Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 7 October 1929 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

The Season for LEATHER COATS is here. The finest coals in horsehide, sheep skin, swatle, cowhide, in easy filling and dressy coats is here. 58.95 Holthouse Schulte&Co

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, | AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE—ChinchUl* Rabbits, for fur. food and fancy. Chas. J. Miller, 226 N. 7th st. 233t30x FOR SALE—Sweet cider. 25e per gallon by barrel and 30c per gallon jug. Apples. Grimes Golden, and Winter Ramboes. sl.lO bushel at my cider mill at Hoagland. August Koenemann. Hoagland. 234-tt FOR SALE —Tomatoes, 65 cents per bushel, picked. Bring your baskets. Phil Sc-hieferstine, 1 mile northwest of Monmouth, Decatur Fort Wayne iva I. - 3 »- :!t FOR and 8 pigs. H. G. Bultemeier, Preble Phone. 236-3 t FOR SALE—One registeted Guernsey male, 22 months old. 20 full blooded white Wyandott pullets, 5 months old. Jim Hendricks, Phone 23, Monroe. 238-31 FOR SALE Lot at corner of 15th and Adams streets. 63x106 ft. Cheap if taken at once. Call 1181. 238t3x WANT ED —Vse of a piano tor the win ter. Will give excellent care. No children. Phone 1194. 236-3 t WANTD —Boarders and Roomers — Wholsome and sanitary Board and rooms. Prices right. Erie Grocery and Restaurant, phone 965 236-6tx WANTED —Mending of any kind and embroydering work. 308 North sth Street. Decatur. 238-3tx WANTED —Girl or middle aged lady for housework in Fort Wayne. Prefer one who would rather have good home than high wages. Phone 895 Decatur lor particulars. -39t3x FOR RENT FOR RENT—Office rooms in Odd Fellows Building above Lankenau's Store See D. L. Drum, Trustee. 236-7 t FOR Rr.NT —Furnished light housekeeping rooms. 611 North Second st Phone 486 238-3: FOR RENT —Furnished appartnient of 3 rooms for light housekeeping Phone 198 424 Marshall St. 238-3 t FOR RENT—B room house on Bellmont road, % mile east ot Decatur. 1 acre of ground and garage. Willard Steele. 238-3tx FOR RENT —Six room house on North Thirteenth Street. Seniimodern. Tele-1 phone 666 or see Julius Haugk. 238-4tx | LOST AND FOUND LOST OR STOLEN —Childs scooter Saturday afternoon. Finder please return to Alva Egly, Scheiman St. City. 238-3tx u NOTICE All persons having allotments: in the following ditches in Washington township: Peter Holthouse. William Bluhm, H. H. Hessler, Alphonse Kohn, \\ ni. J. H. Hahnert, W. G. Smith, W. D. Strait Branch and the Andrew Miller, must have them cleaned by the 15th day of October. 1929, or 1 will have them sold and place same on the tax duplicate as other taxes against such persons, and to be collected as other taxes are collected. Thompson R. Noll. Trustee Oct, 7-9-11 SALE CALENDAR Oct. B—ShadyB—Shady and Swisher 2 mi. north and % mi. east Blufflou—closing out sale. Oct. 9—Cincinnati Union Stock Yards. Pure bred Shorthorn cattle sale. Oct. B—Carl Steigmeyer, 5 miles east of Decatur ou Van Wert road. Closing out sale. Oct. 9—Victor Kumfer, 4 miles (south and 5 miles west of Decatur. Oct. 10—Jacob F. Bloemker. 2 miles south of Echo, closing out sale Oct. 21 —Roy Chiicote. 2 miles east of Monroe on the Ambrose Durbin farm. Closing out sale ot livestock, farm machinery ami the 100 acre farm Oct. 24 —Eastern Indiana Jersey Breeders Assn. sale. Portand, Ind. Oct. 28 —F. L. Irish, Owasso, Mich. Pure Bred Guernsey cattle sale. Oct. 30 —Clarence Stevens, 2 miles west, 3% miles north of Convoy, Ohio, closing out sale.

