Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 194, Decatur, Adams County, 16 August 1932 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES » ♦ FOR SALE FOR SALE—Two used pianos in A-l condition. Your choice 142 50 Sprague Furniture Co., Monroe St. Phone 199 b!93-3t FOR SALE OR TWVDE — Black horse. 9 years old. will sell or trade tor young cow or hogs. Christ Marbach, 2 rings on 697. b!94-3tx FOR SALE OR TRADE—I New two wheel trailer. Will sell or trade tor shouts. Harry Frauhig- 1 er, 421 No. 7th at. 19:ta3tx FOR SALE—Nice canning pickles, 75c bushel; large 25c. Call afternoons or evenings, 1 nilie south of Kirkland high school, John Stetten. Craigville phone. altx FOR SALE — Guernsey and Holstein bull. Homer Ginter, % mile east of Peterson. 193t3x FOR SALE—Two Jersey cows, fresh. Carl Smith 1% mile south of Peterson. a!93-3tx FOR SALE —8 room modern house 413 Adams street, near high school bldg. Small down payment, balance like rent. See Thomas Dowling. 192t3 LOST AND FOUND LOST —Threshing machine cover. 53_i)y 25 feet. North west of AJpnroe. Reward. Menno Roth. Rhone 76. k193-3tx iZisT —Red Men ring, about a •-mojith ago. Initials inside. Finder please phone 5361. Rerjfird. 194t3x * WANTED WANTED —To do housework. Experfrffß'pd. Write box "MIH" % Democrat... b193-3tx I WANTED—Work us practical nursing and help with light house work. PhtTijJ393 Mrs. John Scheimann. * 1943tx — WANTED —Watches and clocks to repair. Prices reasonable. Work guaranteed. Shop located at Green Waters. Roy Lehman, residence 1-'2.3u 15th st. 194a3tx - FOR RENT FORJIENT —Six room house, all nitWft’in with furnace and hardwoorfDioors on South First street. I Al»»*v.‘ room tlat, furnace with priVST“e entrance. Call Dyonis Schmitt, Mercer avenue 194a3t FOR RENT —5 room house, modfurnace at 3(T4 North Nint* st. Inquire Pete Gaffer. - ZZ 194t3x o Jeff Davis' Flag in Museum Richmond, Va„ —(UP)—A silk Confederate flag, which w-is placed on -she casket of President Jefferson TJhvis when his body was lying in S4ate has been presented to the Confederate Museum,, it was announced by Miss Susan Harrison, house regent. The flag, which was maR by Mrs. James A. Brander, wife of Major Brander, was given to be placed in the former home of President Davis by Mrs. Brander's daughters. Mrs. William Mayo Taliaferron and Miss Elizabeth Brunder. • o “Non-Resident Honor Students jCorvallis. Ore.— (U.R) —Only two, 34 Oregon State College stu-| (fents who won awards and honors I are from outside the state. Maude 1 Bally. freshman in Agriculture, is from Kalispell, Mont., and the other. Ruth DeArmond, sophomore in Home Economics, is from Sitka, Alaska. Appointment of Adminlstrnlnr Notice is hereby given. That the Undersigned lias been appointed Administrator of the estate of Rev. Adolph ft. Fledderjuiiann late of Adams County, deceased, rhe estate Js probably solvent. Alfred ft. Ashbaucher, Administrator Fruechte and Lltterer, Attorneys. August 6, 1932 Aug 9-16-23 Appointment of Administrator Notice is hereby given. That the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Sophie Rossman late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probaftfjC solvent. The Peoples Loan and Trust Company of Fort Wayne. Administrator Morris. Newirk and Hasley Attys. August 6, 1932 Aug 9-16-23 ——————— o %ppointwent of A<lmi«i*tra<or Notice Im hereby given, That th* un*Jer«ig-ned haw been appointed Administrator of the estate of Albert W. Ftossrnan late of Adams Count*, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. The Peoples Loan and Trust Company of Fort Wayne, Administrator Morris. Newirk and Hash. Attys. .OTHO LOBENSTEIN FUNERAL PARLOR Monroe, Ind. Mr*.’ Lobenstein, Lady Attendant. Business phone 90—Residence 81. ' .IX ree Ambulance Service 24 hour service. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST E>«b Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11 iSO—I2:3O to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p- tn. Telephone 135

MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS ' I Ills I ■ BERNE MARKET ■ Corrected August 16 i No commission ana no yardage. 1 ■ Hogs, 10V-125 pounds $4.10 156-200 pounds $4.70 220-250 pounds $4.40 250-300 pounds $4.20 Roughs $2.75. Stags $1.50. Vealers $6.25. Spring lambs $5.00. 4 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat old 51% 54% 59% new 51% Corn 31% 32% 37% Oats 16% 18% 21% Indianapolis Livestock Market Hog receipts 6.000; holdovers. 319; mostly 10c lower; 160-210 Tbs $4.80-4.85; 210-235 Tbs. $4.70-4.75; 235-260 lbs. $4.50-4.60; 260-280 R>s $4.30-4.40; 280-325 lbs. $4 10-4.20:' 140-160 tbs. $4.55-4.65; 100-140 lbs. $4.25-4.50; packing sows $3 3.85. Cattie receipts 2.000; calf receipts 598; good and choice fed classes active, steady-strong; lower grades no more than steady; steer run liberal, including numerous loads above $9; top $9.66 for weights 1.391 lbs; some heifers $6.50-7.50; strictly choice held above $8; plain grades $3.25-4.50; most cows $2.75-4: several $4.254.50; odd head $5; low cutters and cutters $1.25-2.50; vealers steady $6 down. Sheep receipts 3.500; lambs around 25e off; good ewe and wethers $6-6.25; bucks $1 less; throwouts down to $2.50. East Buffalo Livestock Market Hogs: on sale 800; slow, desirable 150-210 lbs. steady $5.40; bidding weak to 10c lower on 230-250 Tbs. Cattle receipts TOO. Cows unchanged; cutter grades $1.75-2.75. Calf receipts 200, vealers steady I good to choice $7.50; medium kinds ‘ and grassy offerings $6-6.50. Sheep receipts 700. lambs steady good to choice ewe and wether lambs $6.56; Itucks $5.50; throwouts $4.50-5; few mixed lots $5.25. Fort Wayne Livestock Market Hog market 10c lower; pigs $4.25-4.50; light lights $4.60-4.75: lights $4.80-4.90; mediums $4 65- : 4.75; heavy $4.25-4.40; roughs $3-1 3.50; stags $1.50-2; calves $6; ewe and wether lambs $5.50; bucks $4.50. LOCAL grain market Corrected August 16 No. i New Wheat 60 lbs or better 44c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 43c I Old or New Oats 13c Soy Beans 30c New No. 3 White corn 33c Nc. 3. Yellow corn 38c LOCmL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 13c o "Shinptasters" Redeemed Albany, Ore. —(UP) —A pocketfull of post civil war “shfhplast-l ers” were redeemed at face value I here by the First National Bank fori D. W. Jones of Sodaville, marking •a phase of the anti-hoarding campaign. or possibly the when do we I eat campaign. “Shinplasters’’ are, paper money of small denominaficn including 3, 5. 10, 15, 25 and 50 ; cent values. Jones had kept them | until now as souvenirs. Ex-Senator Wins at Golf Boston. —(U.R) —Frederick <H. Gillett, octogenarian and former U. S. Senator, shot a 47-43 —90 in the New England senior golfers’ championships at Woodland recent'y. Gillett's net of 60 gave him the title for players over 75 years of age. , DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attertluu given to diseases of catde and poultry. Ouice and Res. 508 No. 3rd st. i • PHONE 102. , lor Bette* Health See DR. IL FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6to 8 p. m. Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st.) S. E. BLACK Funeral Director It Is only natural that the final services should be perfect in . every way. That's Black’s . Method. 500—Phone—727 Lady Assistant , I Ambulance Service ’I— E. L. Mock, M. D. announces opening of an office iu [ the K. of C. Building, Decatur. | Phone 166 ' Special attention to diseases and ' surgery of eye, ear. nose and throat

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING “GOING NA IIYE Y SEqJ _____ —————— —7 —l.cq ll YA GETS FOR.I T i'A fiQ~l ijsf .1 HES MEAN TO OJALK'.-ALUJAVS/ H® < fMfl x m ! '■« ® E2.4

