Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

» ♦ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS. AND NOTICES FOR SALE J'GR SAIJ£— Narraganset Turkey Tom. Herman Scheumann Decatur R 1. 57-3tx FOR SALE —One 2 year old pure bred Duroc Male hog. Inquire W. A. Whittenbarger 5 miles north east of Decatur. 58-31 FOR SALE —Walk up stairs and save money. Boys Work Shoes - and Mens Union Suits at Real Bar- ■ gains. 127 North Second street. 59g-2tx ( FOR SALE —Chicks. Chicks, Chicks Baumgartners Blood Tested' Chicks. Hatches every Tuesday. | Quality high prices low. Baumgart- ( tiers Hatchery and Poultry Farm.) Route 4 Bluffton or 6 miles west I and 9 miles south of Decatur. Craig-| ville Phone. 599tf. ■ FOR-RENT ~ FOR RENT—Six room all modern 1 house 927 Walnut St. sls a I month. Phono 666 58-3tx , FOR RENT —6 room apartment; steam heat, re-decorated. W. S. Bowers. 59t3x FOR RENT —S room house, all modern except furnace. In splendid aieighborhood. Three blocks from Court House. O. L. Vance. 59g-3tx FOR RENT —South side of modern i duplex, opposite Court House, j Possession given April 1. A. D. i Suttles, agent. 58g-3t : o WANTED WANTED —Furnished 4 to 6 room • house or apartment, modern for I young couple by March 16. Good j neighborhood. Write to box O. N.. % Democrat'office. 57g-3t i LOST AND~FOUNi) LOST — Holman Bible. Finder please phone 54S or notify this office. 58-3tx Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these - test question? Turn to page I Four for the answers. ♦ 41 1. Who was the author of the' Lame Duck Amendment to the Coa-1 stitution? 2. "Will water glass dissolve in I water? 3. Who was called "Beau Brum-1 mell?" 4. In ancient Rome what was a lictor? 5. Os what sea is the Gulf of Cor-| iutli an arm ? 6. What do the initials R. F. C. • stand for? 7. In what year did the Boston i Tea Party occur? 8. What is the unit of currency in ! Mexico? 9. Did President Wilson veto the I Volstead Act? 10. What is the difference in i duties- performed by an Ambassador and a Minister? DANCE—Saturday night— Paradise Gardens.' Ladies 10c. Men 15c. Buchanan Electric Hatchery —now taking orders for baby chicks and custom hatchery. Heavy chicks 6c; Leghorns sc. Hatching l%c per egg. 2 miles north of Chattanooga, Ohio, and 4 miles south of Willshire on State Road 51. Rt. 1, Willshire, Ohio.

Bathtub aviators are found in the Tornado Belt only. But any good stiff blow ts likely to leave you up tn the air, financially, unless you have Windstorm Insurance. Let as tell you about out Windnorm and Tornado Policies—issued by the dependable Automo bile Insurance Company at Hardend, Conn. Aetna Life Insurance Co. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Suttles-Edwards Co. Agents. Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 felilSliilllll

