Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1932 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES •- — 4 FOR SALE sATe -R plece'Walnut Dining room suite, like new. Kitchen cahlnett. Inquire at 115 Marshall St., or phone 591. 170-3tx FOR SALE —Used piano In A-l condition. Cabinet bench. I’riced cheap for quick sale. Sprague Fur-1 nitnro Co., Monroe street. Phone 199. g!7O-3t FOR~SALE — Refrigerator] - ;reason-, ably priced. Call 176. gl7l-3t PRIVATE SALE Os following fir.niture for cash at once, at 409 N. 7th St. Phone 4631; one 8 x 14 Wilton nig, one S x 12 Axmtnxter rug, | one three-piece overstufter suite, one oak dining table, buffet and mirror, Nappanee kitchen cabinet, breakfast suite, 2 iplece walnut bedroom suite with Simmons springs and spring filled mattress, floor lamp, bridge lamp, smoking stand, 2 end tables, one morris chair, ” rockers, all In fine shape and priced cheap for immediate sale. " bl7o-3tx FOR SALE—Red raspberries. Henry Yake, Route 2, Decatur. Craigville ipbone. g172-3tx FOR SALE Gray horse. 4 yr. old. E. W. Schladenhauffen, % mile south of Kirkland school. Craigville phone 9 on 16. 171A3tx WANTED WANTED—To rent a 6 or 7 room modern house. Write box “T” incare the Democrat b172-3t 1.. ,-—0— —>■ —.l. LOST AND FOUND LOST.. Female Boston bull terrier. Brindle in color and with one white eye. Finder please call John I Joseph, phone 162. al7l-3tx - FOR RENT t'OR RENT- Modern residence, 503 ( North sth. St. Possession (August i 1. Call Ed. S. Moses, phone 864-L — g172-3tx v 0 , I ♦ J « MARKETS AT A GLANCE By United Press Stocks rise to around best levels ’ ot movement. Bonds spurt under lead of do-1 mestic corporation issues. Curb stock advance; utilities, oils ] and industrials in demand. Chicago stocks quiet and steady.' Call money 2 per cent. Foreign exchange mixed; sterling eases. Wheat firms up fractions: corn and oats steady. Chicago livestock: Hogs 10 to] 15c higher; cattle steady; sheep mostly steady. Cotffffl steady around previous closing levels. Rubber recovers early dip. o Hen Adopts Kittens Gridley, Cal. (U.R) —Usually there is no friendship between cats and chickens. but not so on a ranch near Gridley. Four orphan kittens at the home of Mrs. Cord Lewis have been adopted by a mother hen, and spend the greater part of their time under the protection of the hen’s wings. Furniture Industry History Grand Raipida Mich. — (UP) — George F. Clingman, recognized as "the dean” of the furniture industry, is writing a history of the industry in Western Michigan. The book, which will include technical as well as historical data, will be called “Fifty Years of Furniture” The author Is 75 years old. Queen and Jester l.- /,n 1 h * IF 1 ML >-] . < Wf 7 J Hailed by many as “Queen of the American Stagje,” Ethel Barrymore, of the thespian royal family, is shown with a man eminently fitted for the position of court jester. Know him? Yes, it's Jimmy (ScbnoZ2!&i» Durante, famous clown, ihow-n entertaining Miss Barrymore at the opening of “Strange Interlude” in Sid Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. '

