Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 215, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1929 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
ARABLUE SHIRTS The newest creation by ARR O W See them in our window. Holthouse Schulte&Co a
CLASSIFIED FOR SALE FOR SALE — Chinchilla s, the most popular tur rabbit. Chas. J. Miller, 226 N. "th St. 189-30 U FOR QUICK Price reduced. Good modern house, on North Fifth street, near M. E. church; part terms. Possession at once. Daniel N. Erwin. 211-6 t FOR SALE—Two Is month old Durham heifers. Guernsey cow, 5 month old Guernsey calf. Lewis Yake, Decatur R. R. 2 Phone Craigville 213-3tx FOR”SALE—-Guinea pigs, fine health stock. See my exhibit at fair. Manley Foreman. 1210 Monroe St. 213-3tx FOR SALE —Brown Swiss Jersey cow, with first calf by side. Frank Smith south Thirteenth street. 213-3tx FOR SALE— 1927 model Chevrolet truck with a bed on, in good condition. Martin Krueckenberg, R. R. 8. Telephone J-845 214-3tx FOR SALE—Oak dining table and six chairs, 3 oak library tables. Slagle radio, complete. 2 oak rockers. Mrs. C. W. Haggard, Monroe, Ind., 214-3tx WANTED WANTED—WE will pay 7c a pound for good, clean, large rags, delivered at this office. Must be suitable for cleaning machinery. 175-ts WANTED — Any farmer wanting a first class corn cutter apply to Perry Kimmnainan Room at Mr. Hunts 421 North Main st. Decatur. Boards at Eats restaurant. 213-3tx WANTED—GirI for office work. State qualifictions, age and Salary expected Start Monday 16th. Box R. Democrat. 214-3 t WANTED TO BUY — Medium sized house in Decatur. Address M. F. X. care Daily Democrat. 214t3x SITUATION WANTED By experienced jaintor. Want something steady. Address Box J. K. % Democrat 214-3tx FOR RENT FOR RENT—New office rooms above the Morris 5 and 10c store. See manager. eod-tn FOR RENT —An 8 room house on corner of North Eleventh and Nuttman avenue. Call 352. 3tx eod. FOR~RENT—Four and seven room houses, Grant street across from hospital. Two good bargains in city property. Steele & Jaberg. 214t6 ENTRIES BEGIN ARRIVING FOR FREE DISPLAYS (CO.tfTiKUBD FROM PAGE ONE) on South Second street. Women's Department A large number of articles for dis- i play in the women’s department have been registered in the display- room . in the Bowers building on Monroe street, and the articles are being arranged by the ladies in charge of the event, Mrs. Fred Linn and Mrs. Ed Ahr. Many quilts, oil paintings and art work are on display, and the event promises to be a popular one for the women. COURTHOUSE Real Estate Transfers Fred Ahr etux 40 acres in Washington township* to Leo E. Ehinger for sl. Leo E. Ehinger, 40 acres in Washington township, to Fred Ahr etux for 31.00 George W. Galbreath. 40 acres in Washington township, to Herman J. Boulton, for SI.OO. Work of Ancient Priest* Winwood Reade says: “The Rosetta stone, that remarkable monument which, with its Inscriptions tn Greek, In the Egyptian vernacular and in the sacred hieroglyphics, has afforded the means of decipering the mysterious language of the Nile, was a memorial of gratitude from the Egyptian priests to a Greek king, to whom In return for favors conferred they erected an image and a golden shrine.” —o —— Big Square Dance at Sunset Wednesday night.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING “POPEYE’S STROKE’ OF LI < K BY SE(,\r —, — y , M <LT Fft n~~l fotf-HWUE \S l AIN'T TOUCHWI t’LL BET ALTHING ) AFTER ALL I OOHE X POPtVE. IUHAT < I LISTEN HORSE IN THE FACE. U)HY YOU BEEN 1 TOUR LDHffFkE, , THAT HE'S BEEN J For HIM TOO— X TOO NEED is \is CASH- I'LL SHOOT TOO CRAPS DISHED-FACED iOF TOU \aeN- DON'T? «ÜBBING THE / I ASKS FOR THE LOAN \ EDUCATION. (SHOOT ToJOBITS Till THE COutt COME KOBE. HONK.OF CHECK./ GOT RUBBINC! I yoo TRQSK < r-' OV ANILUONAN-E \ I THINK I’LL »’U TAKE YOU J—GOT ME X ? A SAYS No! BLOW HE DOWN!/ HIRE A TUTOR/ ! *\* thocsAND 1 ' tWHIFFkt > B' t— X DOLLARS/ 7 \OVC'/ j -xJt ' ■ a* T\ X "6? < . Jr ' " SB*' ‘ Im /./ a X Jla [e . J.■ ’ <—