THIMBLE THEATER NOV SHOWING—“THE OREFUL TRUTH SEGAH s • t ■ ■■■■ »■ — gg MB ruHE! ") ~ MlNt' 1 VJELL, MO MORE tuoßßlt* \ SW-Hkxt MX) IHVESTCO ( o<o \ ♦ /’ \| X J/ I BRA6S ’ FOR OS-ODE CAN t>lT ) YOUR THiRTV NWO* OOUARS» N „ \YOU BUY/ / f V Hint! ) BKlk and collllt the / ' , ad \ AaiKlP l» -■ / —C-Tl f returns on our r-< / x -->. .. f K aJ k rllNt i n 6 A U *--« / I ‘ 1 c i : 7 j°A a A / 1“ ( * O' * \ ‘ \‘WL JBL JVBMP'' ■ oOr <2 • pj) ' j , ~.. ...... iy — 1 v r i

W-Tic< ididi SOME FOLKS think it quite a feat—earning no Fire Insurance —but the big feat’s to foot the damage, after you’re burnt out! Protection costs so little! Place all your Fire Insurance through The Automobile Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut. Phone No. 358 The Suttles-Edwards Co.. Inc. Over Niblick’s Store Decatur, Ind. Ihiiiiillllliiinill MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount ot 5 PER CENT money uu improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstractie of title to real estate. SCHURGERS ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 S. 2nd St. LOBENSTEIN. MAYNARD & HOWER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or nighL Ambulance service. Office Phone 90 Residence Phone, Decatur 346 or 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 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. i 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 appointment of i;\i:< i roit \<>. XON3 Notice is hereby given. That the tin-liersitfD’-f! has been appointed Executor: of the Estate Poseph Heimann, late of Adam# County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. John E. Heimann. Exec mor Lenhart, Heller & St burger. Attorneys September 23, 1929 Sept. 23-30 Oct. 7. —— (j Miss Reba Brown spent Saturday in Decatur, visiting with relatives. o-- To I DR C. V. CONNELL I VETERINARIAN i Office 120 No. First Street | I Phone: Office 143 —Residence 102 I I Special Attention given to cattle and poultry practice I

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1929.

FOR SALE 3 Hampshire sows, wiU farrow In 10 days. 1 Duroc sow with S pigs by side. 1 2-year old mare mule, a good one. F. .1. SCHMITT MARKET REPORTS DAILY’ REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS East Buffalo Livestock Market Hogs. Receipts 400, holdovers 200: market, very active. 200-250 lbs. $9.40: 160-200 lbs. $10.25-J0.65; 130-160 lbs $10.35-10.65; 90-130 tbs. $9.75-10.35 packing sows SB-8.50. Cattle: Receipts 2.250. Calf reseipts $8.75-9.75: market 20-50 c higher Beef steers $13.25-15: beef cows $5.507.15; vealers $13.25-15.75; low cutters $4.50-7.25. Sheep: Market active, 25c higher. Top fat lambs. sl3-13.75; bulk cull lambs $9-10; bulk fat ewes $5.50-6.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. March May Wheat $1.3488 Corn 95% 1.00% 1.02% Oats — .52% -54% .56% Fort Wayne Livestock Fort Wayne. Oct. 7— (U.P.) —Livestock: Cattle receipts. 75; calves. 50; lings, 400: sheep, 200; hog market | steady; 90-110 lbs., $8.50; 110-140 lbs., $9: 140-160 lbs., $9.85; 160-200 lbs.. $10; 200-220 lbs., $10.10; 220-240 lbs., $9.90; 240260 lbs., $9.65; 260-280 lbs., $9.35: 280-300 lbs.. $9.20: 30<t-350 lbs.. I $8.85: roughs. $7.50; stags. $6; calves, sl6; lambs, sl2. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected Oct. 7) I No. 2 Soft Winter Wheat $1 15 No. 2—Hard Wheat $1.12 No. 2 White Oats 43c Barley —5O c | Rye 80c LOCAL GROCERS - EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 38< BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat 43c Officials Begin Task Os Arresting 300 Persons South Bend. Ind., Oct. 7 —<U.R) —Arrests of 300 persons indicted by a U. S. grand jury which ended a fiveweeks session here Friday, were scheduled to start today. Chief interest centered in serving of capiases on 80 persons named in secret indictments, comprising nearly a third of the total of 181 returned. The jury is believed to have directed a large share of its attention to alleged corrupt conditions in L.y’ke county, and District Attorney Oliver M. Loomis has indicated there would ! be “some surprises” in referring to the secret true bills. All defendants will be arraigned in federal court here Nov. 4, before Judge Thomas W. Slick. I Typewriting Stenographic Work I U you litive any extra typewrit ing or stenographic work I will be glad to do it. Phone 42 for appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge J. T. Law Office, K. of C. Bldg. ! - ■ FUNERAL DIRECTOR Lady Attendant VV. 11. ZWICK & SON Calls answered day and nighL Ambulance Service Phones: Office 61, Home 303 iI- -TiTTiir-. 'I I --IO — O Roy Johnson AUCTIONEER and Real Estate If you wish to sell your real estate either city property or farm land, see me for Quick Sale; by Auction or at private treaty. Office People* Loan & Trust Bldg. Phones 606 and 1022. I