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET orreeted July 21 No commission and no yardage. Hogs 100 150 pounds $4.15 150-200 pounds $4.55 I'2o 250 pounds $4.35 250-300 (pounds $4.15 Roughs $3.00 Stags $1.50. Va tiers $5.75. i Spring lambs $5.00. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind.. July 21.—(U.R) ■ —Livestock market: Hog market, steady to 15c higher; pigs. $4.35-$4.50; light lights, $4.50 $4.65: lights, $4.65-$4.75; mediums. $4.50-$4.65: heavies, $4.35$4.50; roughs. $3-$3.50; stags. $2.50$3; calves. $6 $6.25; ewe and wether lambs. $5 75; bucks, $4.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. Wheat, old .45 47% .50% Wheat, new .45 .47% Corn .30% .31% .31% Oats' .16% .17% .20% CLEVELAND PRODUCE Butter: Market unsettled; extras 20%; Standard 20. Eggs: Market weak; extras 15'4. extra first 14%; current rets. 13. Poultry market steady; heavy fowls 14-15; medium fowls 14-15; Leghorn fowls 11-13; heavy broilers 16-19; Leghorn broilers 13-14; ducks 10-12; old cocks 9-10; geese j 7-8. No potato quotes. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y. July 21—(UPi —4l. gs: on sale —800; slow, few sales 15c over Wednesday's avera- | age; good to choice 160-210 lbs. $5.25; plainer kinds $5.15; pigs and I weights around 240 lbs. held at $5. Cattle: receipts 250; holdovers i 100; butcher cattle trade virtually at standstill;; scattered bids un- | evenly and sharply lower; few pasi ture fed steers 25c lower, $6.25; cutter cows $1.25-$2.50. Calves: Receipts 100; vealera weak to 50c lower, bulk better lots $7; some firmly held $7.50. Sheep: Receipts — 300; latnlis I unchanged; quality and sorts con-! | sidered; good to choice native len- ; iently sorted $6.50; inbetween grad- ] es $5.50; throwouts $4.50; inferior CHICAGO FRUIT MARKET Chicago, July 21—(UP)—by department of agriculture—Fruit quotations: Apples: Illinois yellow transpar- ' ents bu 40-10; Michigan yellow I transparent bu 100; Illionis Dutch- I I ess 35-125. Canteloups: Arizona Jumbo cts. 1175-215; Arkansas 100-125; Indiana ' 125-152. Mellons: California honey dews ■ 100-125 hone balls 175-225; Raspberries: Red 24 pt Michigan 100-175; BBlack 24 pt Mich 75-90; ] 16 qt Mich 100-110. I Peaches: Qeorgia Hylees % bu I 150-165; Arkansas bu 200-300; % i bu ’75. ' I Cherries: Michigan 16 qt sour 75, sweet 125-200. Blueberries: Michigan 16 qt 100225. uOCAL GRAIN MARKET orreeted July 21 No. 1 New Wheat 60 lbs or ■ better . 35c • i No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 34c] I Old or New Oats 13c I I New Oats 13 C I I Soy Beans 3o c 1 New No. 3. White Corn 32c | No. 3 Yellow corn 37c ■ LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET I Eggs, dozen 12c i —o TeetFj Marks License Pay Racine, Wis. —(UP)—Patrolman I Christ Christensen went to a home ' here to collect a dog license. The ] dog met him at the door. ChristenI sen left bearing teeth marks that | did not sho wwhen he sat down. J. M. DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTOR Modern, Dependable 24 hour service. MRS. DOAN, '.ady Attendant Ambulance Service anywhere. Phone 1041 I'or Better Health See j DR. IL FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m, 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. I Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST I ; Eyea Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“SECOND ( x GMI W. MY /on YEAH’ 1 / YES. THM i Yo. Y fe'&MWwWY MY NEXT BIRWtWp : 5 x': .l'.-; ■ ’ Be ouve oylsA wu Be (JHVtHn. Goo PRemTOßic voo.oepwjy/ —X;77 ? — U THAT SO.« '• @ ■ < J- ICw n b__b - » 13

RIOT AT MARSEILLES. ILL. - —r*?.*??* p J \ H* _ . vw '>l * 11l f ftb. f> I .’a j/ W 'l, r i-W t.l - 1 ‘7 s "SEESS “ J • ’■■■ a ”

One man was killed and twenty-two others wounded in a furious battle Tuesday at the Illinois River federal dam project at Marseilles. 111. The rioting was the outgrowth of a labor feud of several weeks standing. Picture at left shows Sheriff E. J. Welter (left) of La Salle County, questioning 11. W. Miller Jr., superintendent of construction