New Hoover Cabinet Member Dynamic Business ‘ Go-Getter " * ♦ * * * * Recently-Appointed Roy D. Chapin, Who Takes the Secretary of Commerce Portfolio, Has Had a Whirlwind and Successful Career as a Motor Car Industry Executive. ■ ( I I I \ w ’fc J F 1 ■ \V / 4 J l ® 2 J | M J I 1 1 S 3 If i IBmi B' \ /Roy D. Chapin -;— □

Detroit. — Roy D. Chapin, newlyappointed Secretary of Comnierte in President Hoover's cabinet, is a, I two-fisted go-getter. In plunging I into the big job of overseeing the national economic panorama. Mr. Chapin has one objective—selling the idea of prosperity to the American people. “You know." he said when inter-' viewed at his palatial home at Grosse Point. Michigan, "there is today a general feeling of optimism in the air. People are tired of playing with the depression. You can almost reach out and touch it. it’s that tangible. People are tired of the depression. They are determined to fight it, and once an Amer-1 ican decides to tight he’s happier.’’ Mr. Chapin ought to know. He’s ■ one of the biggest of the ’big shots' j in the motor c-r industry—the bus-’ iness which is credited in many quarters with pulling the United I States out of the economic dumps in the business lull that followed I the World War. High-pressure salesmanship was the ace that won the day and once the wheels of the great automobile shops in Detroit

Ashbauchers MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING S POUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739 Up to S3OO loans quickly and quietly arranged, No red tape —no cmK Larrassing questions or ■£H investigations. Lawful interest rates — liberal ||||- repayment terms. You KgS will like our prompt, courteous and confidential service. O FRANKLIN : SECURITY CO. Mm Phone 237 Decativ Indiana

DECaTUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 16. U.'32.

1 were turning all the rest of the | nation picked up. Mr. Chapin is 54 years old. In his new post he succeeds Robert P. latmont. who resigned to become I head of the American Iron and Steel Institute, which represents about 95 per cent of the steel pro-i Iducers of the United States. ■ If any one can sell America the! idea of prosperity it should be the new Secretary. He started his tareer thirty-one years ago with the Olds Motor Company and through the more than three decides of his working life he has belt time a figure cf ever-increasing stature. Mr. Chapin is a typical American ; business leader of midd’e age. Round-faced, alert-eyed, and lias a firm, decisive mouth. In the automobile industry he is highly respected as an aggressive organizer, salesman and promotion man, with contacts extending far beyond the limits of his industry. "It appears,’ he told his interviewer, "that the depression has run its course. The upturn has come. We go ahead in spurts. It's time to spurt again, this time to i new levels of prosperity based on . ‘a foundation more substantial than' ever before. “This world of ours,’ he mused, i "has changed five times as much : since 19(w as during the previous thirty years. Yet we are trying to adjust ourselves to it in on time. ; Adjustment, that's the word. Therelin lies the solution to most of our present day troubles." i At the age of twenty-six, Mr. iChapin organized his own company and at twenty-nine became president of the powerful Hudson Car Company. In 1914 he married and now has six children. Today he is chairman of that company’s directorate, a director in the Guardian National Bank of Commerce and affiliated institutions. a director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and of the Detroit Community Union. One of his most important achievements was his accomplishments as chairman of the good roads committee of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce —a national network of magnificent highways that made driving a I pleasure for the motorist. His employes and co-executives are sure Roy Chapin will come i through in his newest and biggest 'job. o I BARGAINS — Bargains In Living Room, Dining Room Suits, Mati tresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. I Monroe, our Phone number Is 44 ct. Why worry about your i Farm Mortgage coming due? I Get a Federal Farm Loan 33 ‘ .years. 707 Court street, Fori Wayne.