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected March 10 No commission and no yardage. ' 150 to 220 pounds $3.60 ( 220 to 250 pounds $3.45 I 250 to 300 pounds $3.35 | 300 to 350 pounds $3.20 | i 100 to 150 pounds $2.80-$3.20 : .Roughs $2-»2.25 ' | Stags $1.25 jVealers $6.50 Lambs $5.10 Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs, 5 cents higher. 140-160 . I lbs. $3.40; 160-200 lbs. $3.65; 200I 225 tbs. *3.70; 225-250 tbs. $3.60; | 250-300 lbs. $5.55; 300-350 tbs. i $3.45; roughs, $2.75; stags $2. Calves $7. Ewe and wether I lambs $5.50. Cattle market lank. ! Steers, good to choice $5-5.50: medium to good. $4.50-5 common I ■ to medium $3-4; heifers, good to e choice $4.50-5; medium to good i ( $4-4.50; common to medium $3-4; ( | cows, good to choice $3-3.50; < medium to good $2.50-3; cutter cows $1.75-2.25; canner cows $l- - bulls, good to choice, $33.25; medium :to good. $2.50-3; common to medium. $2-2.50; butcher bulls $3.25-3.75. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis, Ind., Mar. 10. —(U.K) —Livestock. Hogs, 2,000; holdovers, 277; jmostly steady; 160-250 lbs., $3.85i 53.90; 250-300 lbs., 33.75-33.80; 300 jibs., up, $3.60-$3.70; 140-160 lbs., $3.65-$3.75; 100-140 lbs.. $3.25-33.55; i packing sows, $2.50-$3.25. I Cattle, 100; calves, 300; not ienough to test conditions, slow. I pressing trade on few small lots here; few steers, $3.25-34.50; some heifers. $3-$4.50; most cows, $2.25$2.75; low- cutters and cutters, $1.25-$2; veals steady, $7.50 down. I Sheep. 100; little changed: small | lot, $5.75; others mostly heavy and power grades, $4 $1.50. LOCAL GRAIN market Corrected March 10 I No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 41c ;No. 2 New Wheat 581 gs _. 40c I I Oats 13c I ' Soy Beans 40c | (No. 3. Old White Corn 20c I • No. 3 Old Yellow Corn 26c 1 (New Yellow Corn 22c Rye 25c ORDER SIGNED BY ROOSEVELT ALLOWS ACTION ’ CONTINUED* FROM PAGE ONE i to reopen for the performance of 1 all usual and normal banking i functions except as otherwise ! prohibited to apply for a license | .to the secretary of treasury. Applications are to be filed with ft he federal Deserve bank in ! the appropriate district. Wood'll I said. J wife or i tti.emea i OF ESTVI'E NO. 21»44 Nutice is hereby given tu the creditors. heirs and legatees of Wm. >1 hornton, thedeasvd to appear in the ’Adams Circuit Court, held at Deca* tnr Indiana, on the sth day of April 1533. and show cause, if any. why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirshp, and receive their distributive shares. J. M. Breiner, Administrator iHvatur, Indiana. March In. 1 ' \Horney Nathan ( . Nelnnn. March 10-17 O Appoinlmiut «»f Xil min rat rax With N\il| Annexed Notice is hereby given. That th* {undersigned ha<s been appointed AdI rninistratrix of the estate nf Daniel |N. Erwin, late of Adams County, de|ceased. The estate is piobably st>lI vent. Mantie E. Erwin, Administratrix I with will annexed. I.ulm A VI yr th, AttornryM. Eel; I For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 101 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory i Office Hour*: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to S p. m. S . E . BLA C K Funeral Director It is a comfort to know that when the time comes for the last farewell-the last rites can safely be entrusted to us. 500—Phones—727 Lady Asst. Ambulance her vice N. A. BIXLER optomerist I byes Examined. Glasses Fitted. HOURS; | 8:30 to 11:31) 18:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THREE IS A CROWD” BY SE(, g / sgragl /NO FUM fl VJISHT Q IF VA BRtMCj IAVJSXI , /BEIN' KING OF MMFtovJER ' .I'LL PUKHfi is PRISING-, L <? Ak.-fXCJNNT WOULD BRING A V k/ I ' -A to rule bot X--- ! oh vew T 0 kW . h ~ j « CHAPPVRON I f W « BP,7i ~t.Es /' JFX - gcM : wl ■ ::# -AllKr. iSn I C.IWI P ‘ B

PRESIDENT TO CUT COSTS OF GOVERNMENT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE e * e banking structure. It has accentuited to the stagnation of tilie economic life of our people. It has added io the ranks of the unemployed. Our governments house is not in order