Scene of Illinois Labor Clash y»t ~ -*• .i ■" ’’ i I t ’ " " ’ . '■'x. ■’ 4 . ,O. -< J-*■" ’ Is. C , - L ShaView ot the dam being constructed by the federal government at Marseilles, 111., where nonunion and union labor forces clashed Tuesday. One man was killed and twenty-two injured in the fighting.

i W. C. T. U. Prays for Prohibition San Antonio, Tex. —(UP)—Prayers a .skin- Hi it the national Demo- , cratic and Republican conventions | take no stetp toward repealing the , J 18th amendment were ottered at . i a special meeting 'of members of j the Women’s Chiistian Temperance Union he:e. Snake Devours Macaroni Oregon 'House, Cal., —(UP) —Mrs. : i Walter Jacoby was making mac- ; aroni salid. She boiled the mac-| laroni; placed it on her kitchen; | porch t'O cool. Hut when she re- 1 turned the |jan was (bare. A big I attlesnake was Weaving down the j steps. Inkling its chops in a satisti- i ed manner. The reptile was killed. ■ | Immigration Increases Hartford, Conn.| —(UP) — An effect of the business depression j observed by U. S. Immig atioh Inspector Laurent L. Martineau is ' S. E. BLACK Funeral Director Efficient, courteous, capable service. Calls answered day and uight. Ambulance service. 500—Phones—727 E. L. Mock, M. D. announces opening of an office in the K. of (.'. Building, Decatur, Phone 166 Special attention to diseases and surgery of eye, ear. nose and throat OTHO LOBENSTEIN FUNERAL PARLOR Monroe, Ind. Mr; Lobenstein, Lady Attendant. Business phone 90—Residence 81. Free Ambulance Service i 24 hour service.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932.

Headed for Congress —wß Seeking one of the three new seats created for the State of Texas as a result of its increased population, Mrs. Ida M. Barden (above), of Fort Worth, is a candidate for Congress. Two other women are among the 38 aspirants to Congressional honors and as each of the three women are in a different group, one or all three may be elected. the return to their homelands of numerous foreign-ba: n residents. An average of 150 aleins a month have sought re-entry permits so they could go to their home countries and return here when busi--1 ness picks up, he said. Traffic Officer Resumes Duty I LOVELAND, Col. (U.K) Speed ing tourists may like to know that J the traffic officer has resumed , 1 duties in Big Thompson Canyon, par rolling the highway from Lovei laud to Estes Park. i

company building the dam. Group photo at right, Carl Zetterbec of I Joliet. Sheriff Welter. Roy F. Neulieb, state policeman; Stanley Murray deputy sheriff; Ed Echvareli. state policeman; Clift Anderson of Joliet, and Jess Thomas of Marseilles shown with guns taken from employes of construction company following the riot.

Minister to Be Recalled Moscow, —(UP)—It is .generally unde stood hero that Sdinlslav Patek, Polish Minister here s<x>n will be recalled. Thio recall, it is pointed out, is in no sense a rebuke, but •well-informed circles assert that his retirement is due to his age. College to Honor Adams Chester, Pa., —(UP) — Charles Francis Adams. Secret* y of the Navy, will 'bo awarded the honorary ' degree of doctor of laws at the ! 112 the annual commencement exercises of the Pennsylvania Military ; College here June 7. 0 Symphony Fund Sought Seattle (UP) A city-wide d mjzaign was launched here to rai-e , 128,fj00 to save Seattle's symphony i orchestra, for the season of ldJ2-33. o Major Crimes Decrease I St. Louis —(UP) —Despite a con- ■ siderable increase in unemployment major crimes in St. Louis decreased by 425 during the first six ? months of this year as compared i with last yea-, ipolied records rei veal. Automobile thefts lend with [ 1,536. There were 44 murders. i—o Old Altar Stone in Crypt St. Louis.—(U.R) An altar stone, ■ prsed as early, as 1675 in Francs, is i :r the crypt of St. Francis Xavier’s . i church here. The stone, brought to ' St. Ixntis by Father Marquette when ' he was tracing the course of the i Mississippi River, is believed to be • | the oldest in America. 0 _ Police Stop Turtle Fights I Hartford, Conn. —(UP)—Police (have been faced to stop some 'queer fights here, but the queerest tjwas in the Park River—between 1 two large turtles. <A patrolman bori. rowed a hnat and roped the cmi- battled creatures. One weighed 50 pounds and the other 40. I