MONEY TO LOAN City Loans 6% net 5-10-15 years Farm Loans 10 or 20 years • We write Insurance. —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 St. LOBENSTEIN, MAYNARD & HOWER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance service. Office Phone 90 Residence Phone, Dechtur 346 or 844 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT Lady Attendant Licensed Embalmer S. E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calle answered promptly day or nlflht Office phone 500 Home phone 727 Ambulance Service N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. For BETTER Health See DR. H. FROHNAPFEL Licensed Drugless Physician Phone 311 104 So. 3rd St. Office Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 6-8 Dancing all week at Country Club. Featuring Jay Klopfenstein and his Hotel Carldon Orchestra. 214t2 O— —— Roy Johnson AUCTIONEER and Real Estate If yoti wish to sell your real estate either city property or farm land, see me for Quick Sale; by Auction or at private treaty. | Office Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg. Phones 606 and 1022. o - —o 0~~ ■ " D DR. C. V. CONNELL VEI ERIN ARIAN Office 120 No. First Street I | Phone: Office 143 —Residence 102 | Special Attention given to cattle and poultry practice I I o— n Typewriting Stenographic Work If you have any extra typewrit ing or stenographic work I will be glad to do it. Phone 42 for appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge J. T. Merrvman’s Law Office, K. of C. Bldg.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1929.
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. Mar. May Wheat $1.33 $1.4114 $1.46% $1.50% Corn 1.03% 1.00% 1-04 1.0674 Oats .52 .54% .57% .59% East Buffalo Livestock Market Hogs: Receipts 700, holdovers 3,700. Market, slow, 25-35 c below Monday’s average. , 250-350 Ibe $9.50-1025 200-250 lbs SIO.OO-11.00 160-200 lbs $10.50-11.00 130-160 lbs $9.50-10.90 90-130 lbs $9.25-10.00 Packing sows . $8.40-9.00 Cattle: Receipts 150, market steady. Calf receipts 300 market, unchanged. Beef steers $12.75-13.75 Light yearling steers and heifers $13.00-15.50 Beef cows $8.75-9.75 Low cutter and cutter cows $4.25-7.25 Vealers SIB.OO-19.00 Sheep: Receipts 700; market, lambs active and steady. Bulk fat lambs $13.00-13.50 Bulk cull lambs SB.OO-9.00 Bulk fat ewes $5.00-6.25 Fort Wayne Livestock Market Calf receipts 100; Log receipts 350; sheep receipts 300; hog market 30c lower. 90-120 lbs. $8.55 120-150 lbs $9.05 150-160 lbs — $9.80 160-180 lbs’. 4. $10.25 180-200 lbs r * . $10.35 200-210 lbs $10.20 210-220 lbs $10.05 220-230 lbs , - $9.95 230-240 lbs $9.85 240-250 lbs $9.70 350-275 lbs $9-45 275-300 lbs $9.20 300-350 lbs $8.95 Roughs 88 Stags $6.50 Aalves $17.00 Lambs $11.75 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected September 10) No. 2 Soft Winter Wheat sl.lß No. 2 Hard Wheat EA No. 2 White Oats 42c Barley 50c Rye -80 c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen .... 34c BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat 43c Married Elderly Wive* Among well known men wTotW wives were older than they were are the following: Josephine was older than Napoleon; Catherine of Aragon was older than Henry VIII; Mary Stnart was older than Francis II of France; Jenny Lind was oldee than Otto Goldschmidt; Disraeli's wife was his elder. o Labor'* Great Purpoie Labor is life; from the Inmost heart of the worker rises his God-given force, the sacred celestial Life-es-sence breathed into him by Almighty God; from his inmost heart awakens him to all nobleness —to all knowledge, self-knowledge and much else, as soon as Work fitly begins.—Carlyle. SALE CALENDAR Sept. 11 —Theodore G. Ruck, Registered Jersey Cattle, Wapakoneta, O. Sept. 16—S. H. Hocker, 1 mile north and 5 miles west of Monroe, or 1 mile north and 7 miles east of Bluffton. Sale commences at 1 o'clock. Sept. 16—A Hackman, 4 miles east and one-half mile north of Decatur, Closing out sale. Sept. 17 —Moody Wolf, 1% miles east of Tocsin, Closing out sale. Sept. 18—Herman Ulernan, 2 miles east of Decatur, on Studebaker farm, closing out sale. Sept. 19—Olivia Teeple, administrator's sale, eight miles southeast of Decatur. Sept. 20 — Ed Larkin, horse sale, Bellmont Park. Sept. 23—Mrs. Nellie Tucker, 300 acre farm, complete line of farm machinery and livestock, two miles east of Silver Lake, Indiana. Sept. 24 — Ed Larkin, horse sale, Monroeville, Indiana. Oct. 10 —Jacob F. Bloemker, 2 miles south of Echo, closing out sale. Oct. 30-*-Clarence Stevens. 2 miles west, 3% miles north of Convoy, Ohio, closing out sale.
