Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 15, Decatur, Adams County, 17 January 1930 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, | BUSINESS CARDS, « AND NOTICES ■
! FOR SALE l| T6ft SJlK—F'eeding "tankHRT a: I the Decatur Rendering Plant. | % ton or more delivered fr<- , of charge. Phone 876-T or 513. | 1016 I FOR BALE - PuniVViour'MidH, S 2 I 1 per cwt; Beat wheat bran. $1.90 t; per.uwt; Salt, for stock and butch-. eriag Hut will not get hard, 90c per “cwt. Williams Equity Exchange, Williams Station, Ind. 3 • Z 12t4x i< FUR'SALE: or tradtTfor clarinet, f! A rare old Violin, Stradivarius t nuglol. Call 876-B. 13t3x 1 Ft* SALE APPLES. Jonathans. Ifagners and Baldwins. sl.lO to ‘j sl*s bushel. Prices reduced on ' I Giftnes, 11-25 bu. S. E. Haggard, 1 ! m*e south and %-mile east of jl M®roe. 14-6 t r SALE — 1925 Essex Coach, fl m w tires, A-l mechanical conn difim. $75. 1927 Chrysler coupe, u g<«d rubber, perfect condition, i $::#). Durkin Garage. 14-2tx M Ftill §aI.E— j/ew and used piano... j $-ry lowest prices. Easy terms. ? Spftigue Furniture Company. Phone < ’ft .. ll3t S> Fiji SALE - 2 incubators; one a e Successful; and the other a Syph(l ers hpt air. 1 brooder stove used! „ onceTl.OOO chick size. Will sII rec-l 1 sonable. Roy Voting, % mile east p and ’» mile south of Salem 14-3tx ’• FOR SALE—Span of young mules ' E coming 3 and 4 years old; also U good work horse. Ira Thompson ■ at Williams. 14t3x H -i - . — FOR SALE—Pair of colts, coming 3 yearn old in June. Also brooder E house, 10x20, a hard coal stove and hover, 1,000 chick size. W. C. Martz, 2 miles south of Monroe. Jan 7-10-14-17 X I F(St SALE-Male hogs at $5.50 > per hundred; 15 bushels of pob tatoes; 20 tons alfalfa hay; good I Wolter wagon. Inquire Floyd StoneI bujner, Decatur, route 2. 15-3 t II FOR CRXATEH ZVSOHTS Hatchery Chicks * Order some Decatur Quality Chicks i now it you want early broilers and | eafly fall layers. They will make ’ you the extra profits. Place your * order today. THE DECATUR HATCHERY 11 Phone 497 Decatur, Ind. « 15-51 B Second ht.nd No. 5 „ Un«erw<md typewriter. Phone 631. 15-3tx li I FOR RENT FOR RENT 250 acre farm, 3 miles J northeast of Decatur. Rent as one farm or divide into two. Close to schools. Mrs. J. S. Bowers or W. S. Bowers, Phone 125 or 296 7-9 t FOR RENT—S room house on W. Madison st., newly painted and papered. Furnace and bath. Call Telephone No. 1180. 13-3tx FOR RENT—3 room apartment furnished for light housekeeping, j. Phon-' 198 or inquire at 424 Mar- |( shall street. shall street. 113-31 a FOR RENT—S roori7 house on South u 9t'h St garage. Inquire 303 N. Bth * street Phone 812 13-3 t J FOR RENT—4o acre farm in Blue ,1 Creek township. Inquire of M. Kjrsch, Peoples Loan & Trust Co. t 1 t-w J FOR RENT Filling Station. Cail 15-64 X a WANTED WANTED Everybody to know that B our Telephone number is 663. " Anna Yaney-Foretnan. North End c Grocery. 13-4 t S ■■ g a Humor Ancient and Modern Many of the glib expressions ol 11 the most demure modern women b would have caused the Mrs. Grun Y dys of nn earlier day to gasp In horror. Fur example. If s girl In Ellzsbetlian times hud said d “confound" something she would v have been regarded as a rowdy ling gage uml would have been shunned 8 by failite Society. because the word "confound" originally was a mule I diction, Also, If she hud remarked that she was fond of somebody she 2 Would have caused a titter. Irecnuse . ■fond" used to mean "foolish.’ Dry htp-mr becomes an Impossl bfe expression when It is thut the original meaning of hinlan was to designate a moisture that In old times was believed to he one of the four elements of the human constitution.-Detroli News. Miller’s Raisin Bread for sale Wednesdays and Saturdays each week at all grocers. 192 STOCKHOLDERS ANNUAL MEETING The annual mc-.'ing of the stockholders oi The peoples Loan and Trust Company of Docalur, Indamt, for the elccllo nos dlreetors and the transaction of any other business that may come before the meeting, will be held at the office of said Peoples loan ami Trust Company on the 21st. day of Jan uaTy, : '®’ a * 1® o'clock a. m. __ 'W. A. Lower, Secretary. DM. SWBn. 3-7-10-14-17.