Machinery Exports Up Washington —(UD— Exports of (industrial machinery from the i . United States in May totaled $5,150, 1000, compared with $4,570,00 in A.ril. the C. mmerce Department said today. Official-- said that $5. ' 000,000 seemed o be the t p limit i c.f industrial machinery that can be i absorbed by foreign markets at this ! time. o Take Wheel-Chair "Tours” .i Darlington. England, (UP) , Harold Perkins, of this t >wn. | takes his invalid wife f r hikes itt !a wheel-chair. They sometimes i cover 30 miles a day, sleeprag i I whereiver night catches them. |-; O — | Get the Habit — TracD at Home

1 i'-' A £ 41 E. £ <JUHr Jr i ' V i 75c Va,ue 50c Value 60c Value"" E Fancy Racket Wirt ‘ Bound B Shopping Baskets Screwdrivers COTTO A MOPS ■ Attractive and A Handy Li tie Tool to A WELL MADE H Serviceable Use Around the House HANDLED MOP j 3?c_ 10c 19c| SENSATIONAL SALE OF NEW ! PARCHMENT LAMP SHADES Rf ■neas al .. . VALUES IN THIS GROUP ' UP TO $1.50 | NW I I i lO IO ’i each B IT WILL ALWAYS PAY YOU TO SHOP AT THIS STOKE I SCHAFER HDW COl

* Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these | | test questions? Turn to Page | Four for the auswerg. * — 7 ~ ’ | 1 Who wrote the story Pigs Is | Pigs?” i 2.—Wh>t are iron pyrites ; ontotimes called? . 3 h uw does Germany obtain the personnel to man tier navy? 4. (tn what date did the I . S. de- I dare war against Germany? , Where is the city of Cheyenne? ' 6 —who wrote "Mourning Becomes Electra.’ ’ | 7—what is the plural of datum? ! S.— For whom wag Pennsylvania named? | 9.— What is the smallest state in | area in the U. S ? di).—What does silicide mean? Pennsy Fishermen Open War on Water Dogs WILLIAMSPORT. Pa.— <U.R) —j ; Fishermen in this section declar-l | nd war on water dogs, also known! jas salamanders and hellbenders. I The anglers claimed that the! i salamanders not only eat fish: 'spawn, but also kill larger fish.| One caught recently held an] ■eight-inch trout and the tails of I five smaller fish. o ______ Weight Lost—Swim a Tie Leetsdale. Pa., — (UP) — When I 1 diet fails, you might try swimming off that surplus weight. Patrolman Roy Wilson and Miss Helen McCrea recently swam a one-mile race . in the Ohio River here—the winner t> be determined by the amount as weight loss. It ended ia a dead heat. ' Each lest 4% pounds during the ■ race. 796 Crossing Crashes IHarrisburg, Flu, —(UP) Automobile drive: s who failed to stop at street and highway intersections j designated as through highway ] crossing- eaus d 796 accidents durpng the first five ninths of 1932, iacc rding to first five months of

State Tjr Univers, lt y t ga „ Philadei, inn ( ..JHB <al I'eiin.-i Iva a tile mist ‘ f the 111 ad' hi y ' ill-. I tltrteU S , . ■MB Civil War 4 . d .. 4 < I < 111 lb io ■ Age Limit h Jf I' i' ..II .10 i l l a —■ B Old Tilt ? Heapoedi Mn . the . list 7f i ,i , — —

■ ~ J Proper I uneralH —services c ings. They a : ,rn • ience only. Mg W. H. Zv. :a nB FUNER\I. I'Hrl T.gj■■ Mrs. 7.x nk. ' i: r’um nil lit "; ■ll N. Secund