Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 12 June 1939 — Page 2

Page Two

Best Leaf Crops for Fine Bowl Salads W w > lu; lettuce cos lettuce mcmd luvld cublv leaved OQ COMAiNE ENDIVE ENDIVE /< ffC ™ WW chervil chives CORN salad CUQLED I I [uAgDEN CBESS Green Leave* Kuh in Vitamins Easily Grown al Home.

Bowl salad, which gourmets of the gay nineties insisted on muting at the table, and great chef* always include as an indispensable part of a perfect menu, is enjoying a revival and playing a new role. Always esteemed lor its piquant freshness and flavor, it is now prescribed by physicians a* the most important source of health giving vitamin*. And new discoveries have placed a premium on green leaves in the salad, since green coloring indicates richness in the sunshine vitamin C. Here is another point on which the gourmets and doctors agree, since leading chefs in our big cities have been insisting upon leaf and cos rather than head lettuce, where they could get it tor mixing their finest salads. Tight heading aorta, they say, lack flavor and do not do justice to carefully blended dressings. A most interesting variety of green leaves for bowl salad can be grown by home gardeners, assuring a varied selection throughout the summer and tall To begin with are leaf and co* lettuce, chef* call the latter romaine. Both are easily grown, leaf lettuce in the early summer and fall, giving leave* Urge enough to use in thirty days from sowing. Romaine is fully mature in sixty day*, and stand* the hot weather somewhat better than the leaf type. Endive is next in . .rtarice. It gomes «two type*, e,oad and curly

rTest Your Knowledge* | Cm you answer seven ot ueae I ten questions? Turn to page | f Four tor the answer*. | 1. On whijh coMt ot Africa is Uo Ke public ot Liberia T I. How many skies baa a hexagon? 3. Wbut la the name ot the branch <*t farming concerned with the production at milk and its products? 4- Which Canadian city was first vin led by tbe King and Queen of CnKiand. on their recent visit to North America? d. What la tbe correct pronunciation <>f tbe word insulate? 7. For what government agency do tbe initials N. Y. A. stand? » What la the beet conductor of electricity? I. What la the national game ot Scotland? 10. is polygamy legal a‘tywhere in the foiled Stales? 1 What is tbe literal meaning ot

M-O-V-E-l) MY WEI.UING SHOP h.L". been muted tn the Schmitt Bldg., acruwt from Monroe street river bridge on V. S. Road 221. Krick’s Welding Shop

Barney (boogie and Snuffy Smith A (JEM OF A SURI” ISE By Billy De Beck \Z \ Z x COUSAH \ f '>*" ,Arr >lf >Mn A ‘ TH VNWO SOW WfelWS 11 I WNPVMEMtW MC OMfiGUM* / /CqUiA I' BBOUDX HME TOOSUW ) / \ GEN-\}-Wte DVRMONT J \*** & A *w ttWMW J HM-RMWroKWft CWfTER- It 7 ( V&IW *k=J ‘• : u > V - t / fahrr^^j^V' ‘< • Vawßinoi/ J 3- »<_> 3» ' ■ lmjw- —— - ~ "" '""hr jimJL s ’u’ <Sc3 Pm »w»«« «MMKurn«L I . ) .miA-x i , Vz >'( <<c — r «^Hßb. — z 6 C<r*fi j MW!// .*• ,i J L_*a • ~ -- ... .-.J I -| THIMBLE THEATER Naw Showing-“WITH OR WITHOUT ONIONS?” C U 1 H t te‘ II |Z (T| I m ore t jote from '.do AHO £?P EM 2i O/^ 7 -ha A' SafcrA ). SS FS -1 \ \V.A 1- VK— x . ’-riffik s \ 3 \ Z w —— * -1.. ».'• S—* ■■»■ ■■ ■ h '«" «■ * « ill iXiriK i I *«- "* »■ *— w »M< W-J

leaved. Both have a distinctive flavor. They mature in 70 days, and stand both hot weather and frost. A late sowing should always be made to mature in the fall, when frost improves the flavor. Corn saUd has a fresh and spicy flavor which makes it a welcome in> gradient of the bowl saUd, and is grown easily in spring and fall. Curled garden cress thrives with ordinary garden culture and impart* a pungent flavor to the bowl salad. Watercress is highly pnred and easily grown where there is a good supply of fresh water to keep it constantly moist Chervil is an aromatic pUnt some* what resembling parsley but su* perior in flavor, and can be used both in the bowl saUd and a* a garnishment for meats. Like parsley, the seed is slow to germinate. Sow it with a few radish seeds to mark the row. Chive* is a most useful saUd vegetable. It is a cousin of the onion of which the leaves ar* used. They have a delicate onion flavor, just enough to season the salad. Chive* grow from seed easily, and a plant live* many year*. It bears an attractive lavender flower and is often used as a border along the garden path. At least two sowings -hould always be made of these lew. vegetables. one in the spring and one in midsummer for the tali crop: and as many as four sowings may be mad* with good results.