Don’t Forget Our Store Wide Sale Everything in our stock can be bought at great savings tomorrow. Iborßoiisiteyl NCHUTTE Az-fjO. M D>*»lur, Ind. W.
S. E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR Mrs. Black. Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or night. Office phone 500 Home phone 727 Ambulance Service MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT money on improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of title to real estate. SCHURGER ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 S. 2nd St. For BETTER HEALTH SEE DR. 11. FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturapath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd St. Office Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 6-8
N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:36—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135 I —■■■■■ RADIOLA. GREBE AM) ATWATER KENT RADIO Trade in your used radio or phonograph. \\ ERLING RADIO SALES Preble, Ind. Phone 17 on 28 WANTED—Good, clean, big Rags, suitable for cleaning machinery. Will pay 7c lb. Decatur Daily Democrat. o Get the Habit—l rade at Home, FUNERAL DIRECTOR Lady Attendant W. 11. ZWICK & SON Calls answered day and night Ambulance Service Phones: Office 61, Home 303
Typewriting Stenographic Work 11 you have any extra typewriting or stenographic work I Mill he glad to do it. Phone 12 for appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge .1. T. Merrymans Law Office, K. of C. Bldg. PLEASE SEE WINEI RIDE KITSON American Security Co. First door west of Postoffice for your 1930 Auto License Plates Open Evenings. Thank You. Lobenstein, Maynard & Hower FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance Service. Office Phone 90. Residence Phone. Pe atur IMS or 844. Residence Phone. Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT Lady attendant licensed Embalm-r MONEY TO LOAN City Loans 6% net 5-10-15 years Farm Loans 5%% 10 or 20 years We write Insurance. —THE— Suttles-Edwards COMPANY Niblick Store Bldg. DECATUR. . INDIANA
> HIMRLE THEATER SHOWING-’ THE SKIN HE D ( - JnSt W SetM TO fte SAFe CNOUUH THCHCXTy / OQT THERE'S AN INVISIBLE MORNING >HE IDAS y / .- F , Ru t T ALL IF W^ 1 - t 7 /’> t V/B ? H c 7 / ' f M CRU) ABOARD OH WO FULL -WE RE ) ' IJ 0 i^a IH tED COME ON DECK \ / /- • / ' ' HfOEBYDANLiftHT AnDDO/.< NOT ALONE ANO THAIS/ In- I IN TWJ s k U J ■jV/' /ri f \\B2~ \ -"u-x - ■ —in 7'..0 ■ ; -7. W LPWWW ■■■■,: I” ' " '* By L. F. Van ZcIuTB "THE MAIN THING ON MAIN STREET’ " /3B •*’ ■ TyMAo cVIMES Bus OffE A YEARJDUZE -j — --g- ■- 4 f SOME SOttS REQUIRE TAXI- __ - C H C)P CoME t SFEhO ' IJdR "oywEr rtECE JE MAIN fl CABSgBOT OUQ POLLS WIK | KIDS_ SUFFER NM , . 747 >«.' mS THE I WAN NATS ; ... / ( 1 JL' <ES ' -• I • j wn‘ \ A ■ /I -rk NAT '>^l| / PoP -) ■ ' !re l’ l, OtD MAN HATCH Took tours A FONTAINE I A «A T / POP -1 ! ; I BMAH / '3s |HB A SEW OF KIDS DCWN TOWN TO .LOOK AT f k wn n 7 \ V (__-_<i =»_ = The xma<; ■store windows. ck/' V <rZ *- XwH -'■ WE WAGER MORE than ■■ one fond parent 6 ■ u.s 1 V THANkFUL XMAS COMES HmAH BUT ONCE A NEAR. S.wti u <•» - -—" T ~—- ’ hat w
