Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 232, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1929 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Start the Winter Right with a pair of No. 400 Winner OVeralls sl-29 anti it can’t be beat. Blouses to match at $1.29. Holthouse Schulte&Co
CLASSIFIED | ADVERTISEMENTS, | | BUSINESS CARDS, | AND NOTICES FOR SALE SALEi—Dark blue flannel middy biouse and skirt, reed rocker, some practically new mason jars for cannjgg. Tel. 250. 231-8 t ]$R SALE— Full blooded Barred Bock pullets hatched first of April, rtul G. Habegger, phone Berne 4621. Monroe R. 2. 231t3x unr SALE Evergreens —Arbor vit•aes, junipers, spruce, pines, hemlock ets. No better time to plant than right now. Compare my prices with ally catalog prices you may have. Come aj>d see before you buy or send list of what you wanj for prices. All stock strong healthy, well rootand true to name. Residence four rftles west of Berne. Moody Brenneman. 227-5 t W)R SALE —Eating and cooking apIples |1.25 and up per bushel crate, qj-ing container. Michigan Elberta peaches 3. E. Haggard 1% mile west oj Monroe. 229-stx SALE -l's-d piano, price 512.". •iSa down, $8 per month. Bed, davenport with mattress. A-l condition. Prague Furniture Company, phone 169. ijOR SALE OR RENT--Hous, a- P 22 • Line street. Will sell on terms. G. l|. Sprague, Phones 5351 or 199. x 230-3 t fSOR SALE—LiIy of the, Valley Bulbs, •15 for SI.OO Phone 383 or call at 343 AJercer Avenue. 230-3tx SALE —Big 3 Electric •machine; vacuum style; Kectric sweeper, in A-l condition FJione 881-0. 230-3 t FI)R SALE — Sixteen shoats weight 80 lbs. each. One Gray mare, six years oM. A good one. C. C. Miller, route 8, 230SALE—An 8 room modern house.] three blocks from court house. Or will trade for smaller property. Address Rpx B. C.. Democrat. 231-3 ts SALE — Pair of Toledo scales. good as new, will sell cheap. Can be seen at Ed Coffee's shoe repair shop. J. W. Meibers. 2313tx FOR SALE —Bicycle, like new two new "tires. Walter Summers 999 Walnut St. , 231-3tx FOR SALE—FuII bloo led barred Rock pullets, ready to lay. Phone 0-885 2H-3t FOR SALE —Tomatoes, 75c per bushel Trout farm. 232t3x lA>R SALE - IMf" Whippet 4 sedan ! •Will trade for cheaper car. Frank Young. Wren, Ohio. 231-3tx FOR SALE —Flemish Giant Rabbits? ?five does and three bucks. Also some good huts. Phone 908. E. C. Martz. 2313txeod WANTED WANTED—To buy large heating stove W. Monroe st. Clem Voglewwde. 230t3 V?aNTED— Work for High School boy alter school evenings and on Saturday Cftll us.'. 230-13 x WANTED—Job to cut corn by the Shock. Phone 308. Perry Kinnaman. • 231t3x llaNTED —Boarders and Roomers — .Wholesome and sanitary Board and rooms. Prices right. Erie Grocery and Restaurant, phone 965. 231t6x MfANTED—Giri for housework and to assist with children. No washing or irbning. CaU 255, or inquire 249 North Fifth street. It MJa/TED —Boy npt attending school. •to*learn car washing. Decatur Auto F LOST AND FOUND tj)ST — Shopping basket containing .food chopper and bottle of medicine Satuiday. Finder please call 798. 231-3 t r FOR RENT /£)R RENT —- Five room house on •North Seventh Street, modern except ftlrnace. Inquire 604 N. Third Street. • 230-3tx W>R RENT Five loom house, lights afid water. 720 Elm street or call 1059 231Ft>R REN"f—Furnished room in modern home. Woman preferred. Phone -jo (days) and 319 after 5:30 o'clock in afternoons. 231-3 t : — *J. W. Ash of Fort Wayne spent yesterday afternoon in this city.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING “HOOK, IJNE AND SINKER BY SEGAR - - uo MR TO <1 IF \K. CASTOR, WGO UNmSfktDkNb P \oIHN DO TOO U)fcnT ? \M I NDW.PftR.TtO.'V I OUGHT TO, Voo —' S€X VOU ABOUT A VERY / 1 MORE ABOOT GUSS”uLAOBER" OIL UJELUS, GOLD) 1 ’ IF AbWOF THAT \ I DME >*? 1 IMPORTANT MAT ) r^ o ,^ * INVEWMIHTS , - I ORUJHAT? OONUH COMF ALLOUR . I^s a lIH / /( i > Lx. " r " y r a THMfa$ \ Ji z'fc x- v ffl 4ii>A -? -.41 ii Ja “• it I—- ~ L wmaRgMSM IwMhe 7 L' ( V* 1- Jif--- —-— — i •— thwt Br.um r*—rv.4, J‘2.. 1- 'f *1 A'fc -I.—} O J . r O ',929. Ring Featarw Syndicate, lac. SmHHMI — — _