•he name Philadelphia? 2. Name the arm o! the Mediterlunean which snpatates Italy tram jibe llalkan peninsula. 8. Name the first President of th ) Republic of Texas. I 4. Name the first reigning monarch of England who visited the . United State*. 5. What Is the highest rank tn the ( U. 8. Army? 6 Into what lake does the Genessee River empty? T. What is the correct pronuncia- [ hob of the word integral? , 8. Name the capital ot Australia X in vhat round did the last tight . < between Joe Louis .nd Max ' SchmeUng end? , i lu. What la the national authuni ot j Great Britain? J O XUTUK OF SSVXL aETTLKWEhT . of cvTvrs: wo. as..* ■ Notice l» hereby givi-n to the erelitora. heirs and less teas of t ianlel , P. Nhoemakrr. deceased, to appear In ' the Ailama Circuit t'uurt. held at I*ecatur, Indiana, on the St.i day of , rieptembvr, i»3S and »how cauae. It ’ any. why the Final dettlemsnt AcI i t:;, <■ . i«drnt -hould not b» approved: and 1 there make proof of heirauip. ami [re-rive their dletrlhutKe snare* I James t> Hrtgas, Administrator lie Bonis Non Iv llut, Indiana. June V. !»•». Vaihan t. Nelson, ktterae,. NOTICE! I will not be responsible ter any ' debts contracted by any person I other than myself. J Clem Voglewede

Brjde 7 ' ■’ by HAZEL

CHAPTER XIII "My mother gave me thia,’’ Marie touched the diamond clip at her neck, and a* her new mother-in-law looked polite, but unimpressed, she added: "It's all rest stonea, gnd platinum. Mother Had it made into a clip a couple of year* ago. "Her mother she was an actress. | know, had the stones," put In “Well!" Mr*. Wilson said again. She offered more biscuits, which Mari* refused, but Eddie ate. it was too bad that Eddie had don* this thing. He must have been craty. but it waa plain that he might have done worst. She thought of Mr*. W otter's Fred, who went to the Russian River for two weeks and came back married to a divoreee with three little children—and Fred barely 21! "We haven’t a guest room," she told Marie shyly. “We used to. The front mom that Bee's got now, used to be. We used to have quite a lot of guests, mostly my folks from Davenport, lowa, but we never got around to visiting them back, and finally they stopped coming. "It wa* an expensive trip tat all but my brother-in-law and my sister—ho work* for the railroad, and now they've settled out here in east Oakland... what was I saying? Oh, ye*, about th* guest room. "So. anyway, the children were growing up and the rain used to beat in on that old sleeping porch so bad—it’s on the west side—that it wasn't .much good. I wa* always having to dry out the bedding, so we had it glassed in and I gave it to Eddie and put Bee in th* front room that used to be the guest room, and so—" She stopped in confusion. She was going to say, "I suppose you'll have to be in the sleeping porch with Eddie--" but she couldn’t quite bring herself to face it Eddie and that girl... She didn’t see bow she eould stand it Blushing furiously, she got up and started fur the sta.rway. Over her shoulder she called, "You can come up if you want to." Eddie picked up the bag*. "I suppose my trunk will com* later,” Marie said. Again she wa* close to tears. She walked so dose to Eddie that the big brown suitcase bumped her. at every step. Edward set the suitcase* down on the painted floor of hi* room—the room that used to be a sleeping porch. Marie closed the door behind them, and then stood, clasping and unclasping her cold hand*, watching him anxiously. “Take off your bat and stay a whiter She took it off, held it "Honey—furheaven'ssake! Cheer up! My mother isn’t so terrifying a* all that, is she? I thought she warmed up pretty well. You’ve got to remember this is a real shock to her. Why, honey girl, you aren't going to cry?” He took her, hat and all, into his arm*, and she held tight to him, laughing breathlessly, hugging closer and closer, wishing he'd never let her go. He'd known a lot of girl*, most of them pretty, but never one *o exquisite, *o warmly, fragrantly lovely. He wa* a* proud of her a* an art collector of a mw painting. He wondered if his mother had noticed the beauty of her wide greenish eye*, with their black fringed lathe*, their lung, sweeping brows. He wondered if she really appreciated the uniqueness, the complete deairability of the girl he’d choeen. He felt th* need to tell her—to get ft all etear. "Listen, darling!" He released himself from her dinging handa "I better go down and talk to Mom tome mor*. You can be unpacking if you like. You'll find room in that chest. My stuff is all over, but you ean put it all together in a couple of drawer*. I’ll be right back.” After he wa* gone sb* walked ( around noting the neat, empty shabbiest of the room, the absence of pictures, of personal belongings, of anything to show that it was Edward’s. How eould he have lived in a place like thi*T How could this