TELLS OF NEW , I USE OF STALKS Invention Is Devised To Turn Cornstalk Refuge Into Synthetic Gas Minneapolis, Sept. 10. —(U.R) — The lowly cornstalk, which youth still fashions into fiddles, assumed a new importance today as the source of a cornstalk gas capable of providing heat, light, power and refrigeration on a commercial scale. Experiments covering the production of the new caseous fuel were reported to the 78th American chemical society convention by' Professors A. M. Buswell and C. S. Boruff of the University of Illinois. Production of the caseous fuel also would cut much of the cost from the manufacture of cornstalk paper and partly eliminate the deadly corn borer, the professor said. Comparatively simple apparatus —a small cylindrical tank, a supply of dried cornstalks —and the average farmer would have enough gas to cook his meals, heat his home, charge his electric storage plant, operate his gas engines and provide his freezer with dry ice. “It has been estimated,” Burwell and Boruff said, “that a circle of corn > land eight miles in diameter would i produce enough gas to supply the usual consumption of a city of 89,000 persons. “The’ chemical process is quite simple. Fermentation of cellulose by bacteria, which could be provided by the waste in the drains from the farm home, results in the formation of sufficient quantities of methan or marsh gas to make its production possible on a practical scale. “At the same time the deadly corn borer would largely be eliminated and all the stalk would be digested save that fibrous portion valuable in the manufacture of paper.” Chieako Courts Must Hear Various Troubles Chicago, Sept. 10—(UP)—Four new chapters of the voluminous story of modern married life were handed Chicago courts for proof reading today Mrs. Julia Frejlack field for divorce charging her husband beat her when she demanded that, he quit eating crackers in bed She said she got a black eye for her suggestion that they buy twin beds. In another divorce action, Joseph Whittam, a publisher, charged that his wife, Anna, mixed moonshine in milk for their four-year-old son. The husband said he often found the baby intoxicated. In still another suit, Mrs. Bertha Ritzman, mother of two children and student at the university of Chicago asserted that she worked as a steno- - — AT' — . .y I ! I .»»■ —
PUBLIC SALE
As I am quitting farming, I will sell at public auction at my farm miles east of Tocsin, 3% miles north, % mile east of Craigville, Bt4 miles west u£ Decatur <m State Road 16, on September 17, 1929 Beginning at 10 o’clock HORSES, 4 Head —2 gray mares, 5 and 7 years old, weight about 1350; I bay mare. 3 years old, weight about 1300; 1 bay horse, 4 years old, weight about 1350. COWS, 2 Head —1 Guernsey cow, 2 year old; 1 black Jersey cow, 6 years old. HOGS. 6 Head—l Chester White sow; 5 Chester White shoats. HAY AND GRAIN—IO ton Alfalfa hay; 5 ton Alsike and Alfalfa hay mixed; 475 bushels oatsf 30 bushels barley; 32 acres good corn in field; II acres good soy beans in field. FARM MACHINERY —1 McCormick eight-foot binder; 1 McCormick Deering fertilizer and grain drill; 1 McCormick Deering double disc, 7 >ft; 1 McCormick corn binder; 1 McCormick Mower; 1 Gearless hay loader; 1 Monarch hay tedder; 1 I. H. C. corn planter; 1 P. & O. Rotary hoe; 1 I. H. C. side delivery hay rake; 1 McCormick Deering Web loader; 1 P. & O. tractor plow; 1 John Deere two-row corn plow; 1 Oliver one-row corn plow; 1 Deere gang plow; 1 Gale walking plow: 1 Nisco manure spreader; 1 spring tooth harrow; 1 spike tooth hartow; 1 weeder; 1 Dunham cultipacker.