MONEY TO LOAN City Loans 6% net 5-10-15 years Farm Loans s'*% 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 Abstractls 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, Decatur 346.0 r 844 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT Lady Attendant Licensed Embalmer •S. E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR 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—12:39 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. For BETTER HEALTH SEE DR. H. FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturapath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd St. Office Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 6-8 BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE $2250.00 buys on best street in Decatur. Why not buy a rental preposition that guarantees 12%%? One square from court house. One of best small farms in Adams county, with $6.000.00 worth of buildings for SIIO.OO per acre. Needs no fixing, A real buy on Third street. Modem, for $4,000. A Neat home in good repair for $1500.00. Many others. See STEELE & JABERG, Phone 256 232t6 o x O’FIN E <>»■ • i’st!, !-ri.!-:ni:vr or estate xo. araui Notice is hereby given t<» the creditors lieiis and legatees of William Bernard, deceased, to appear in the Adam* Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana on the 22nd day of October >929 and show cause if any whf the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved: and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship and receive their distributive shares. Julius S< hultz. Administrator Decatur, Indiana, Sept. 30. 1929. Attorney Janies T. Merryman. Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Get the Habit—Trade at Home. It Pave • Typewriting Stenographic Work II 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. Merryman’s Law Office, K. of C. Bldg.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1929.
FOR SALE 1 Fresh cow and calf 10 head of young heifers 20 head of breeding ewes F. J. SCHMITT MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. Mar. MayWheat $1.28% $1.35% $1.42% $1.45% Corn .99% .97% 1.01% 1.04 Oats .52% .53% .56% .58 Fort Wayne Livestock Cattle receipts 75; Calves 50; Hogs 300; Sheep 200; Hog market 20-25 c off; 90-110 lbs: $8.35; 110-140 lbs $8.85 140-160 lbs $9.70; 160-180 lbs. $10.20 180-209 Hrs $10.35; 290-220 lbs. $10.45 220-240 lbs $10.25: 340-260 lbs $10.00; 260-280 lbs $9.70; 280-300 lbs. $9.55; 300-250 lbs. $9.20; Roughs $8; Stags $6 Calves sl7; lambs $11.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected Sept. 30) No. 2 Soft Winter Wheat $1 15 No. 2 —Hard Wheat ... $1.12 No. 2 White Oats 43c Barley < 50c Rye —BO c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 37c BUTTBRFAT AT STATION Butterfat — -44 c Georgia Rivers Return To Normalcy Today . —— Atlanta, G|., Sept. 30 — (UP) — Georgia Rivers were returning to normal stages today after almost a week of steady rain in various sections of the state causing extensiveuamage to crops, property, railroads and high ways. The Savannah river returned to its banks at Augusta where the lower part of the city was flooded. The Charleston and Western Carolina bridge there was washed away. Hamburg. S. C., across the river from Augusta, remained under several feet of water. Damage to Augusta itself was slight although city officials faced a sanitary problem as a result of the flood. o— Plane Rises In Air Without Aid Os Motor Frankfurt. Germany, Sept. 30. —(U.<?) —Fritz Von Opel, the wealthy young ■automobile magnate, succeeded today hi rising in an airplane propelled by rockets'- instead of by a motor. Von Opel has been planning to attempt a flight across the English Channel in his unique plane, today’s flight being a preliminary . test. o PAYS WITH LIFE Bellefonte. Pa.. Sept. 30. —(U.R) — William Weston. 30, father of four children, paid with his life today in the electric chair at Rockvfew penitentiary for the murder of Mrs. Helen Coles. Philadelphia. () o DR. C. V. CONNELL I VEIERIN ARIAN I Office 120 No. First Street I Phone: Office 143—Residence 102 i Special Attention given to cattle and poultry practice I Q-. ’ - - A FUNERAL DIRECTOR Lady Attendant W. H. ZWICK & SON Calls answered day and night. Ambulance Service Phones: Office 61, Home 303 —— o o Roy Johnson AUCTIONEER and Real Estate ■ If you wish to ceil your real estate | either city property or farm land, | see me for Quick Sale; by Auction j or at private treaty, | Office Peoples Lean & Trust Bldg, i Phones 606 and 1022.