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY,JUNE 12. 1939.

house be his, this little, round-faced, i discontented woman be hi* mother? It was all so different— so terribly ' different than she expected. i She sat the one chair I that the room contained, and looked ’ areund. A painted floor, sloping toward th* window*. A dingy faded green rug. Roughly finished wall* and ceiling painted a light purplish blue. A brown metal bed. with a pink and white striped seersucker spread. A golden oak chest of drawers, with a mirror with a white painted frame, a straight backed wicker chair painted blue like the walla—aad nothing else. I

inxilywxi Im A 1 Be J I'. s»> "Listen, darling!" He releaaed himself from her clinging hand*. "I better go down and talk to mom some more."

They'd always called her room at home small, but this—thia was just a cubby hotel Her room. She closed her eyes, to shut out the sight. Queer thoughts went running through her head. Wild thoughts. The fifty dollar* in her purse. Trains back home. Dover street, and her mother and Charite. “Oh, no. nothing wrong! I just decided that l*d better stay at home until—" Until? Until what? Until Edward could take her away somewhere? But Oakland waa hi* home. The people he knew were here, hia best chances. A wife's place ia with her husbanA Besides, they wouldn’t have to be here, in thia house, more than a day or so. And it wasn't such a terrible place. The street was rather pretty, and it didn't look so bad from the outside—just sort of eracker-buxy, and narrow and high—and short of paint. Inside, It was comfortable and pleasant enough except for thia room, and of course people always Sut all the odds and endu and junk i a boy's room. She got up and walked eofliy around the little room again The window* looked out on the back garden. There was an acacia tree just outside, and a pink, flowering plum. And another flowering plum in ths yard next door. But those green net curtains! Why doe, anyone put greer ret curtains in a blue room, with a pibk bedspread? How does anyone stand it? How did Edward stand it? She thought of Edward, with hia neat gray flannel suit and his immaculate shirts and smart ttes. Edward, who knew how to order dinMrs, and talk to waiters and porters, Edward, who looked and acted like a young msn-abouutown. She twisted the narrow whitegold wedding ring on her finger. She couldn’t be really unhappy when she thought of Edward. Edward.

, who'd come like a knight m a fairy ’ Ute to make all her dreams com* ■ true! And if the way was a bit hard. ■ Just at first, and Edward's backI ground wasn't just what she ex- ; pccted, what of it? You can’t have I everything, and she certainly would < i not exchange him for all the rest of 1 , the world! He'd born gone quite a white, and she hadn't done a bit of unpacking! He'd wonder what she'd been doing. But first she'd clean up a littte. Maybe it would please Mr*. Wilson if she changed into her yellow silk spurt dress, and looked a* if she