grapher. sacrificing her own education that her husband, Oita, might complete extensive preparatory work in physics and gain a professorship. She charged he gained the desired position at Lehigh University and then shunned her because of her lack of a college education. A police court must decide whether husband or wife has the right to turn off the lights in their home. Morris Burns and his wife dJHagreed; he jerked the light fuses; she called a repairman; Morris fought the repairman; Mrs. Burns called police: and police called it disorderly conduct. o America’* Motto It is said Sir John Prestwick of England suggested the motto of the United States “E Pluribus Unum.” to John Adams, who communicated this idea to the secretary of the Continental congress. It was then used on our government seal, and hence our national motto. —o Martyr’* Big Mistake The one real liberty we have is liberty of thinking, most of which a man should keep to himself, to avoid unnecessary trouble. Many a martyr might have avoided .martyrdom by keeping his mouth shut, and without loss of usefulness.—E. W. Howe’s Monthly. — -—■ , ... „o — ■ Large*t Water Bird The albatross is the lurgest of the water birds, its wings often measuring more than 10 feet from tip to tip. It lives mostly on the wing, following a ship for days, lighting on the water anly to snatch a bite of food. —o Distinction We are astounded to learn that the preacher who wrote a book on experiences as a cab driver in New York ’ has so far eluded the classification of hack writer.—Detroit News. o — The Pa»tor Say*: Some people, like locomotives, pull whole trains: others, like automobiles, propel themselves alone; while still others are mere cars, which have to be hauled.—John Andrew Holmes. o Oy»ter» Score According to H. G. Maurice, of the British ministry of agriculture and fisheries, oysters are the best cure for influenza. He states that when he and his wife both had influenza they dispensed with a doctor and spent the money so saved on oysters, which cured them. 0 Purpoae for Baldnei* A new drug culled thallium acetate will enable you to experience complete baldness for a week. Yon drink it; three weeks later your head Is bare; a week after that your hair begins to grow again. During that week doctors can treat various scalp complaints.—Exchange. o Get the Habit —Trade at Home, It Pay*
WAGONS —1 Weber wagon and hay ladder; 1 heavy Weber wagon with hay rack and grain lied; 1 Turnbull wagon and hay ladder; 1 wagon box, triple bed. HARNESS —3 double seta of heavy work harness; 1 good 20 in. Boston truck collar; 1 good 21 in. Boston truck collar; some used collars. MISCELLANEOUS— 1 McCormick Deering 6 H. P, engine; 1 grapple hay fork; 1 drill press; 1 power emery grinder, 1 grindstone; 1 No. 5 Ankerholth cream separator; 1 No. 12 Delaval cream separator; 1 mud boat; 1 bob sled; 1 set dump boards; 1 Bowsher feed grinder with sacker,1 corn shelter; 1 pulley for 4-horse tandem hitch; 1 5 or 6 horse plowhitch; 1 4-barrel water tank; 90 feet 2-inch rubber belting; 1 30-foot grain .elevator; ditch scoop, hog fountain, tank heater, hog troughs, grain sacks, scoop shovels, pitch forks, beet fork*, scoop board; double trees; and many articles not mentioned. CHICKENS —3 dozen White Rock pullets. TERMS—Sums of $5.00 or under, cash. Sums over $5.00, 6 months ‘time, on bankable notes. First 3 months without interest, las*t 3 month bearing interest. 5% discount given for cash on all stuns over $5.00. MOODY WOLF Aucts.. Johnson & Ellenberger. Clerk. Raymond Fitzpatrick. Dinner by ladles cf Tocsin U. B church. 6-10-14