SET NON-STOP FLYINGRECORD Coste And Bellonte Are &afe After Fear Had Been Expressed Peipiug, Oct. 7—(U.R>—The French legation received a telegram from the French fliers Dieudonne Coste and. Maurice Bellonte today saying theS had flown 5,9*8 miles without a stop from Le Bourget field. Paris, to Manchuria. to break the world’s record for non-stop, long distance flight. The telegram, signed "Coste and Bellonte” read: "Landed safely on remote desert of Heilung, China. Sept. 29. Covered 5,958 miles continuous flight breaking all records. Traveled week, reaching Tsitsihar, Oct. 6." The estimate of the distance of the flight made by Coste and Bellonte was considerably higher than early approximations which had been made oir a basis of geographical position. However, considering that the fliers left Le Bourget with fuel for 50 hours flying and that aided by favorable winds they had average at times as high as 125 miles per hour, the 5,958rnile figure appeared probable. Because of the,scarcity of reports, it could not lie determined to what extent the airmen varied from the straight line course, which would account for the nearly 1,000 miles difference between their estimate and the straight-line distance bewteen Paris and Isitsihap*. Their statement that the flight had been made .without a stop left no I doubt but that they had broken the record of the Italians, Arturo Ferrarin and Carlo Del Prete, who flew from Rome to Brazil in J'uly, 1928. LOBBYING PROBE TO BE THOROUGH Sub-Committee Will Call All Propagandists Before It To Testify Washington, Oct. 7. —(U.R) —The inside story of Washington, with chapters about how lobbists work to influence government policies, how so-, ciety affects congressional votes and how former congressmen and government officials are employed by interests here, promises to be started this week before a new senatorial investi11c SALE REXALL DRUG STORE Thurs. Fri. Sat. lAshbaucher’s MAJESTIC i FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ' ROOFING « SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739 Notice All former and prospective employes desiring employment during our campaign should mhke application at once! ♦ t Holland-St. Louis Sugar Co.

gating committee. It will be the most extensive under taking in the investigating line con-| gress has inaugurated and, according l to those who are sponsoring it, all propagandists, large and small, secret and open, good and bad. will be called upon to reveal their activities The sub-committee which is to conduct the inquiry will be selected today at a meeting of the senate judiciary committee. Among those expected to serve are Sen. Thomas J. Walsh, who uncovered the Teapot Dome oil scandal in a senatorial Investigation: Senator Caraway, Dm. Ark., author of the project and perhaps chairman Norris of the judiciary committee. Plans for the inquiry have been officially outlined by expressions from most of those who are expected to serve. They want to begin hearings before the end of the week, delving flrst into the tariff lobbies. During eveiw tariff contest various manufacturers associations maintain attorneys or publicity representatives or .both here to see their interests are either l>enefitted or protected. o Darrow Denounces Idea Os Sterilizing Morons London, Oct. 7. —(U.R) — Declaring I that Morons are highly valuable to society and compose the class of any population that does the “mass of the world's most important work,” Clarence Darrow, noted American lawyer, in an exclusive interview with the United Press today, attacked and denounced the fovement to sterilize mental and moral defectives. It is the Moron, he a/gued, who shoulders uncomplainingly the unpleasant takks of life. If any steps are taken to prevent the reproduction of Morons, “many lawyers, doctors, parliamentarians, preachers and congressmen would have to go to work.” Darrow contended Describing the propaganda for sterilization of defectives as “impracticable, unscientific and cruel,” Darrow said: “This is a new fad which I hope will pass away. The idea that a burglar will breed a burglar is utterly absurd. So far as heredity is concerned. a preacher is just as apt to produce a burglar as a burglar is. The training that is given to the individual after birth doubtless has a good deal to do with it. "As to sterilizing having anything to do with preventing criminal conduct it is well to understand the starting point. Technically crime means violation of a statute. A man may be kindly and humane and yet he may violate a statute. He may he cold, heartless and crafty and yet he may conform to all printed laws. Euncie Bringle Takes Stand Again Today Los Angeles. Oct. 7.-—(U.R) —Eunice I Pringle wil be on the witness stand i in superior court again today so attorneys tor Alexander Pantages may continue their attempt to break I down her testimony that she was atI tacked by the wealthy theater man. I She already has been subjected to ’he cross examination of Attorney | Jerry Teisler, but he has failed to shake her story. The 17-year-old dancer, speaking in a soft, confident voice, told the jury ! Friday that Pantages lured her to his secluded consultation room to discuss booking for her act and then made frantic love and attacked her. She probably will be asked by Geisler to re-enact the asserted attack scene for a third time. After she has concluded. W. L. Gord- | on, tenant of the Pantages theater building, will be called by the state. He was one of the first to reach the consultation room after the girl ran into the corridor, screaming for help. He is expected to testify concerning an unidentified woman reported to helped Pantages arrange bis clothing in the excitement which followed Miss Pringle’s screams. BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE $2250.00 buys on best street in Decatur. Why not buy a .rental proposition that guarantees 12%%? One square from court house. One of best small farms in Adams county, with $6,000,00 worth ot 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, Phcae 256 238t6

