Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 9 October 1931 — Page 5

* LIMITING WFOWL KILL WDED IN U. S. _ 'fllical Survey Chief |K. S Three Reasons For Decrease 1 : ■ . having no • 'line IO Paul B " reau nt Agriculture. ■ »"' |K ~,„, • . recently I^K.. ir ... • crouglit. and pat'! the reduction ana- where the birds .. ~,1 rads

S COMMUNITY SALE ■ on SATURDAY. OCTOBER 17. 19.31 S at CRAIGVILLE, INDIANA ■ Sale to start at 1 o'clock sharp. Horses. Cattle. Fann Implements. Used Lumber and Tin and many other articles not mentioned. If you have anything to sell bring it to this sale, small commission charge on’ all goods sold. auctioneer. Gideon Gerber, clerk. I Public Sale decided to quit farming, I will selj at auction at the sale at Crainville, Ind., on I SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1931 Sale beginning at 1 o’clock sharp, she following described property: Two hhy work horses. 1 j'-arling Holstein bull; four months old Guernsey |Mtrnrtor disc; tractor plow; wagon 1 , with grain bed; set of low cul tipacker; International corn plow; flale corn plantk mower; Deering hay tedder; Hoosier fertilizer grain ■■seed corn dryer. HBARNESS 1 good set of work harness. st my farm located 3Vi miles south of Craigviile. bC head of early White Rock pullets. articles not mentioned. ■WIS- Will be made known on uuy of sale. I SAMUEL GERBER ] High, auctioneer. ( Lmk-.i

[Appelman’s Grocery fHONES 215 and 219 DELIVERY SERVICE Rating and COOKING QT CHIPSO. Flakes or 91 z. ■ apples, 6 pounds Zt)C Granules, each till ■CALIFORNIA GRAPES 1 rx SOAP, Large 1 th. bar £ _ B ‘‘onnd ,10C PC fil'N KIST ORANGES Qr OLD DUTCH CLEANSER 1r _ ■Jjfeen 25C 2 cans 15C fe TAW 25c ‘^ s ~EANS 25c Fgg 16 75c R, £“ ES 15c |SOVP BEANS EAT NORTHER * JELL-o—3 packages O- [ 1 pounds 91 r» 2 Jell-o Moulds Free ICRanherries 7TZ — perfection special nn [J* Pounds , , 25C ANGEL FOOD CAKE Ot/C To n W ER COFFEE MILLER S CAKES 1* zl -±"und box 1 C TTWE 15c "^^ ~EA,,S ~~sc . SOA>> 25c — rau t—Pork & Beans—Catsup-—Red Beans — each 6e LITTLE ELF SOUP H’NA.mJti'Jr’ VEG BEE F. BEEF. BEEF BOULLION, TOMATO I*/. —. ;EF. TOM. VEG., 5 cans.. (1 can Vegetable Soup Free) ~rOC for every milk and cream use 2 Tall cans 15c * *w 5 Small cans 25c

tlon of more than 111,000 acres in Carolina, Colorado, Florida, Nebras ka, North Carolina and South Carolina. Through executive orders about 65.000 acres have been set aside for like purposes in public lands in California, Montana, Neva- | da and Oklahoma. This gives a toI tai of 176,000 acres in nine states. Nevertheless, according to Redington, drastic action will have to f be taken soon it the supply of game birds is to be kept up. Such action he said should consist of “effective regulation and limitation of the kill of the birds," which has totaled bes tween 12.000,000 and 15,000,0000 ani- naully. y . 0 Airedale Swims Seven u Miles To Safety tLondon. —(UP) —An afrdale dog ~ swam seven miles to shore after be e tag swept into the sea from a steam y drifter in the vicinity of the Island p of Eigg, on the west coast of Scotland. e It was taken care of by a wo- , man doctor on the Island and after h wards returned to Its owner, a fisherman engaged with the Lossieb mouth fishing fleet. Furnaces For SkaterT" Y St. Marys, O.—(U.R)—Four huge f outdoor furnaces are being Installed in Gordon State park here so s that skaters may keep warm this - winter.