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Berne, Ind , Jan. 17. —livestock: 90-120 pounds $9.10 120-140 pounds $9.40 110-160 pounds $9.70 160-200 pounds $9.90 200-230 pounds $9.75 230 260 pounds $9.55 260-300 pounds $9.35 300-350 pounds $9.25 Roughs $7.25-$7.25 Slags . $5.00-$6.00 Calves $16.00 Lambs $12.50 Fort Wayne Livestock Fort Wayne, Ind., Jan. 17.—U.R) —livestock: Cattle receipts, 100; calves, 75; hogs, 700; sheep, 300; hog market 10-15 c up; 120 lbs., down, $910; 120-140 lbs., $9.35; 140, 160 lbs., $9.70; 160-200 lbs., $9.85; 200-225 lbs., $9.75; 225-250 lbs., $9.60; 250.300 lbs., $9.45; 300-350 lbs.. $9.30; roughs, $7.75; stags, $6; calves, $16.50; lambs, $12.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Jan. Mar. May July Wheat No quo. 1.21% 1.20% 1.28%. Corn .89% .93% .95% Oats .46% .47% .46% East Bi 'falo Livestock Ilogs:: receipts 1,600 holdovers 600; fairly active to shippers 10-20 cents over Thursday’s average bulk 110-210 Ills $10.50 $10.65; 220-250 lbs $10.25-$10.50; 270 lbs $10.10; packing sows $8.40 $8.90. Cattle: RecXpts 2(T); virtually holding done on steers and heifers cows steady. Calves: Receipts 600; vealers active .steady SIB.OO down. Sheep receipts 3.600; lambs fairly ac ivc, steady to weak, good to choice held higher; medium and stiong weights $12.25-$13.25; Fat ewes s6.fio-$7.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected Jan. 17) No. 2 Sett Winter Wheat sl.lO No. 2 Hard Wheat. $1.07 No. 2 White Oats 40c Barley so c Rye 80c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 33 c BUTTERFAT AT STATION BuCerfat 3(je
W. H. Myers Auctioneer 416 Mercer Ave. Decatur Indiana A “Guarantee” of Service or no pay. I let you be the judge. Phone 1144 E A T Chop Auey. Mexican Chili, Waffles and Old Style Buckwheat Cakes —at— CAMPBELL’S More Money for Your Properly with Chris Bohnke Auctioneer » Phone 874-H Decatur. Ind. I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1930
TO FORM NEW COAST GUARD Plan Patrol System in Effort to Enforce Prohibition Law Washington, Jan. 17 — (UP) — Young men who yearn for military careers may read new posters on the billboards, something like this WANTED—young men for the new mobile unit of the coast guard along the borders. Will give opportunity to «ee new country. Join the yoast guard and become a "land soldier" of the sea service. Salary $2,100 a year. Plans being formulated tor the new unified border patrol, recommended by President Hoover, indicate the organization will be a military unit, bearing the same relation to the coast guard as the Marine corps does to the navy, it was learned today. Officials said the patrol will be a land unit under the guard, with a different type of uniform, and designations of rank similar to those in the army, instead of navy titles. Ordinary border, partolmen would be designated privates, with noncommissioned officers in charge of sections and commissioned officers supervising considerable areas. Rear Admiral F. C. Billard, com mandant of the coast guard, will direct the laud force as well as his sea unit, and thus would liecome In effect, both a general and an admiral. Size of the coordinated patrol has not been determined but some of-, ficials estimate that probably 5.000 men would be required to guard the 3,000 miles of border not patrolled by coast guard ships. Patrolmen would be enlisted under the. coast guard for a definite teim of servic , and be subject to military supervision.