CHALLENIft 4 1 I<\|" X \ iy WARWICK DEEPING

CHAPTER FORTY-THREE The same evening Burgess appeared in his Sunday clothes at Josiah Crabbe’s. The man was frightened. A sense of insecurity had chilled his ardour. Crabbe was amused. “There’s that cottage of mine waiting for you.” “I’m fearing, sir, I mayn’t get the work as I did down yonder.” “That’s it, Burgess, that’s it. Twopence halfpenny for the rights of man! We lie snug in our pockets, and let liberty lie in the gutter! Don’t you worry, my man, don’t you worry.” “Right’s right, Mr. Crabbe, but when a man’s got a family ” “You won’t be worse off up here, Burgess. Don’t be a fool, and don’t whine, I don’t like whining.” * • • I I Cobbler Burgess’s cottage in George Lane had another tenant, and this appeared to be the sole result that could be attributed to ’ the protest he had lodged with the Navestock Board of Guardians. No »ne seemed interested in the matter, and whatever Dr. Threadgold may have thought of Turrell's cottage property and the state of the stable yard adjoining George Lane, the cynical persistence of the old conditions suggested either that Threadgold had thought it best to have no opinions, or that he had had no success in stating them. Someone had thrown a stone into a ■tagnant pond, and the ripples appeared to have died down. Josiah Crabbe, the man of property, knew otherwise. Men whose interests have been threatened are very sensitive. Even an abortive attack leaves them uneasy. They do not forget. He had to hold Editor Boxall back by the collar. “Wait a few weeks, and well give them another dig, just when they are beginning to settle down comfortably. In birching a boy, Boxall, you shouldn’t lay it on too fast. Give him time to think between the strokes, and to wonder when the next is coming. That was just a rap to begin with.” • • • It was late October, and the yellow leaves were falling from the Lombardy poplars or. the road near Josiah Crabbe’s house. At Eve's Corner, Mrs. Sarah Loosely went to and fro in Wolfe’s sitting-room. ■ busy primness on her mouth. Visitors were to be there to tea, and the lace doylies on the dishes took •u immense amount of delicate attention. It had been said that Heaven would have to lie the perfection of tidiness, or Mrs. Loosely would not consent to remain there. Palm branches would be sloped like muskets on parade, halos tilted at precisely the same angle. Wolfe was busy in the coachhouse, diving into the deeps of a monster hamper. Yellow straw and wisps of paper lay piled about, and files of bottles, green and blue, •tood crowded like a mob along one wall. He was unpacking drugs that had arrived that morning from a firm of maiuv’ai'tuilag etivuiisis whom Josiah Crabbe had recommended. His brown hands were groping in the bottom of the hamper when the door-bell rang. The clinking together of two bottles at the same moment masked the sound for him. There were greetings under the I white Georgian porch between Mrs. Loosely and two visitors. "Well. Sarah, it is a long while since I saw you. You don’t look a day older.” “I don’t feel it." “Here’s Jess, getting long in the ! legs.” Mrs. Loosely pecked at Jess’s cheek “You are getting quite grown up, my dear!” ,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1933.

and for many reasons no effective action his been taken to restore it to order. 1 "Upon the unimpaired credit of the United-States government rests the safety of deposits, the security iif insurr-aiiet- policies, the activity ot Industrial enterprises, the value of our agricultural products and the ! availability of employment. The '(credit of’the United Stites govern- ■ ment definitely affects these funda-

MraMMWp™ SI ’ VKJI. I 41J “You are a nice man to ask visitors to tea!” Jess chided.