DELAWARE WILL I AID UNEMPLOYED Wilmington, DeI.,XU,R)- Deleware has $5,000,600 available for its emergency construction program with which to combat the unemployment situation this winter, accoring to Governor C. Douglas Buck, and Deleware has only a population of 238,830,. lids vast amount of money, Governor Buck said is in addition to the $2,500,000 the State Highway Commfsion will have available for road construction this fall, which includes a new 18-mile highway from Wilmington southwestward to the Maryland line, leading to Elkton, Md. And if all this money is not enough, Governor Buck is ready to do the exceptional-call a special meeting of the State Legislature and ask it to approve of more plans he has in mind for emergency work. One of the peculiar features of Delewares construction program is the elimination of machinery whenever possible. Any machine that displaces four men, for an instance, will he discarded and four men taken on, if it is possible, however, to ignore the machine. For charity and immediate relief. money will be gathered by contributions from every state employe and from every state payrolls of large manufacturing and business firms. These people have all pledged to contribute one per cent of their salaries during the winter months for relief funds. New Hampshire Girl Busy With Cobbling Rochester, N. H. —(UP)—If you should walk into Ernest L. Dearborns shop and see a girl on a stool behind the counter stuff her mouth full of shoe nails, don’t be alarmed, it’s merely Charlotte Burleigh 16, cobbler by trade. Charlotte's home is near the Dearborn shop, and from childhood the girl was fascinated by the cobbler's craft. She was observant and inquisitive, so much so that a few years ago she started to repair her own shoes and those of her family. Dearborn was rather surprised I when Charlotte, following her grad- | nation from high school, applied for a job. but he happened to need an assistant. So Charlotte Burleigh, clad in knickers and a man's shirt of rough cloth, daily helps to keep Rochester ou its feet. o Centenarian Active Long Eddy, N. Y — (U.R) —Long past the age when other persons retire, George Fuigeson. 101, still is active. It is a common sight to see Sullivan county's oldest citizen chop wood and do a laborer’s work, The aged man has 15 grandchildren and 25 great grandchildren. Bunyan's Last Descendant Glens Falls, N. ¥.— (U.R) —The latest descendant of John Bunyan, author of the noted “Pilgrim's Progress,’’ is John Bunyan Stuart, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Sutherland Ruggs Stuart. The bady was born recently.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1931.

Al Has Lighter Moments *»■ ’K • rw j r ■ m "i . i V’ V?. X A, r--’ : ■ Jkfe-• i * Mt?’ - / L■ W| w■/ f w ® lan<i?blggest h ßl.ot' Umed Stales go''*.'ritmen" the big'boy' Idmself "To S’ UeftraL^LbTTmk 8