were really going to stay awhile. She HAD been rather ungracious, sitting* eating breakfast with her hat on! No-wonder the poor woman »»1 so upset! It waa easy to find the bathroom —at the end of the hail. Old fashioned. but awfully clean and neat, with lota of fresh, white towels, and crisp white ruffled curtains. Refreshed, and almost happy again, she slipped into the becoming yellow dress, patted her curls ia place, and started unpacking. Laying out Edward's things gave her a superior, matronly feeling. She hummed softly aa she worked. There wasn't much in the tiny clothe* closet that cut off one corner of the room. Just a couple of old suits, and a slicker, and a blue flannel bathrobe. Dear Edward, he must have taken nearly everything he owned, to Hollywood. Th* half dux«n bln uses and dresses she had brought looked new and expensive in their strange, shabby xurrounding*. She wondered how much Edward's family knew about her—how muck they knew of their “pen pal" correspondence. Probably not much, because Edward had been working a* a ranger in Stanislaus national fore*t when »he first wrote, and be d been up in the country bomewhare. near Garberville. ail last summer. Rut if he said anything at all, he would have mentioned Juiie and pictures, and Gram, who wa* Fanny Standifer and played Shakespeare. Os course all that would mean a lot to the Wilson*, because Edward himstlf had had some stage and screen experience, and he said hi* sister Beatrice had stage aspirations, too. They’d probably loo* up to her a little, and be a littte *hy at first Well, she'd be nice to them, and she'd bear in mind that she'd only married Edward, not hia family. (To Be Continued) CwntsM isx*. v> *im r»i«» *f»«w«. ><•