Old System of Timing Still in Use in Egypt Before the advent of the modern clock, many, towns and cities told the time to their people by tiring a gun at noun Rome was such n i place, and kept to the dully firing i of her veteran noon gun on the Janleulum hill, whicu had been done so far buck as human mem ory could go until a year or so ago Then she decided to replace lids ancient form of time signaling by the most ultramodern system available. A master electric clock was Installed In the city observatory, which controlled 300 ntlier electric clocks placed In different quarters of the Eternal city on the Tiber. The 538.000 Romans are therefore exceptionally well catered for as regards the time. Wlmt an amazing contrast Is such a method ns this to the manner in which parts of Egypt to thia very day tell the tlmu. There some j of the natives still employ ancient I shadow clocks. These consist of wooden boards with little “goal posts" In the middle of them, which measure by the shadows they throw the length of Jobs which have to be performed oy oxen or laborers. These “clocks" have been In use for telling time for 4.000 years. COURTHOUSE Read Estate Transfers Julius llaiigk el ux, part in lots 569, 570. Decatur, to Noah A. Bixler for SIOOO.OO Harry R. Moltz et ux iu lot 489,
Decatur, to Lawrence Green et ux for >2,250.00 Albert F. Bieneke et ux in lot 895 Decatur, to William F. Beineke for SI.OO William F. Beineke et ux, SO acres in Kirklaud township, to Albert F Bieneke for SI.OO. BLIZZARD HITS MIDWEST; COLD WAVE ARRIVES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) co dest it had been this winter. Minnesota was digging out of the heaviest snowfall of the season. Highways still were blocked with drifts and trains were running late. Temperatures likely will not be normal again for almost a week, said O. A. Donnel, United States weather forecaster for the Chicago area. o — College Professors Plan Annual Meeting Keysone, S. D., Jan. 17. — (U.PJ — Former President Calvin Coolidge will write a history of the United States from 1776 to 1930 in 500 words or less. The terge historical summary will be engraved on the granite face of Black Hills mountain near the towering figures of Washington, Lincoln, Jefferson and Roosevelt. Officials of the South Dakota Historical Association said the inscription will be legible for 5,000 centuries. o Arcbimede. II The family was out for a Sunday afternoon ride. Each member of the group entered gayly Into the lively conversation about neighbors and the weather—each, that is. except Joe. age six. Joe had said nothing and seemed engrossed in deep thought. Suddenly a look of surprise and wonderment lighted the young man's face and he broke his silence In the voice of one who had fust made a sfrange discovery. “Poppa," he cried. "1 can look straight ahead with one eye and look around with the other!" Aft ' the Unattaioa-i- | "He's on a hunt for blnrj say this of anybody is to Indi cate that the person referred ’» la on a quest for unattainable o> lefts. Tills Is a rather eolo, ful express slop which conies down to us from the days when there wag no such 'hing as a blue rose. As » matter nf fact, this was the •use until unite* recently For It j was only s few years ago that the ■limbing rose called "Vellrhenhlau" —violet blue —was Introduced by he Germans. Until the advent of this species >f rose the flow-- was cultivated inly In th® -ointnon varieties. —Kan <as City Times. | Heart Tissue Still Lives In Institute Now York, Jan. 17.—<U.R>—Living tk.HUe cut from the heart of an cmaryo chicken in 1912 attained its eighteenth birthday today. The tissue was severed by Dr. Alexin Carrel and has been cultivated ever since in the laboratories of the Rockefeller Institute. In recent years the institute lias declined to give out any information regarding the growth of the tissue because the. experiment achieved rather more notoriety than either Dr. Carrel or the institute liked.