NEW CHARGE IS MADE IN KILLING Seven Facfe Second Degree Murder Charge In North Carolina Labor Strike Charlotte, N. C., Sept. 30. —(U.R) Seven persons faced second degree murder charges as result of the killing of Ponce Chief O. F. Aderholt of Gastonia after the state had made reductions in charges and dismissals at opening of the trial ioday. The three women defendants and six men —all arrested after the killing which was an aftermath of labor difficulties in this textile community —were dismissed. Previously Solicitor John Carpen ter had announced that first degree murder chafges had been reduced to second degree against 13 of the defendants. The only ones whose charges were not reduced were the three women, Sophie Melvin. Amy Schlechter and Vera Buch, but they later were dismissed. The men whose charges were dismissed today were Robert Allen, M. K. Byers, N. F. Gibson, Floyd Hampton. J. C. Heffner and Russell Knight. The state next dismissed the assault charges pending against Ernest Martin. D. E. McDonald, Walter Loyd Rotxrt Litoff. C. E. Loll. J. R. Pittman and Clarence Townsend. These defendants were not on trial in the present case but were under bonds awaiting trial on charges growing out of the Aderholt killing. These revisions in charges and defendants were made after the defense counsel had returned to court from a three quarter of an hour conference and assented to consolidation of the assault and murder ca.ses. — o — Plane Lands Safely Sitka, Alaska. Sept. 30.—(U.R)—After flashing an S. O. S., the monoplane "Land of the Soviets” bearing four Russian aviators on a Moscow to New York flight, was at anchor here today being prepared for a take-off for Seattle probably Tuesday. The fliers landed here from Seward at 4:45 p. m. (8:45 p. m. est.) yesterday, after six and three quarter hours continuous flight. They were two hours behind schedule, having been delayed by fog. An S. O. S. signal sent out by the plane's radio operator was a mistake, It was explained. The distress signals were picked up at several points and also by the U. S. coast guard cutter Haida which changed its course to render assis- , taftce. o — FLORIDA AND ALABAMA HIT BY HEAVY GALE <roSTJ!»tTEf» rmix pnc.e owki northern edge of the gulf were cut off, as the high wind tore down Carrabelle. La., was evacuated I y its 1.000 inhabitants during the night. The focal point of the disturbance shifted to near Pensacola at ■ midmorning, the weather bureau advised. Hurricane warnings were put. up along the Alabama and Mississippi coasts, and it was predicted the storm would cross the coast line near Pensonwla tliist afternoon "attended by winds of hurricane force.” The wind reached a velocity of 75 miles an hour towards noon. In the weather bureau office, on the tenth floor of a downtown building, p ctures on the wall swayed. Fears were feft for 140 men on 13 fishing ixiats unreported here for hours. Warning Issued Mobile. Ala., Sept. 30—(U.R)—Warning that a 75-mile gale probably would strike Mobile was issued by the weather bureau this moruing. The bureau said the path of the hur; rieane which has been raging off Florida Indicated Mobile probably would be affected. Schools were dismissed and ships in harbor moved up the Mobile river to shelter. Change Flags Washington, Setpt. 30 —(U.R) —The U. S. weathrt" bureau today ordered storm warnings along the Alabama and Mississippi coasts changed, te hurricane warnings.
