the tree on the sledge scraping along a snowy lane, and the two men and tho boy trudging •long beside it. That night they trimmed the tree, and at last Hirain mounted the ladder and placed an ancient and dilapidated angel on the top. When at last he came down, he looked around him sheepishly. “The old man always said a prayer about now," he said. "We might just be quiet for a minute anyhow.” see* Chrl* missed Noel when he went back to school. But he wa* increasingly busy. The country people eame in increasing numbers. Sometime* at night a car or a buggy would stop under his window, and he would find himself Jolting along through th* darkness. So me tiling hard and tight in his chest began to soften; hi* smile was more spontaneous, hi* voice more gentle. Here again were the intimate contact* of hi* early days in practice. It did not matter that he wa* still earning less than it coat him to live. What mattered wa* that he had found a place for himself, small a* it waa. But be was lonely, lonely as he had never been before in his life. There were long hour* empty even of sound, for Mr*. Miller went home after hi* early supper. Snow came again in January, clogging th* roads, banking up against hi* windows and cutting off most of hi* outlying case*. He cut a path to the woodhoure and on* to Mr*. Miller’* eottage, but with on-* arm It was slow, heavy work. Ho would put a foot against the shovel, push it under the snow, and loosen iL Then a little at a time he could lift it out of the way His back ached al night with weariness, his hand showed blisters: but he kept doggedly on. Then Just as h« had finished, the snow melted, leaving hl* work for nothing. The roads turned into *eaa of mud. the path* became small stream* of water Mr*. Miller, plowing along her road, caught a cibl whu'l, ' irm-d Into nneummila, and he had a long fight for her lit'*. It wn.v on a day when Mr*. Miller wa* still siek and things had gone very badly indeed that he opened the ftont door to find the village taxi driving away and Beverly on the porch. “I’m here, Chri».” she said simply. “What are jmu going to do with me?" He stood still, looking nt her. “Do with you, my darling?" he said. "I’m going to love you all my life, •nd I'm going to send you back by the next train ” But he opened tho door, and she camo in. She did not look about her —like Kntie. She looked only at him, and suddenly there in the hall she pu' her et*ni* around him and laid her head auieily on his shoulder. My pocr Chris," she said. “Don’t sand me uway. 1 couldn't hear it. Ir.ti't it time I stayed, Chris? Isn't It time, uarttag?” <T« be continued! Or* :fir bt Marr MnMfui tuitiiw OUUWuUd W KaAA FbbUUM IjBd.MU. LjML

Casualty in “Bloody Harlan” at A- I V . , ’ tyJnW r» *yj| | Eugene M<"Glothln. a striking (TO miner, become* first casualty to shed i IdtNid In "Bloody Harlan" section of Kentucky. 11.- waa shot iu the hip j when, it is alleged, he shouted Scab!" at John Padgett, a non union miner. McGlothln la seen In hospital with wife and mother.

Gunfire Breaks Quiet at Harlan a dL . I ’ I In w i hi > - • Wu'x ■' fTv ' ''' 44 _ » ri ■' . ? tSg* Plckrts milling about national guardsmen Outbreak of gunfire breaks the comparative quiet in the serious Harlan county. Kentucky, coal tb up. Gunmen in ambush tired on nr >rk 'ie Vh** ° f ,h * n ’ inr ’ dnd national guardsmen returned the fire. No inJunes were rej>< Pel. 1-h .to show, pickets and national guardsmen milling about near a mine entrance. nBUOn,u

right font behind her left and; made a two! eurtsy. Once tint!, formality was out of the way th< quinta took charge of the sittm- j linn theniM'lve*. ('i-cili- wa* the firm one to think' up the idea of kissing th<*'si<i '«-ii. ! She just walked at-roas ill*- room i mid did It. As soon as her sisters saw what waa hupp-'iitnu they,' too, were thronging around :h>>i qm-rii. scrambling to see which i one eiHild kiss her tlrat. The quern loved It. The king mid qurvn w 1 !! carry! back to lamdon with them five! memenhma of thia visit. Each ofj the quint* gave them an *ulo i graphed photograph with Ihelri name* wrawlod on them in large! childish lettera. In turn, the king and <iu*-et. gav.n »ai-h of Iho quint* llltlr blu«' ruder| coat* and announced th--y were gift* from Princeaa Elisabeth and Prince** Margarn! who ora waiting eagerly In London for new* of the Dlonm-s. For a time It aerim-d that Oliva Dionne and hl* wife weiu to laignored In *ll the excltemmtl over the quint*, but they. too. were preuenied to the king and queen. The queen and Mrs Dionne cmversed In Frenoh and they dirctisaed a subject that all women like to laik about- their children. The queen told Mr*. Dionne about the two prtaeeMe* tn London. X .-o aa. — GERMAN AND ITALY ((YINTiNItEIi Flit IM PAGK ONK) would bi- triumphant and ns nn aid to world peace mid progress But it was connidered significant that the Japanese statement confined the support of the Tokyo government largely to opposition tn communism, einphnel/itig that the gtivet tiini'iii has decided to join up with the European totalitarian pow«ti> only against soviet Russia t The chief Eutopeau dauget spot