Jess laughed. Mrs. Loosely put it as though growth was a new and amazing phenomenon. “Mayn’t I grow? I’m seventeen.” “You ought to have your hair up.’’ “Oh—bother!” “Mr. Wolfe’s not expecting you till four.” “We came in early Sarah, and I shopped quicker than I thought I should.” “He’s head over ears in a hamper in the coach-house. Never knew such a gentleman to do things for himself. And as considerate as a curate.” Jess mouthed her scorn. “Curate! Let’s go and catch him at it, Mother. I’ll leave the basket here in the hall.” So Wolfe was caught still groping in the hamper, his back towards the house, and the late October sunlight streaming in upon the yellow straw. “You are a nice man to ask visitors to tea!” He found the glowing, mischievous face of the girl setting off the maturer amusement of the mother. “Hallo! I didn't expect you yet.” "I'm going in to have e chat with Mrs. Loosely, John.” “What a mess you are making!” “Mess! Nothing could be more orderly. Look at those bottles." This was Jess's first visit, and she had to be shown all that Wolfe had to show. She was a partisan from head to heel, taking things passionately to heart. Wolfe may not have seen the girl's pride in all that concerned him, but her mother saw it, and smiled with her wise blue eyes. Jess was ready to turn Mrs. Loosely’s house upside down in her enthusiasm, even to oust the good lady, and see Wolfe in full possession. The door bell interrupted tea and there were voices in the hall. Someone was shown into the room on the other side of the passage. Mrs. Loosely appeared with an air of importance. “Mr. Flemming wants to see you, sir." “What, the rector?” “Yes." Jess flushed up sensitively. “There! Isn’t that just splendid! You must go, John. Don't let us be in the way. Wo can look after each other.” Wolfe found Robert Flemming standing with his bark to the big gilt-framed mirror that hung over the mantelpiece in Mrs. Loosely’s parlour. Flemming, like Wolfe, looked too big for this little bric-a-brac world, a humap-headed As-

mental human values. It, therefore, becomes our first concern to make secure the foundation. National recovery depends upon It. "Too often in recent history liberal governments hive been wrecked op rocks of loose fiscal policy. We must avoid this danger. "It is too late for a leisurely approach to this problem. We must not wait to act several months hence. The emergency is accentuat-

syrian bull stranded in some curio shop with his head six inches from the ceiling. i “Good afternoon, Mr. Wolfe. I have come to call on you in your new quarters.” “Please sit down, Mr. Flcmming<’ The rector looked for a chair, but some vague prejudice kept him standing. An attitude of mind that approached the apologetic was absolutely new to him. It was like preaching in a strange language, “You find yourself comfortabk . here?” “Very.” Flemming himself was big with i discomfort. “I may as well tell you at once, Mr. Wolfe, why I have come to call ■ on you. The fact is, I have been • thinking over that conversation we . had some time ago. I don't know i that I am altogether easy in my mind.” Wolfe's heart went out suddenly to the older man. There was a la- . bouring of the heavy wheels of ■ Flemming’s mind. His handsome . face had an expression of doubt, • and of distress. i “Won’t you sit down?” “I can talk better standing.” ’ “You arc referring to the talk we k had on the health of the town?” “Yes.” I Wolfe leant one shoulder against • the window casing. Flemming was i like a man trying to walk in do#»p j mud, and Wolfe felt a desire to r -tretch out a hand to him. | “I shall only be too glad to give • you any information. But as things I I stand " i Flemming’s eyes turned to him > expectantly. • “Ah, that’s where 1 fee) my disI Acuity. My impression is that there is an aggressive and bellicose spirit ( at work in the town." Wolfe's mouth grew sterner. i “I think I told you, sir, that there are times when a man must fight." “Then, you allow—“I allow that I am against all . compromise, and that there is a certain public spirit growing here that meuns to force reform.” "A few Radicals, eh?” ”1 don't think you ought to put i it that way. Besides, such a taunt i cuts back." “You are right; 1 withdraw. But are you determined to be bitter? I . say bitter—because— well, it’s hu- . man nature” “It is not bitterness with me, but I can assure you it is war, if that is what you wish to know.” Copyright. I«’2. bv Rtbrrt M ,M. Hnde & to. Distributed by King Feuturc* syndicate, inc.