• RATH ♦ MISC ELLAN EOL’S One Time—Minimum charge es ... uu .._ a 7— 25c for 20 word* or lose. Over FARMkRK ATTENTION — Call 20 worde. tfce per word »?®-A al our expense tor dead Two Times— Minimum charge slock removal. The Stadler Proof 40c for 20 words or less, ducts Co. Frank Burger, agent Over 20 worde 2c per word for the twe times. ■ 1 Three Times—Minimum ehargs NOW HATCHING two halchss of of 50c for 20 worde or leas. Baby Chicks every week, all Over 20 worde 2k*e per word leading breeds; also Baby Duckl GUFeFnJEr: mu StelTXl pr,c * “±1 Obituaries and verae* .. fil.OO llal h,ry ’ Monroe. ><H» .y We recover and repair anything vr»x> utir We bujr ,eU fontltur*. Deca FV*V oAlsm tur Upholsters. Phone 420. 145 8 ALWAYS new aad USED waaber*, Bca,aJ * treet UMOI sweepers, refrigerators, coos V/isj ul-vt stovea, gasoline, coal and wood; “VK lUuMT .null paymenu. Docalur HaU-hery roR KKvr HV( . rtfom James Kitchen. salesman. LU-ts *p* rtmell t t abov . Svr< Mea| FOR SALE — Anything you want Markvl PbOKQ »57. 13V-3 in the nursery line. Riverside FO R KENT 4 room modern apert Nurstty, Untie, lud IJ3’.( tneuc Inquire at 367 South First I FOR SALE—Home grown sweet Btreet 13»-ft potato plant*. 25c hundred; cab- y UK KKNT 6 rwul U)Wvr bage. cauliflower, mangoe. tomato aparlmeul ; <arMe . luaulrv I and flower plants. Sc doxen. Wil- NorUl 8u ... .. Kam Strabm. 33» N. »lb Street. ——— -u — U3S-2t ■niura.-Mor., FUR RENT — Three furnished housekeeping room* Hath. sink. | FUR SALE House, five room* and private entrance. Garage Phone bath. Large basement. Cloee ip 827 North Sth St. 137 k3t | Phom- 778. 13S-31X IFOR SALE Choice of one out of WAXTb'n two mares. Both have colt* six ” • week* old aud both bred again WANTED TU BUY — Child a play ; Hugo Thieme. g‘, mile* northeast |«. n and lu y| or . lo t. Jn go<>d von . of Decatur. 18*-3t ditlon. Phono 883-E. 13s-3tx FUR SALE. Rent or Lease Two WANTED—Loans on farms Eaatniile* vast of Decatur, ou Mon * rß money. Low rates. Very libr . mH. aud Van Wert roads, near *ral terms. See me for aLelracu of Dent school house. 2 story rest- UUfc F rell£ h Quinn. 33 m w-f dance 49x28. 12 room* and garage. e . loos to, combined in building, truss roof on garage. Electric wired HELP WANTED ihrouchoui One acre of land. I Possession at once. Williard Steele. Man to take up landeccpe work. Phon. H 24. 13»3tx Must be satisfied with 835 iu a FOR SALE Tb.wcH.gb.br.vl Boston ~ , . „ eeaary. Hau«Ue orders for Roses • m'il.J north* IU mn .\^ b Xr Shrubs. Fruit Trees. I Herns Tile Mtn ' llxtw Heote*. for old and new cuslomBerne Tile Mill Momw C<J A< Nvwark FOR SALE— White male hog or N " lU-S spotted Poland. Weigh each 2tN> 0 isiunds Your choice. SIS. H P. *».. •_ . .. s. uni i'll-... «»:. us .;t Business, Opportunity iltare. Ruxa _ „ OPPORTUNITY aud Ptstios J ice refrigerator*. To CQ , NTQ BuaiNEis 83 to »5. 2 us.Q living room suites. T ° ,NT ®L RSE» .822 aud »2«. 1 11-3xll Axminster FOR V °U R SELF » < uc It. .>0; I 5x12 Axminster rug, Weatesw *■.« Aeaeetate sieve >10; 1 5x13 Axminster rug. |5; 4 Western Auto Supply Compani. Pianos, player, aud straight. |» ft-"*, bZd’': to Ihi This merchandise was ill eales volume of 1* million Jotters In [traded In on new. AU came out ,M * W***re now offering you an 'ot iowml h..,n..u Vnmiiu. opportunity to own and operate a m Sprague FurnitUTv u r.l.rn Auto Associate Stare, home ■Co.. 152 So b«<oud St. Phone 1»». owned, tn towns ot 1.1»« to I*.ee*. 188-St Tb<r * sr* over love auc* store* in ISS •* opernlion. • You can tiecome th* owner and opI 4 KT 1 «VII X'V'.l T XIIV rrntor ot a "Western Auto Associate lAJBI AAIJ rVUIWL* More” for as little as IS.Tie in tn« ■ smaller towns, which pays for mer. MIST Medium si led short eared ' t>*ndi*e s»d fixture* and everything r»-d h,.n»d t>, neeeaeary to start business. We tram ■ red hound. Any information j. ou | n „ ar auv - lM ,r U | merchandising leading to hi* recovery will be method*. greatly appreciates. John Geel. w „ Aa<<> f 13b 3tX Associate .lore Division ——— 21*x Batterson St. Cla.lnnatl, Ohio MARKETS AT A GLANCE ~~ , 0 1,11 ■ ■ Bto<ka. lower and quiet. 001# BATHER Honda. Irregularly lßwer; U. S. —— governments. Irregular. tCOMTUtOMP FMUM PAOS OSSI t urb stock*, irregularly lower. fuses were blown, Imui were I I. 11 !!** 0 * ,ocbl, ‘ ,rr *'<“**r. brought down and two transform < nil money. 1 per cent. t>ra werr t> un)(( j ou t. -• Foreign exchange about steady Charles Ehlnget of the Citteelis ;in n-iatiot, to the dollar; Dutch Telephone company, reported that guilder weak. th„ | (MU , thwes wa* not so great. ’""fot futures oft as much as wh h , m |y fuses being blown X*! . Score* of tree limb* were blown Grain* tn < hicago, lower, wheat down and in a few eaaes dKLire . • ott about »* to % c au d corn oft , ma || tre ,., werP fowled over. All ,o of the damage wa* repaired at an < hhago Uveetock. hoga steady early hour. jto Crons; cattle, steady to strong; —- ■— Rubber futures lower. > U. S. Awaits Her Silver unchanged In New York dl 42% c a thio ounce. 1 " - o — •tors Ohvtl I IM".-'" < ..I lU.H) | * . d;.. , h . t,» > ' e"’ .W' bb m -i i>■i mi , i O *4 sfaSKtSSSSEsb i»iin vo g,,,.; W 'orw '.♦'Sss'wWb.. ilii'lr dirt i lliul h, shurer , “RMBP* f * •ii A It. 'V. I- A4u..i W ' it ii Ind ma J • . in. I • , jKtJr i Vulhnn W J"- , i ’.n i VETERINARIAN " •pedal attention given to '■ *■ V * | disease, of uaiiie and ewwilly. Offic* A Residence “ 430 No. Fifth St Phone 102 W»’ The United State* federsl authoriN. A. BIXLLR ties eagerly await return to this nsTourriinT country of Mr*. Ruth Maria Ruben* optometrist (above) given a suspended sentence Eyes Examined - Gia**** Fitted Moscow for entering Russia on a forged passport. Her husband w HOURS *UIT bclu. bhe is under federal id•:80 ta It 30 12:30 to 5:00 dritmaat in connection the spy Saturday*. 4 00 p. m. and fraudulent pawport case* re- | Telephon* IM rantjv triad in New York. ,

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