Dunxig cootlnued to sixxie over the weekend as the result of the killing of a German by a shot i fired from the automobile of a | Polish official in the fhuiMft five city udtiilnlstnitloti Both p >lan<| ! and Ditiuig preaaoted each other I with note* of protest ind both issued contradictory *tatemeiita ’ teaming the other for the dash. i With the negotiations of the op. i laming lilia ks coining lit i oetid. I both sides appear to be n.arkl ig I time on a declaim whether they ' will stir up a tempest over the I shooting. In any event, it* Im- ' lairlanee will !»• only that which the two governnieiita decide to give it. AGED WOMAN IS tCONTINUKD FKOM PAGE ONK) ed Th>- sheriff opened the it,vestlgatloli immediately by searching all hobo eamp* in the vicinity and quest lonina suspicious eliaractors, hut nn truce of the robber eiHild be found. ("liy police o!H---eers were also notified. Hincu the flashlight was turned In her face, the aged victim was unable to give an acrurate description of her SHKHlImit. except for the fad that he was (all, dark and wore a short gray overcoat. ADAMS COUNIY ■■ • ivri-;ift;ii |.|(.im ca';i; n-.i'.i approval of the prlosn bureau City and county jails aa a claa* rank so low. In comparison to federal standards, that prison bureau officials favor a campaign to either improve or eliminate them, .luhies V. Bennett, director of prisons, stated that in his opinion any measures for improvement of conditions at existing local fulls would be "only temporary measure*.’ and that "we must look to the abandonment ot the coutfty jail aud substitution of neutrally local-

FOUR CRASHES CLAIM LIVES Indiana Traffic Death Toll Mount* In W'eckend Wreck* , Ry Vnltrd Press Seven person* wcr« dead today 1 a* the result of four automobile' crashes on llooaler highway* dur- ’ Ing the weekend. Killed when their car crashed Into a tree on Indiana highway *2 near Brctavllle were Lsßoy Pfaff. IX. and Paul Newman. 17, both of Huntingburg, and Gcnor* Mae Leiugang, 14, of Holland. Another companion. June Beard. 14. of Kelvin. suffered minor Injuries Coroner l.eo J. Uirey blamed high apewl that caused the driver to lose control of the car for tho accident. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown, about sis and 40 respectively, both of South Bend, were killed when their car wa* Involved in a triplecollision near Wabash. Their car was struck from behind by a machine driven by William Jones of Wabash and thrown Into the path of a third machine. The Impact of the second crash tipped the car over an dual it on tire. Earl laindow. 2X. and Jospeh Buyta*. .11, both of South Bend, were killed when the motorcycle, which they were riding collided , with an automobile driven by Ed-' win Herman, also of South Bend. J on a highway southwest ot South' Bend. PENDERGAST IS GIVEN SENTENCE I Fallen Political Boss Os Kansas City To Federal Prison Kansas City. Mo.. May 22 - <U R) —Tom Pendergast, the fallen bos* of the Democratic political organixation here, today wa* sentenced II to prison for one year and three months. . He also was fined JUl.ooo. Sentence wa* Imposed by Judge Merrill K (Mis after Pendergast, the man who made senator* and governor*, had pleaded guilty to charges of income tax payment | evasion. The sentence meant the end of the political career of the fi7-year- j old man whom- very appearance' was that of the cartoonist'* con- | ception of the political overlord. Judge Oti* remanded Pender-' gaat to the cuatody of the U. 8. ‘ maiHhal and said that h would he- I ed state farms." Indiana jails approved by the* prison bureau include. l>e*ides the Adams county jail, the following I Institution*: Allen county jail at Fort Wayne; DeKalb county Jail at Auburn, Elkhart county jail at Goshen; Huntington county jail at Huntington; laiPorte- county jail at Laporte; Miami county jail at Peru; St. Joseph county jail at JeffecBend; Clark county jail at Jeffersonville. (Tay comity jail at Branil; Dubois county jail at Jasper; Marlon county jail at Indtenapolto, and Vanderburg county jail at Evansville.