LIQUOR TRIAL NEARS CLOSE East Chicago Mayor’s Fate in Hands of A Federal Jury Hammond, Ind., Jan. 17. —(U.PJ— The alleged East Chicago liquor conspiracy, described in the closing plea by government counsel as “a monster that destroyed good government,'* was placed in thy hands of a jury in federal court shortly after 11 o’clock this morning. Earl J. Davis, special assistant prosecutor, completed his argument at 10:36 and Judge Thomas W. Slick immediately began his instructions to the jury. Nineteen persons, including Mayor Raleigh P. Hale and Police i Chief James W. Regan, were defendants. Davis, in the only argument to the jury today, scored Mayor Hale bitterly as the "master mind” of tire a'leged conspiracy. “Hale never made a statement in harmony with the truth." he declared at one point, adding that "the East Chicago booze situation was a reign of terror.” Defense arguments were completed late yesterday. The jury voted Io hear Davis this morning rather than finish the case last
Rebuilt Cleaners |,KE »^ TRit Rebuilt at factory. New ban brush and cord. Guaranteed to f»ive satisfaction. Only a few at Hits special price $12.50 each. NIBLICK & CO.
AUTOS Ke-financed on smaller payments. Quick service. Franklin Security Co. Schafer Bldg. Phone 237
Ashbaucher’s MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739
night. The case is the third of the three general conspiracy cases resulting from federal grand jury action in South Bend last fall. In Hie two Gary cases, three were convicted in one and charges were nolle pressed in the other. , o — Sixth Fire Victim Dies at Indianapolis Indianapolis. Jan. 17— <U.R) —A sixth member of a family of seven who were victims in a gasoline ex-
BETTER USED CARS i LATE MODEL B FORDS, 1 CHEVROLETS, I ] PONTIAC, I ESSEX, 1 DODGE, ! 1 BUICK, > CHRYSLER, STUDEBAKER, NASH, GARDNER, GRAHAM-PAIGE ■ Saylors Motor Co I 213 N. First St. Phone 311 ■
Roy Johnson, Auctioneer 1 COMING SALE DATES Jan p lß v Saie . Belmont >ark, Decatur, Ind. w; V ! mHh ’ 4 mile 80uth - M * 4 west Rockford, Ohio. tj v Jal ‘of 4 lto J ’ . Chapman ’ east ifc* / of Decatur.. W* Jl *"- 1' W ’ lUrt - 1 mile north and U miles east of Monroeville, St Tjßk P-rk !2"’ U . lni,y Bale - Bellmont ff.h\ V D<xatur - Indiana. east nf n n n V™’* 8 ~,ilcß east of Decatur. ’southin' M fte “' < : hber ser. 5 miles FebT-R^ C *R r s ftn Co ’ *” arm If)ad ' Feb 11 Mil - J l' lcher - % mile west rt!D - i J -Mike Saurs, 2 mile west 1 11 — an i e 3 n mn h ° f Conv °F- Ohio. ’ Feb 18 \ * l ' ! J? orth Pret ’le, Ind. My dates are, and u mi', Ehrfismi ‘ n . 1 mile ea«i Feb 15—f’nm 1 m S " Uth E(it ! ert *m. Ind. filling fastParT%T t Unit r Sale - Bellmont Feb 18 “'A* L Ur ’ lndian “. Call at my Feb R 2O kf n" r "’ ° hPi °’ ,ner ’ 4 milt ' B Wt>Bt cxpen3 ° a " d ■•rowJ*** s ’ 4 —
Residence Phone 1022—Office 606 DECATUR, INDIANA
plosion In their on January 7, di<-d today, one survivor. Everett Kluesm r died o! and It s 6 months old twin tj Evelyn, was still in a dition. Parents, two brother died soon a:tei ion in u living room veloped the home in tlaniei. Physicians held Evelyn. HB o I LA ( See the new Dodge li-M