Capone on Way to Court I'' '*'""** .. , Txts *' v 'v'i JI r^* : ’ <' ••• ■ ffiWCtrTrtr • ‘ ‘ .-t. C ‘r - . . bKmI mHMBI • i'i... < . MR*<MMHW Al Capone, kingpin of Chicago's underworld, is shown here as he left his car to enter the Federal Building to attend his trial on charges ot income tax frauds. TrVIO TBV BinO using such a servin' for several IL lA\ I AY Alt IX years. The Pantagraph also uses I L/\flV I 11/* fIIUU its planes to obtain pictures and! - _ _ f° r various promotional stunts. 11l \ fir I fLI UrT\ Iu southel ' n Ulinois the first UjOfiOLLU VL I 0 newspaper said to have adopted I this style of delivery was the | West Frankfort Daily American. , San Antonio, 1 ex.. (UP) More j q<he publishing company recently I than 100 unemployed heads of fa- a( ] ( ] e( j a plane to its delivery servrhilies have-been put to work here | ce aU( j w jj| now transport its lat» through a combination of the new ; editiollg t 0 nearhy cl tfes. state tax on cigarets and the ingen-, 0 ulty of Theodore Ahlborn. Now Ahl vmc t i i x_ born plans to help disabled war Wife Asks .IlldgC to Jail veterans. Cropped Haired Hubby ' A month ago Ahlborn, a native of Germany, sat on an Alamo Plaza; Webster. Mass.. — (UP)-Frank[ park bench and wondered where Niw “ ic ' B Penchant for having his his next meal was coming from. Hair close ctopited caused his wife Then he observed a girl rolling cig n " Pnil 1,1 embarrassment when, arets on a hand-rolling machine in •hey went to social functions. a window across the street. He not She asked a district court judge I 'lced several unnecessary motions to put him in jail for five days so In the operation of the mat hine he would have to leave his hair designed legally to beat the state grow, but an out cfatourt settlement j tax. * as H /*id 10 have been reached. He conceived a new machine, ami e ’ was able to explain it so well ho I City Sealer Winks Eye managed to borrow enough money PhonCV Baby Scales from a stranger to make a sainpl The sample worked well maim- Chicago —(UP) Joe Bruin, city tacture of the machines began at B eajer. whose campaign for houust once and within eight days Ahlborn weights in stores lias made him unwas abl<‘ to put to voi b :n->i • ih.ii popular uitli unscrupulous m< r luio unemployed heads of families, j chants, winks his eye on excessive Ahlboru uow plans to make a , weight on one type ot scab', at least million of the machinas. and then I 1 hat scale is the kind infants are turn his rights over to the Disabled weighed on Veterans of America, so disabled "if jf’]] make ’em happier, let (he veterans can make the machines (o I mothels ovarweigh ’em,’ says Joe earn their livings. A cent from the who is a bachelor, sale of each machine goes to the | o local chapter of the disabled veter-1 Caterpillars May Meet ans organization now. Springfield. Mass. (U.R) —Mem0 ' bers of the Caterpillar Club, comIllinois Newspapers pos' d of aviators who have had to Send Editions By Plane w "" t J I will meet here soon it plans oi Springfield ill., -(UP)-Use Of lA ; lr '° n U ~' ’t Ur Ch “ n,ber airplanes to deliver newspapers to 1 7 Jmi " er . ce He is outlying districts is being undertak- K€>U, " g 1,1 ,0 “‘ 11 , u,,h I tl,p v “ , ~,. ; members with the idea ot bringen by several newspapers In I i- ... . . ~ .. , tug them together, nois iu an effort to expedite the de livery of editions. Youth May Get Medrl One of the first papers to use; Schnectady, N. Y (U.R)—Saving airplanes for such service was the I the lives ot two adults msy merit' Chicago Daily News, which inau-; Allen Roosa. 12. a Carnegie medal? gurated the airplane d- livery ser- His fellow boy scouts are working vice tor its late editions in the area toward that end. Roo.-ia rescued surrounding the metropolis Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Young ot The Bloomington Pantagraph is Gloversville when they fell Irom a> another newspaper which has been boat.

PRAYER MEETING AIDED NEEDY Chicago, —(UP)—Practical application of a Wednesday night i prayer meeting text, "sowing good ' seed" was made by members of the , New England Congregational i church. During the prayer meeting a par 1 ishioner announced an opportunity ' for going good. “As I came down Lake Shore; drive,'* he said. “I saw a man and a woman on the parkway adjoining the beach. He was rubbing her feet, apparently trying to warm them, | and then wrapped his coat around i I them. x “As I watched, he spread out newspapers in the bushes. It looked as if they were preparing to spend the night there." A collection was taken and after some sea: ch. the couple was found huddled in the bushes. Both were about 25. They were coatless and hatless. The woman was without shoes, only tattered stockings covering her feet. He,r husband had wrapped her feet in newspapers and a thin shawl and had placed his coat over her. He was In his shirt sleeves. The night was cold. The church members gave them funds to obtain lodging and food. A physician announced he would give! them medical 311100(1011 free of charge. The young woman, he said ' was on the verge of pneujnonia. David Campbell motored to Bluffton. Thursday, where he attended to 1 business. I i - _____ __ '

■aTTmiw ■min num mi—— ■ iiiiimiiiiiiiiiihiih iiii i ihi iit /O\ PRICES TALK! VjrVV / UNUSUAL SAVINGS 1659 • f ! ON HIGH QUALITY MERCHANDISE 1 WHERE ECONOMY RULES SCRATCH FEED DAILY BRAND 98 lb. bag $1.39 DILL PICKLES, Master Brand Qt. Jar 15c DANDY OYSTER CRACKERS pound pkg. 13c DEL MONTE PRI NES Two 2-lb. pkgs. 29c PRUNES 70-80 size .... Ifrs. 29c CANDY BARS Bonday Box of 21 bars 59c NAVY BEANS—Hand Picked lb. 5c SPARKLE—Gelatine Dessert pkg. 5c PANCAKE FLOUR 5c MARSHMALLOW’S—I pkg of Cracker Jack Free—lb. box 20c CREAM CHEESE—Wisconsin lb. 19c TOMATO SOl’P—Campbell’s 3 cans 20c PET MILK Evaporated - - J 2.§C I 8 O’CLOi K COFFEE—World’s Largest Seller lb. 19c 1 BREAD—Grandmother’s Twin or Regular 1 «/ 2 lb. loaf 7c I RlCE—Fancy Bulk |), j c CIGARETTES Popular Brands Carton $1.32 SALAD DRESSING — Rajah yt, jar 29c SOAP—P. & G. or Kirk’s Flake 3 bars 10c CORN—Standard Pack 3 No. 2 cans 25c PINEAPPLE crushed Z 35C | FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES I SWEET POTATOES 10 lbs. for 23c ’’•ANANAS 4 lbs. for 22c CELERY—Large Stalks 3 fro 10c ONIONS — Yellow 48 lb. bag 89c IF©©© STOKES The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.