EIGHT DEAD IN AERIAL MISHAPS Week-end Air Accidents Occur In Widely Separated Parts Chicago, Oct. 7.—(U.R)—Aerial accidents claimed eight lives in widely separated parts of the country yesterday. Four men were killed when a monoplane crashetl from 1.500 feet near Leona. Tex. A torn wing folded over the cokpit and prevented their jump | ing. The dead: Marvin Potter. Teague. Tex : Lieut. Jack Brooks, pilot, Dallas; Leon Lynch, Centerville, Tex.; Allan Powell. Centerville. Bryan Heflin, pilot, Hui»tville. Mo., and Rowland and Miss Deldee Hardin. Moberly. Mo., passengers, were killed when the airplane in which they were flying crashed from 400 feet during ceremonies at the opening of a municipal airport at Moberly. Thousands of persons saw Baker

PUBLIC SALE As I am leaving the farm I will sell at public auction on the old Faulk farm located 4 miles south ami 5 miles west oi Decatur, or % mile south and 3 miles east ot Craigviile, ou WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1929 Sale commencing at 10 o'clock, the following described property: HORSE —1 Bay mare, 9 years old, weight 1300 pounds. CATTLE—4 Head One spotted cow, giving 414 gallons of milk per day, 3 years old; 1 Hol stein cow. 9 yearn old, giving 3 gallons of milk per day: 1 Guernsey cow, 8 years old. giving 414 gallons of milk per day; 1 Brindel cow. 9 years uH, giving 3 g<wtHta of milk per day. HOGS-6 Head —Six head of Feeding Shoats, weight 80 to 90 pounds. , SHEEP-19 Head—Fifteen head Shropshire breeding ewes; 4 head Demne ewes. 40 Acres of Corn; 100 bushel of Extra Good Seed Oats. IMPLEMENTS One Fordson tractor and ploww, uwed two seasons and in good condition; 1 McCormick corn binder, in good shape; 1 two-row John Deere cultivator with four-horse hitch; 1 C. B. Q. corn planter, with bean attachment and 80 rods wire; 1 Flying Dutchman hay loader; 1 American fertilizer drill; 1 Indiana grain drpll, good as new; 1 spike-tooth harrow; 1 6-ft. Deering binder; 1 Ideal Giant mower; 1 old wagon; 1 Lily cream separator, in good condition, tnd many other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS —All sums under $5. cash; sums over' $5 six month' ti>:i>’ will be ■given, first 3 months without Interest and bankable interest on the last I mouths. 5% off for cash. FREE! FREE! FREE! There will be a FREE Lamb Given Away on the Day of This Sale. Every one has a chance to win. » VICTOR KUMFER EUeuberger Bros., auctioneers Leo E. Ehiiiper, clerk Ladies' Aid will serve dinner. H ! — f A Long, Long Trail |r {This bank enjoys looking back over the long, long trail it ft. has traveled through the years. ' The pleasure is keener as we ' , note the growing prosperity and ■ } financial power of customers . j who have traveled the long trail S with us. We look ahead t 6 ■> ■t more progress, with friends old !■ and new. e fcapiial and -

Diehl, 22. plunge 2.800 fret to death when Ms parachute failed to open at Altoona. Pa. He leaped from a pi aM piloted by Lieut. Ernest Hewitt ■ 1 o ' '<» 11‘ K " ' hi;vt of vre: x«». z.‘«tt stott. e is t.crcby Ktv.ii to the (roti tore belr» and lecatere ot William £!! nard. decea»ed. to app- cin t h t . M ' i Circuit Court, held all»» atm. Indiana on the 22nd day ot ixtober Iri.u show cauMt it any why th,, pinat s,. (lament Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not lie approve and said heirs are notified to then ui there make proof ot heirship and k. 'ceive their distributive shares. Julius Schultz. Administrator Decatur. Indiana. Sept ::o. 1925. Attorney James T. Merryman. Steele & Jaberg for FIRE, TORNADO and LIFE INSURANCE Phone 256 K. of C. Building