The tropical storm which struck Florida was reported about 75 miles southeast of Pensacola moving north- i westward at 10 to 12 miles an hour. "In the absence of Apalachicola | report conditions are that the center will cross the coast li«e near Pensa ] cola this afternoon attended by winds | of hurricane force,” the bureau said ! o Communists Take City Hong Kong, Sept. 30. —(U.R) — A force of communists today captured - the town of Shang Hang and made i prisoneis of the members of the < German dominican mission at Ting- • Chgw. 1 Seven of the dominicans were lat- I er released, four were detained in 1 the hospital to treat those who had; been wounded in the assault on the, t town, and the others, including three i sisters, were held for ransom. J 0 -s— 1 t RANGERS PATROL BORGER. TEXAS Mayor Is Released on Bond; ■ Town Branded As Corrupt Borger. Tex., Sept. 30. — (U.R) — A chastened Borger citizenry went to its tasks in the oil fields today while state troops were en route to take charge of the'town, described by high state officials as criminal and corrupt. Mayor Glenn A. Pace was free on $3,000 bond following his arrest yesterday on a ch<MTc of attempting to thwart justict' by a state's witness in a murder trial out of the town. • • The city jail was in the hands of rangers, police maintained by the state to be rushed to points where peace enforcement has gotten out of the thands of local officers. Borger police had challenged a ciaim by the rangers that they were in league with liquor and narcotic dealers. The rangers won out through an order from the governor. The town had been portrayed as infested with vicious underworld elements. after the murder of District Attorney John A. Holmes. A lay evangelist today had come into a prominence which he described as the “first fruits of the new Borger." The Rev. Col. Gay W. Green : Sunday preached to the largest con- i gregation ever to gather under the rafters of his gospel temple and 56 ; persons, some of whom never before , had visited the church, were convert- j ed. Persons who have lived in Borger during the three years of Its history —in which there have been 24 murd-1 ers —said it was the first Sunday that i blatant music of mechanical pianos. at bars and gambling places had not; mingled with the hymns sung in the , Rev. Green’s church. o TOWER IS STRENGTHENED Pisa, Italy, Sept. 30. —(U.R) —The cen- j turles-old leaning tower of Pisa seems I assured of permanency with the success of engineering efforts to strength-1 en the ground around the tower's I base by injections of liquid cement. | AITOINTHENT OF EXHCI TOR M». ans:) Notice is hereby given. That the un r j derslgnert has been appointed Executor of the Estate of Poseplj Heimann, late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. John E. Heimann. Executor Lenhart. Heller & Sehurger, Ati.orneys I'-IP S'-I'i - SALE CALENDAR Oct. I—J. R. Hurless, 2 miles north 1% mile east of Wren, Ohio. Oct. 2 —N. F. Foley & Son, 1% mile north and % mile west of Convoy, O.! Oct. 3 —Clarence Mitchell, 1 mile j south. 3% miles east of Monroe, Ind. ' Oct. 5—J. W. Meibers, Admr. of city property, house and lot. Oct. 7 —Herbert Kirchner, 1% mile' north and % mile west of Preble. Oct. B—ShadyB—Shady ttnd Swisher 2 mi. north] and % mi. east Bluffton —closing out sale. Oct. 9—Cincinnati Union Stock Yards. Pure bred Shorthorn cattle Bale. Oct. 10. —Jacob F. Bloemker, 2 miles i south of Echo, closing out sale. ’ Oct. 24 —Eastern Indiana Jersey . Breeders Assn. sale. Portand, Ind. Oct. 28—F. L. Irish, Owasso, Mich. I Pure Bred Guernsey cattle sale. Oct. 30—Clarence Stevens, 2 miles] west, 3% miles north of Convoy, Ohio,; closing out sale.
PANTAGES BOTH IN COURT TODAY Wife To Receive Sentence And Husband To Ask For Change Os Venue Los Angeles, Calif, Sept. 30.—(U.R) — Alexander Pantages, millionaire theater man, will learn today whether the courtroom in which his wife, Mrs. Lois Pantages, was convicted of manslaughter will be the scene of his trial on charge of attacking Eunice ] Pringle, 17-year-old dancer. Mri|. Pantages was scheduled 'to! appear today for sentence and two j ministers to appear before court judges to learn whether they should ! be punished for contempt of court for their remarks during her trial. Pantages" motion for a change of venue, charging Los Angeles is pre-1 judiceff against him. will be argued i before Judge Charles Fricke. If it is denied Pantages will go to trial here Tuesday. Mrs. Pantages was ordered to ap-
Saving Money - Educational Every young man and every young girl should ever keep in mind that the best results the world has to offer can be obtained by saving money. When saving, you learn self restraint and self control; you learn the value of money and the ways of finance, banking and business. START TODAY—IT IS WORTH WHILE. | The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. Bank of Service —man can dispute the necessity of a substantial bank account. The happy and contented i< ting of being prepared no mat ' what the adversities might be. Wise men — young and old— are constantly on guard and are systematically laying aside a little each week. You—- ♦ too, can be on the “safe side.” This bank welcomes your account. “A GOOD PLACE TO SAVE” Old Adams County Bank
pear before Judge Carles H ar ,| v . sentencing. Her autoniubile with khat of Juror Kuu.uto and <2 ed his death. The ministers' charged with <™. | tempt are the Rev. R. p. Sc huler the Rev. Gustave Briegieb. ——— Takes Part in R ai( j Sheriff Harl Ilnllin vAor h n [ city took part in a laid , ;i Jav " conducted by officials of t' a > (oult i Saturday night in wh h liqu or Wa( seised. Lecy Street of m a Bryant w M arrested. ■ —o — Set the Habit—Trade at Home, h P» y , - —
wwwwwww'j" ‘•"“ifinnmiu I: Ashbaucbi r’s MAJESTIC FURNACES | ; ASBESTOS SHINGLE ! ! ROOFING 1 I SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739 1 i r '
