Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1929 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

VMMTHIMBLE TH EATER NOW SHOWING—“THE FALLEN HERO” BY SUGAR | _ . , i . . i . ■ f ■ "'-i " " "•— ■ ■ r**''* ~ ~1 usqc popf/E - ( TOO LNt! TOO LfXTC Whether at the HET EVERYBOOy— > THREE CHE.ERS ME N WHW I HEEDS IS ( PoPt/C!) pmsTth E uJHiFFkE ’ HOTHIH* UJILU HEU° (HE City Pool or LET'S GtVC THRR6 CHEERS) EYE - THAT uJONT HELP THREE DOCTORS. HOTj pgq LOCK- QUICK ) HOttJ - I'UB LOST TOO ,h " b< '“' h < OR 7 pto . \ M I B,,n « i 't l h." ,im > ~<, *cO. S'r'W P. \> Vtmcookw/ -A\ ' 1 >•• O® h” ■Apr— Swimming Suit | IM' “ l&tfi' ' Many new numbers are I ‘ n ■ . | 1 here for you to I li l l 11. f £J, ■ WWm , _£■ > > * BBBK' choose from. ■»} ‘ ’LZasSGC® HolthouseSchulte&Co ’—rn ®" ' q (to ~ & I© r t»”. m ft—* tft/Mt, w. _J

Kwwrw,vru t ". rs CLASSIFIED 0 ADVERTISEMENTS, | I — V | BUSINESS CARDS, ;• AND NOTICES BS2<y< ! »«X'»CHi<KI FOR SALE FOR SALE ('«<>«><! 7-foot McCormick | binder. Dain hay loader. Victor Byerley, Craigville phone. 144-3tx FOR SALE—Plants oFthe wonderful I Crego and California Giant Asters, ta seven colors. Mailed postpaid at 75c per hundred. Nothing like them for fall blooms. I. F- Alexander, Convoy Ohio. 143-7tx FOR SALE—4 stands of bees, 4 empty hives, 11 supers, at a bargain. O. L. Vance, phone 384. 143t3x FOR SALE— Uabbage, tomatoes and sweet mangold pepper plants. Also a large variety of > flowering plants. Phone 5424. Willard Steele. 143-3tx FOR SALE—IO acres of clover hay. as soon as ready to cut. Jim Hendricks Monroe phone 23. 141-3 t FOR SALE—A piano, in good condition. Phone 1238. 144-3 t FOR SALE —25 shares of stock in Peoples Loan & Trust company. Address Box 12, care Daily Democrat. 145-fitx WANTED WANTED—GirI or middle aged lady for steady housework, reference. Prefer someone that desires a good home. Address Democrat Box 10. 144 3t WANTED—Work to do by boy, age 15. Call 1146. MALE “HELP ’ WANTED— Energetic man to manage Decatur store. SSO weekly guaranteed also substantial share of profits. Real future for right man $750 cash deposit required on goods. References necesasry. Stores, Dept. 5, 116 N. May Ct., Chicago. 144-4 tx WANTED—Farm hand, single man preferred. Burton Niblick, phone 196 1443tx WANTED TO TRADE— A one year old colt for a two row corn plow. Decatur phone 861-0. 14 tit WANTED—GirI wants to care for children of afternoons and evenings. Francis Foreman, telephone 663. " 14513 FOR RENT FOR RENT—One six room brick house. One eight room brick house. Each house has a separate garage- Also one repair garage shop, size one hundred by forty feet, with cemeu' floor and electric lights, and office room, located one mile and half north east of Decatur on cement road Phone 5424 Willard Steele owner 143-3tx FOR RENT — One furnished sleeping room with private entrance. 403 W. Madiso nstreet. Mrs. hCarles Feasel. 144-3tx FOR RENT —5 room house on S. 9tli St. Phone 812. 303 N. Sth St. 144-3 t —• ' — LOST AND FOUND LOST —Ford rim and tire, lease return to Steele and Jaberg office and receive reward. 144-3 t FOUND —The Best Smoke in the world. The White Stag. “It makes your nickels have more ‘Cents’.” Try it today. • LOST —Man’s gray sweater. Finder please call phone 335. 145t3 Seek To Oust Manager Os Inn At State Park Spencer, Ind.. June 18 -(UP) —The state of Indiana is seeking to oust Mrs. Walter Richards. 54, as manager of the Canyon Inn at McCormack’s Creek Canyon State park. It was alleged Mrs Richards was delinquent in payments of profits from the Inn to the state. However, she asserts, the payments have been delayed due to lateness of the season. Agents of the state removed furniture from the Inn and had water and electric service stopped as. eighteen guests were being seated for luncheon. Mrs. Richards found two tables, lit coal oil lamps and carried water from a considerable distance and the luncheon was served. She announces she will refurnish the hotel at her own expense and continue service despite the state's action. 0 Mrs. Ed. Whitright and daughter. Gladys, spent the day visiting in Fort Wayne.