Sloan Testifies r £? H ■k ■ • -, uK. > * \ V Alfred P. Nloan. Jr. Predicting that the automobile |nduatry would continue to expand aa national income Increased. Alfred P. Sloan. Jr., chairman of the hoard of General Motors. ia shown ax he appeared aa a witness before the monopoly committee in Washington. Sloan told hie llatanera that, "we have got to have more profit in industry. * It's got to be made more flexible ao people can shift money from one thing to ajwUier,"

gin serving his sentence Im med I lately. He will be taken tn the I prison st Leavenworth, Kan. 4<> mile* fmm here, later today. Il wa* understood. The stroeta around the tempo' I ary federal building were jammed i with curious when Pendergast, ac- - cotnpanied by hl* son. Thoma* J I'rndergast. Jr., hi* nephew, James ' Pendergast, and hl* attorney*, R. R. Brewster and John C. Madden. - arrived. The *7 year-old man who had named United State* senator* and , Missouri governor* because of his , tremendous power and tho elh. len 'ey of hl* political organisation.showed no sign* of emotion aa ht walked to tho counsel table. q. CONGRESS MUST (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON Kt the nation Into conflict If general fighting developed in Europe ' That group would Ito willing to alt ' here through the summer with an , eye on the While I louse, ready to check any bold presidential move The tax dispute He* about where! last week's While House confer-! ence left It, except that effort* SH'.I being made on the house side to find a method of adjustment less’ ••mltarrasshig to the admlnlstra-* ■ tion than surrender to the ulti j tnatum of tax-reform senate conservat Ives. j I Congress also mu*t act shortly

It Pays to Use MAYFLOWER I Wallpapers They last longer because they are pre- ■ coated, which makes them fast to ■ light. When you buy MAYFLOWER H papers you are sure they are correct ■ in style. ■ Prices As C . Per I Low As Uy Roil I Kohne Drug Store! On the East Side of the Street ■ DKCATITR INDIANA ■ ’ ZMfbf iudas! > HERE’S REAL SAVINGS ON THIS NEWS- >< PAPER & YOUR FAVORITE MAGAZINES X Th* thrifty way Io tubteriba far yavr All FOUR C' > aswtpopar and Amorita’t Grodn A farm ONLY and fiction pubheationt. Naw ordart or a*• 'TH V >' ronawah accapfad. ( THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 YEAR Ado soc » AND THREE 810 MAGAZINES V GROUP A-SELECT 1 MAGAZINE & i Q American Boy R Mo*. Q s ('] American Girt a M'H. X M’Calla Magarine ......I Yr. z Christian Herald ...A Moa. KM < Parent*' Magarine 6 Mo*. ) I) Pathfinder (Weekly) I Yr. X \ L) Modern Romance* Yr. f J J P Romantic Story | Yr. »( fl Screen Book .........I Yr. ' LJ True Con(*t«i<ui* Yr. x J O Open Road (Bov«) t Yr. < [j Woman'* World 2 Yr*. *& ' [J Better Home* a Garden* ........I Yr. Home Art* Needlecraf Yr*. V , Motion Picture ... | Yr. Q GROUP B-SELECT 2 MAGAZINES ' 0 American Fruit Grower | Yr. X ? (J American Poultry Journal | Yr. X . Breeder * (.arene | Yr. [J (loverleaf American Review ...........I Yr. V , ( j Country Home Y e . < (j Farm Journal Yr. Sd ) [ ] Home Art* Needlecraft | Yr. s ( I Home Friend ......I Yr. X / (J Leghorn World 1 Yr. < LJ Mother'* Home Life I Yr. xx ( M 26 Ittue* Q s Plymouth Rock Monthly | Yr. X , (j Succeuful Farming t Yr. O < LJ Poultry Tribune ay. W z ( j Woman'* World Yr* 0 s U National Live Stock Producer I Yr. A ( U Houtehold Magarine I Yr. SZ J FILL OUT COUPON-MAIL TODAY X ' Clif lilt as au/tatlan after rhading aatt dttM V J and mtltit with taufion. Q z w..-. J.••*»«“ ''Thrdty Reader" fS r Name , y ' frrert ~ 1 ft er g. F. P. - . . _____ _

PAGE FIVE

•on vital iMdlcfea Including ihn I treaaury * 42.000.00u.000 ■lablllta- • lon fund, dollar devaluation, proaKlrntial authutlty to laauo - 000.000 of greenback money and •llvor purt hatw- Thoae power* of I Ihr proaldent alao will expire June 30. Rutledge To Teach At I. U. This Summer llliMitnlngtou. Ind.. May 23. cU.P> Wiley B. Rutledge, Jr., newly appointed aanociatv juatlca of that ) U. H. circuit court of appeal* for the District of Columbia, will tnach ut the Indiana Unlveralty aummer ' achooi tin* year. It wa* revealed I today. He I* a former dean of the Uni- ] veralty of lowa law achooi, and Doan Bernard C. Gavit of Indiana | aald that under the arrangement. ' Prof. Eowler W. Harper ot the I. ; U. law *chtM>l fat uity would teach at lowa. j 0 Trade In a Geed Town — Decatur

I “PYGMALION" I You pronounce it like "Pig-matl-yun." -’■Kr.nu.ll-UMU !!. . .. .1. JLWW—eJ