Monarchical Succe»»ion When the king of England dies the lords of the privy council, the lord mayor of London, the aidermen and other officials assemble and give the order for the proclamation of the new sovereign. The new king then takes the prescribed oath. VDMIMSTH V I HIX MAI.F. OF PIIIHSOXAI, IHIOPFOTY State of Indiana. County of Adams. 8SIn tin- matter of the Estate of Henry f. Teeple, deeeased. Number 2664, noth e is hereby given that the undersigned administratrix us tile estate of Henry I. Teeple, deceased, will offer for sale at public auction at the late residence of said del cased in Blue Creek Township, on Thursday September tilth tilgli. at 10:00 o'clock (Standard Timet, the following personal property of said estate; consisting of: llorses 2 Bay Mares, three year old, weight 1,700 lbs. each: one team of purebred registered roan mares, age 5 years, weight 1,800 lbs. each: bay mare. 11 years old. weight 1.700 lbs; bay mare, 11 years old weight 1.800 lbs. < attic Bed and White cow, four years old; 2 Jersey Cows, each four years old; One aged Jersey eoW, Guernsey Cow; Bed and White cow; Spotted Calf; Guern- ■ sey Bull, 2 years old. Hay < Grain IS ton of mixed hay in mow; 250 bushel eats; 36 acres of corn in field. Implcim-iils di Timin ) Wagon, Corn Plow. Corn Plow. Kotary Hoe. Osborne Disc Hiding Plow, Harrow. Gale Biding Plow; Auto Trailer; Buggy; Binder; IJay Bake: Scoop: Feed Grinder; Plow; Five Shovel Plow; Buckeye I‘till; International Corn Planter; Standard Mower; Three Sets double work harness; Six Horse Collars; Two Hay Forks; Fifty Foot Hay liope; Three five inch Pulleys; Four Forks; Grindstone; Spring Wagon; Cooker; Gas Drum; Double Shovel Plow; Spray Pump; Stove; Cream Siparator. Terms—All sums of 15.00 and under Cash in hand: over $5.00 a credit of not I to exceed nine months will l>e givt n I the purchaser executing his or her note, therefore bearing Interest at S'?; for tile last three months waiving relief and providing for Attorney Fees and with freehold sureties thereon to the approval of the administratrix. Dated September 3rd 1029. OLIVIA TEEPLE. Administratrix Roy S. Johnson. Auctioneer B. F. Koller, Attorney September 3-104
PUBLIC AUCTION| 1 will sell at public auction at my residence, V 2 iiiile east and 1 one mile south of Wren, Ohio, on Friday, September 13, 1929 Commencing at 1:30 o’clock E. S. T. '3O—HEAD OF CATTLE—3O 15 Cows, ranging in age from 2 to 6 years old, with calves by side. 6 Cows to be fresh during this month. 9 Head of Yearling tc 2 year old Heifers. These cows and heifers are all high grade Guernseys and Jerseys. 10 head of good Breeding Ewes. 1 Buck. TERMS--Made known on day of sale. Moser & Mcßeth Roy Johnson, Auctioneer. 9-10-11 PMMMMMMMBMMMWWWWB 111 —— 111,1 —; ssssc - * >*PLf * I WJ I Getting More Out of Life J w I 1 T The more you- put into your i ■ ; savings account, the more you will get out of life. Opening an account is the first step toward ffi a[; Prosperity; paying deposits ■' establish a steady stride goalG Capital and &aplus^o t ooo.od -
tPPOIMMEM (.! Im IIM ,| H No. Zimm; ln 'nn Notice Is hereby giv, n That the „„ derslgned has been . c ,i * trator of the estate ~| |i . son. late of Adams c .. , ' The estate is probabl. . .. I ..mhatr i lX;X , ’s." i . \ ;-- Bept ' *" th IMi> S ’T< >M<4 '"TH E <>F FIN VI sin | | M| . ESTVTF. Xu 2i ;lJ •» Notice is hereby gi-.ei, t„ tlle M ton, heirs an<! legate . j o i in {wl Vail, deceased to appear m the vi Circuit Court, held at I-.. on the 26th dny ,»f s.• ■*• * i‘s Bbow cause if any. why S tlenient Accounts with • . decedent should not q'piu\. 4 said heirs are notified then a/5 there make proof <»f h■. <; ip> ' uh(l 7 ceive their distributive -har.-s. Christena E. Vail, \\ Executrix Decatur, Indiana Sept. ;; Attorney Lutz and Adan;- Spt'i.u Big Square Dance at Sansel Wednesday night. Get tne Habit —Trace at Home. It P lyl
9* KOI ND TRIP » to ST. LOUIS AUGUST 21 Nickel Plate Road Leave Decatur. 9 36 P. M. Arrive St. Louis 7:57 A. M. Returning Jeave St. Louis 5:15 p.m. September 15. Good Attractions at Theatres, Zoo and Museums. Seasonal Sport. Baseba'l St. Louis vs. New York Giants Consult Ticket Agent for Details. L _ ;