1 MONEY TO LOAN City Loans 6% net J 5-10-15 years Farm Loans 5‘A% 10 or 20 years No Commission Charge. —THE—-SUTTLES-EDWARDS COMPANY Niblick Store Bldg. DECATUR, INDIANA MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT money on Improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstractis of title to real estate. SCHURGER’S ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 S. 2nd SL LOBENSTEIN & HOWER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or nighL Ambulance service. Office Phone 90 Residence Phone, Decatur 346 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT S. E. BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR New Location, 206 S. 2nd St. Mrs. Black. Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or night Office phone 600 Home phone 727 Ambulance Service N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 6:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. H. FROHNAPI EL, D. C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE The Neurocalometer Service Will Convince You. at 104 S. Third Street. Office and Residence Phone 314. Office Hours: 10-12 a.m. 1-5 6-8 p.m. COURT HOUSE Real Estate Transfers William F. Andrews etux to Lewis P Wendel, lot. 254 in Berne, for SI,BOO. o FACES REFORMATORY TERM Greensburg. Ind, June 18 —(UJ) — Convicted of manslaughter in con nection with the death of Hubert S. Taylor, 54, Herschel Curry, 17, today faced a two to 21 year sentence in the Indiana reformatory, o . POLICE CHIEF DIES Gass City, Ind., June 18—(UP)— Joe Mitsch, 45, police chief, died suddenly of a heart attack at his home. Mitsch, succeeded William Voris, April 9, who also died of a heart attack. — o > X(»Tl< E OF 11X11. SETTI.EME.XT OE ESTVI'E XO g.Vtl Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs mill legatees of Curtis Johnson, deceased, to appear In the Adams Circuit Court, held at Ueeatur, Indiana, on the 2nd day of September I 92!» ami shone cause, it any, why the final settlement accounts with the estate of said decedent should not he approved. and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of neirtihip, and receive their distributive shares. lona Pennington. Administratrix Decatur, Indiana une is, 1929 Dore H. Erwin, Atty June ls-25 DECATUR PET SHOP (Above Bakers Restaurant) TROPICAL BIRDS AND FISH, ORIENTAL GOLD FISH, FEEDS £. SUPPLIES. Phone 1223. Hours-10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ‘"Ji «— -> ' - ——— PLENTY OF GOOD FEEDING TANKAGE at reasonable prices. Fred Mutschler Pkg. Co

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. JUNE 18. 1929.

MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Fort Wayne Livestock Fort Wayne, June 18,—(U.R) —Livestock: Calves, '.■*»: hogs, 300; sheep, 50; market 5-10 c higher; 80-110 lbs.. $10.50; 110-110 lbs., $10,75; 140-160 lbs., $10.90; 160-180 lbs.. $11.20; 180200 lbs., $11.30; 200-250 lbs., $11.20; 250-300 lbs., $11.10; 300-350 lbs., $10.90; roughs, $9.50; tags. $7; calves, $14.50; spring lambs, sl4; yearling lambs, $10.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE — July Sept. Dec. Wheat $1.06% slll’4 $1.16*4 Oats .91% -ID% -S«% Oats .43% .42% .45 East Buffalo Livestock East Buffalo, June 18.- UR) Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 600: holdovers. 700: market active, 15-20 c higher: 250-350 lbs., $11.25-$11.80; 200-250 lbs. $11.40-sl2; 160-200 lbs., SIL7S-sl2; $11.65-sl2; packing sows, $9.75-$10.25. Cattle: receipts, 75; market steady; calves receipts, 400; market steady to weak: beef steers, $13.25 $14.50; light yearling steers and heifers, sl4$15.25; beef cows, $lO-$10.50; low cutter and cutter cows, $6-$8.25; vealers. sl6-$16.50. Sheep: receipts. 300; market steady; bulk fat lambs, $15.25-$16.50; bulk cull lambs, $12.75-14.255; bulk fat ewes. $5.75-$7; bulk yearlings, $11.50$12.50. Cleveland Produce Cleveland, June 18.—OJ.R> Produce: Butter: extras, 44 1-2 to 46 l-2<« extra firsts, 42 1-2 to 44 l-2c; sscjjmds, 40 1-2 to 42 l-2c. Eggs: firsts, 29%c; ordinaries, 28 %c. t Poultry: fowls, 28-29 c; broilers, 4042c: leghorns, 25-26 c; (lucks, (spring) 30-33 c; old cocks, 18-20 c; geese, 1518c. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected June 18) No. 2 Soft Winter Wheat $lO2 No. 2 Mixed Wheat 92c Nj. 2. Hard Wheat 82c No. 2. White Oats 40c Yellow corn per 100 $1.20 White or mixed corn sllO Barley 45« Rye 80c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs dozen 26c BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat 41c FORMER GENEVA RESIDENT DIES fCONTINUBD FROM PAGE ONH) and one daughter Gladys, of Eaton. Mis. May Ketchum, of Geneva, is a sister of the deceased, and three surviving brothers are: Professor Barr, of Des Moines. Iowa; Stanley Barr, of North Dakota, and Charles Barr, of Anderson. Funeral services will be held at 2 o’clock Thursday afternoon at Eaton, with burial in the cemetery there. Mrs. Baker and Mr. Ketchum will attend the funeral services. 0 Thought His Head Was Too Small; Blows Out Brains With Shot-Gun Chicago, June 18 —'(UP) —Because he wore a No. 7 hat and believed his head was too small, Benjamin Gisin, 26. blew out his brains and fell across a blazing brush pile he had built as his funeral pyre in a Wisconsin forest, according to a theory advanced here by his father, Henry Gisin. Tlie elder Gisin. a prosperous former of Mound City, Kas., passed through Chicago enroute to Rhinelander, Wis., to claim what little remained of his eon’s body; He discounted the suggestion that Benjamin had been killed by gangsters and attributed the tragedy to the youth’s weird complex. “Although he was perfectly normal —ahnbst an athlete in fact, Ben had an idea lie was (physically deficient.” Gisin told interviewers. “He could not drive from his mind the obsession that he was a weakling and that his head was too small. Poor boy: he wanted to be a journalist, an author atid a cartoonist. I'm afraid he studied much too hard." o Get the Habit—Trade at Home, It Pay»