> Tort our Knowledge rj 11 Can you answer seven of these 1 i test questions’ Turn to Page Four for the answers. 1. Whit was Henry W. Longfellow's middle name? 2. What does “toujours’’ mein in j English? 3. Can an alien enlist in the U. S. [ Army ? 4. What is Eddie Cantors real name? 5. Who wrote the play, "Street Scene?" 6. What is the Pan American Union? 7. Wh is the heir presumptive to the British throne? 8. Who was the first Lord Pro- , tector of ?.e C-. mmonwealth of England? I 9. Os whit church is F:anklin D. I Rcosevelt a member? I 10. Os what church is Herbert C. Hoover a member? MONROE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bahner and daughter Ruth and son Max and Paul motored to Auburn on Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Moore and son Mrs. Feid Smith. Jack of Hartl, rd City spent tlie week-end with Mr. and M s. F. H. Tabler. Mr. and Mrs. J ibn Floyd motor- | ed to Huntsville Ohio on Sunday and spent the day with Mr. i and Mrs. Richard Floyd. Mrs. Mary McKean and son Bobby and Go: man of Berne spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. wil-

* s “What would taste good for dinner tonight?' How many wives have asked that question ... and how I many brides of the future will ask it . . . of indifferent husbands, right after breakfast or lunch? Hopefully at first, almost desperately after a time, and finally as part 1 ot a dull, daily soliloquy. For every wife discovers that I a man with a newly satisfied palate is a total loss as a source of inspiration for future meals. Nevertheless, it’s an important and trying matter, I this business of planning the menu. There arc cookbooks, of course, but better than that, why not find out what s new in the markets? Pick up y our newspaper - that will tell you. There’s news about food—in the advertising of local markets and stores, and in that of the nationally known producer of tempting things to eat. Here’s a new way of buying and serving chicken, for example, and one that’s no trouble at all. Or a ham, with a new and piquant flavor. It may be that artichokes have just come to market—the first of the season. Or her ries, or I ruit, or corn on the cob. The advertisements in »our paper tell you these things, with the prices, and where you can buy them. Here is inspiration for manv a meal, without dragging weary feet from store to store, looking for what would taste good tonight. Decatur Daily Democrat

. liana McKean. Mr. Haymond Crist made a business trip to Washington Indiana on, Mbnday. Miss Ruth Bahner is spending the week end with her sister Mrs. , Ferd Smith at Aubiiin. Mr. and Mrs. Fore-t Andrews spent Sunday at Winchester the, , guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Crist and daughter. Mis. Martin Hoffman and son Doyle motored to Cleveland O.iio I: ou Saturday and spent the week- | end with relatives. Miss Marie Soldner of Berne I spent the week-end with Earline . Stuckey. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Aurand 1 J and daughter Alice. Eileen and Mar- ' Hand of Grand Rapids. Michigan is > spending the week with relatives. I Miss Katy Diggs > f Fort Wayne | spent the week-end with Mr. and . I Mrs. Jim A. Hendricks and san Mc- | Gee. ■ I Mr. and Mrs. Dm Noffsinger Mrs. Rena Head: leks and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Noffsinger motored to i Winchester on Sunday and attend ' the Stewart reunion at Goodrich : Park. ’ Mrs. Forest Lake of Decatur spet Monday with her parents Mr. 1 and Mrs. William McKean. 1 Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Osterman and daughter Elnora and son Iva' 11 Fort Wayne called on Mr. and Mrs. Otis Brandyberry and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Noffsinger on Sund y evening. CUSTOM CANNI NG— Our plant will b open each dly except Sat- . j urday. We are prepared to can all ' kinds of vegetables, price 5c per • can. Tel phone 1422, Lumber Co., > building, Soufh St. M nroevllle. .‘Glenn W. Carpenter. bIS9-3teod

BOURBON PRINCE ENDS CAREER Member of French Royal Family Found Dead In Woman’s Apartment I Paris, Aug 16. -(U.R) - Prince Ed j gard of Bourbon, member of the j Austrian branch of the French royal family,-was found si-shed to death in the apartment of a young woman friend today. His companion, a Spanish woman, was taken in custody. The prince had been killed with 'a razor. The prince was the husband of 1 Clara B. Cringer. an American. Hei was born in Austria in 1850. I The woman arrested gave the name of Miss Ondeleria Brau Solor. She said she is 39 years old. Miss Solor was taken before an examining magistrate. She said Prince Edgard had attacked her, and that she fought him with the razor in self defense. Police understood that the prince, who was the son of Alice de Bour- ' bon. had been in reduced circumf stances of late. FAIL IN FIGHT TO REPEAL THE WRIGHT LAW my riXI lll> FROM PASS <>NH I prohibitionists. The prohibition fight extended , from the first hour of the session . until the last. One of the first votes 1 of the assembly was on whether

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