PIONEER LOST PROFIT ON BEDS Butte, Mont., —(UP) — Herman] 'Graaf, Montana pioneer, was paid. 1 SIOO each for bods he made from ! packing boxes during the early | days—and failed to make a profit. Graaf, a German emigrant boy, j drifted into Helena, Mont., in 1870 ' He had learned to be a cabinet I maker in Germany, and after an 1 unsucc, ssful try at gold panning. ! decided to return to his trade. A dance hall proprietor wanted I eight black walnut beds made and offered to pay Graaf SBOO to build i 'hem. Graaf, accepted readily be-1 cause at that time black walnut was so plentiful in the United States it was used to crate furniture which was hipped “knocked down" to the west. (iiaaf set to work, expecting to j realize a nice profit from his venture. He made the beds and set them up. Through his lack of knowledge of the English language Graaf had misunderstood the dance hall own er and had built the beds for the wrong houses and found that they would not go through the doors of the cabins. Undaunted, Graaf proceeded to! I remove the roof of the one-story i j cabins and lowered the beds into, 1 place. But he had to hiie help and ! the expense was so great that he I . did not make a dollar. — O Troopers Killed 15,000 Dogs Harrisburg, Pa.—(U.R)—Police of- ' ficials in Pennsylvania exterminated 15,4(10 unlicensed dogs for the I I first eight months of 1931. The i VUMHHBSCanBaEaBMBMBKfInE

BAKED GOODS I that are always GOOD Bnkl/V Quality 1 lb. Loaf... 5c next BnS*? Sln «‘ e I!read ’ IV2 »’• next time you ord- , , _ er. Baked fresh ’ Bc or 2 f <»r 15c daily by master Millers Twin. I l i lb. bakers they have „ L , •• ••; 8c no equal. You can Round Bread 10c buy Miller’s Bread _ 3 *°F • 25c and Pastry at your Sandwich Bread . 10c | grocers or meat ,or ; “? c 1 market. We also Dinner Buns, dozen ac I fill special orders G,azed lX»u«hnuts, _ I for parties or social ~, oz ® n ~;.‘ ‘, I affairs. Glazed W hole W heat Doughnuts, dozen 25c H See us for Special Orders Ask your grocery and meat market etc. Millers Bakery I PHONE 1 DECATUR T

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number was a slight increase over the 1930 total. There were 476,056 dogs licensed in the state for the same period, a decrease of 1,500 over the 1930 figures for the corresponding date. o Hoosier Owns One Os World’s First Typewriters Huntington, Indiana-(U.R)- William ! Peeler, living here,, has what he beI licves to be the first typewriter ouilt in the United States. With the original machine Peeler believes he . has the first typewritten letter sent 1 through the U. S. mails. The letter was written by his father, Abner Peeler, June 19, 1866 ■ It was addressed to his wife at their* ' home in Webster City, la. At the | time Peeler was traveling by stagecoach to Washington, D. C. to obtain a patent on the machine. The model Peeler took to Washington he found to be too large to come under the patent law. He returned to his home and spent two years making inmprovements. On his second trip to the capital he learned that the idea had been duplicated and sold for S4OOO. Peeler however was paid SISOO tor improvements. College Cuts Enrollment Albany, N. Y.—(U.R) —In order to .avoid a surplus of teachers, 300 students have been denied entry jto the State College for Teachers i here. “There would be no point 1 to training more students for the (teaching profession than could be used, Dr. A. R. Brubacher, president, said. o Two to One Foot ailments afflict two women for every nutn.