[many pupils WIN HONORS (COXTIXI EI» FHOM PAGE ONE) 50 out of possible 50. American history—William Stauffer Glendening, Hartford township, 70 out of possible 75. Arithmetic—Oscar Koenemann and Reinhard Bultemeier, of Preble township, 90 out of possible 90. Geography — Wayne Hahnert, Blue Creek township. 95 out of possible 99. — o THISLTE KILLER NOW AVAILABLE A very useful and valuable material has been discovered for killing Canada Shistles. The mateila! used for the purpose, which is sodium chlorate or calcium i holorate, is a kind of salt which when mixed with water and sprinkled on the thistles will effectively control them. Last year, several farmers in the county used the material and they leport very good results. It ilj best to use the material in June and then go over the patch again in August to eliminate those thistles that were overlooked the first time. About two or three days after the chlorate is applied, the tops of the thistles will turn brown and die. In a great many cases, the roots are completely killed. Where the material has been used on a patch, very few, if any thistles reappear if they were all covered with the spray. A good method to use in applying the material is to dissovle the choloiate in water at the rate- of one pound of cholorate to one gallon of water. A common sprinkling can be used to apply the solution. Care should be taken to saturate the tops of the thistles thoroughly. Where the thistles are in a field of oats or hay or any growing crop that crop will be killed also providing the material in applied directly to the plant. However, the ground will not lie affected and a good crop can be raised on the spot the foilowing season. The material is not poisonous to livestock. A supply of the material is being stocked at the Gottschalk Supply Company at Berne and the Williams Equity Exchange north of Decatur. No doubt several other firms will handle the chlorate in the near future, further particulars concerning this material and its application may be secured at the county agent’s office. o— Blot on Nature’s Face French Guiana is famous or infa mous for Devil’s island, the famous penal settlement Three or four times a year a steamer leaves the prison ol L’lle de lie on the coast of Brittany loaded with the most dangerous prisoners gathered from tlie French prisons. They are taken to the so-called isles of safety, off the coast of French Guiana, to toil under the tropica) sun until they die or their terms at® ended. Business Honor Longfellow said: “There is an honor In business that is the fine gold of It; that reckons with every man'justly; that loves light; that regards kindness and fairness more highly than goods or prices or profits.” More Work for Undertaker There Is no sight hi America so de tressing as the dying churches, open m Sundays to a dwindling few, closed luoughout tlie week.—Woman's Home Companion. 0 — TO SEEK DEATH PENALTY Newport, Aik., June 18 —(UP) — Pisecutioii attorney Williams announc ed today that he will demand tlie death penalty in the case of George Johnson, deputy sheriff, charged with killing Mickey Dillon, who sought to escape after his arrest on a liquor charge. o BRYANT MAN RELEASED Portland, June 18. —The case of the state against George Adams, of Bryant, for stealing soybeans and other feedstuff from neighbors, has been dismissed. The prosecutor stated that he was unable to get Bryant witnesses to testify. o Report Canadian Woman Menaced By U. S. Bullets Windsor, Ont. June 18 — (UP) — | Chief of police J D. Pocter. of Sand- j wich, Ont., reported to the Ottawa government today that a Canadian woj man in a speedboat near here had

Windsor, Ont.. June 18 — (UP) — Chief of police J D. Pocter, of Sandwich, Ont., reported to the Ottawa government today that a Canadian woman in a speedboat near here had

been menaced by machine gun bullets fired by an American coast guard in Canadian waters early yesterday According to tlie police blotter Car! Raymond. Monroe, Mich., and J. O’Connor, Newport, Michigan, were crossing the river with Mrs. Ellen Johson, of Sandwich, as a passenger.. Mrs. Johnson had been visiting relatives in Michigan. V, S Coast Guard boat number 236 ordered tlie speedboat to stop, despite, the fact it was in Canadian waters, according to Raymond, and when the order was disregarded the speedboat was sprinkled with machine gun bullets. One bullet struck near Mrs. Johnson, another clipped Raymond's ear, whMc others shattered the windshield <of tne speedboat. o — Grand Jury Resumes Vote Fraud Investigation South Bend, Ind., June 18. —(U.R) — Lake county vote fraud was the chief case before the Federal grand jury here today, which resumed its investigation after a week-end recess. Among the 40 witnesses here today were- Warren Fairbanks of the Indianapolis Newt and Boyd Gurley, editor of the Indianapois Times. Fairltanks and Gurley were called into the grand jury chamber and

1K DISCOUNT ON YOUR Electric Light Bills » BY PAYING ON OR BEFORE June 20 POWER BILLS are also due and must be PAID by twentieth of month at CITY HALL [I —.

of month at

CITY HALL

questioned with regard to the Lake county political situation.' Walter Scrage, Whiting. Ind., mayor and Lake county Republican chairman was also a witness. Department of justice agents brought a score of

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colored witnesseH from Lake county. Thomas Riley, ludianupulia detective was also reported to be here. j ohn D. Williams, former chairman of the Indiana state highway commission has been subpoenaed.