. ed by the necessity of meeting great ■'refunding operations this spring. "We must move with a direct and resolute purpose now. The mem- ■ hers of the congress and I are ' pledged to iminediaie economy. “1 am. therefore, assuming that you and I are hi complete agree- ' ment as to the urgent necessity, jand my constitutional duty is to ad- > I vise you as to the methods for ob- ' itaining drastic retrenchment at this time. “I am not speaking to you in general terms. 1 am pointing out a definite road. "The last congress enacted legislation relating to the reorganization and elimination of executive agencies, but the economies thus to be effected are small when viewed in the light of the great deficit for the next fiscal year. They will not meet the pressing needs of our credit situation. Provision so radditional saving is essential. o LESS THAN 10 BILLS REMAIN CONTINUED -FROM PAGE ONE ed by the governor. Giving Valparaiso, which was deduced from a fourth to fifth class city by the legislature, the right to continue to make extensions of its

FEATURING ALL WEEK IN A & P STORES .. HOUSE CLEANING WEEK! This week jour nearby A & P Store is selling Manj' House Cleaning Necessities at Special Prices. Take advantage of this sale and Realize Substantial Savings. Amnonia 32 oz. Bottle each 19c SLICED BACON, cellophane wrapped, l 9 lb. pkg. 5c DICED CARROTS No. 2 can 5c Soda Crackers 2 115 c CIGARETTES, popular brands pkg. 10c PANCAKE FLGCR, Sunnyfield brand 20 oz. pkg 5c BROOMS s,ra "s * each FILLETS OF HADDOCK, Boneless 2 lbs. 27c MAC ARONI or Spaghetti, Encore brand 8 oz pkg 5c RICE 3 joe ROLLED OATS, Sunnyfieid brand.. .20 oz. pkg. 5c DATE.NUT LOAF so. loaf 10c Milk Whitehouse 2™' 9c 8 O’CLOCK COFFEE 3 ih oks . 55c PET or CARNATION MILK tall can 5c — FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Bananas lb. §c HEAD LETTUCE 2 for fc ORANGES !S A NAVELS z doz. 45« s “>9c ~ NE>\ CABBAGE ||>. GRAPE FRUIT 1 for 10c m?ch?g ° ES 15 ,b 10c H MICHIGAN BAKING Bag " A. S P. Food Stores

FIRST LADIES OF THE LAND | j . M From Martha Dandridge Curtis Washington down to and i ing Anna Eleanor Roosevelt—our Washington Bureau s latest • I tin includes biographies and interes-ting facts about the each of our Presidents. You will want this informative Fill out the couponi below and send for it: ■ CLIP COUPON HERE ■ Dept. 224. Washington Bureau, Daily Democrat. H 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. K 1 want a copy of the bulletin WIVES OF THE PRESIDEXIH and enchse herewith five cents in coin, or loose, uiuaneelled postage, stamps, to cover retain postage and handling costs- 9 1 Si I NAME STREET and No. B i CITY STATE . B 1 am a reader ot the Decatur, Ind., Daily Democrat. B

i . municipal water system under the 7 laws on that subject applying to ■ (fourth class cities. I i Reducing the maximifm salary •that may be paid to the trustee of i Center township, Howard county, •from 23.000 to $2,500, and leaving • j the exact amount to be paid, from SI,OOO to $2,500, to the discretion of the connty commissioners. Providing that only persons fishing on their own land, those under ■ IS years old. and former service i men may fish without a license. i o Get the HebH—Trade at Homa

t|,|><>intii><- l i) „i Not cc is lieri l.v .mr.-c, ’.uni. -signcil has c. . ■; ;•• rninistratrix .f i .• ■ . !<)lil- r late of A.I • ■. • led. Tliv eslats . Malimia < Hili r Frit.-I.le A l.ltirrrr Mi,,. ' j Feb. 22, IhT F- "-I J j Federal Farm I.nanß made on good farms ■ in Adams County. Apply isl Court street, Fort Wayne. liiß