Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 92, Decatur, Adams County, 18 April 1933 — Page 5
JUDGES consider CASE iw” ’ another Englishmen. |Bg. :: i leave this courtroom as a wh, n 1 entered declared. *^M|.| l '< Non! .vail was the third tln ' bar to ■ jaw gianta all defend ,KJ, Nordwall said. ,i j; i: i. nd of the soviet and I am not afraid to say , once of the press. , an only acquit me after the evidence." ■| , Jlonkhoiise was called ,\s h’U'sian chief of the \p 0.,; t .'n.in Vickers Comih- business superior countrymen. K"i[a:ii |i-it"cily certain that couldn't have signed the S i,.n ih.i 1 attributed to W-T' 1 ' || “ sai<l - 1 stand (on '> diitely innocent." Tn-C confessed ill preexamination that ho con- 1
[Wednesday Specials B’resh Country Eggs 2 doz. 25c ■Fresh Tasty Fathom Fillets, .... lb. 22c ■Fresh Bamberger 3 lbs, 20c ■Fresh Pan Sausage, 3 lbs. 20c ■Lard. Today Only 3 lbs. 15c ■Fresh Creamery Butter 2 lbs. 42c ■Winnies Ib. 15c; 2 lbs. 25c ■Frankforts, Bologna, Pudding, 3 lbs. 20c ■Nice Pork Steak 3 lbs. 25c ■Fresh Shoulder Ribs 6 lbs. 20c MT. N. T. Soap—about a lb. cake ■Try it 3 bars 10c ■Nice Beef to Boil 3 lbs. 25c ■Free Deliveries Order Early I Phones 106 and 107 | Mutschler’s Meat Market
R nation a NURSERY SALERI - At The WORLD S LOWEST PRICES - - 5,000— EVERGREENS, TREES, SI I RUBS, PL ANTS AM) VINES—S,OOO W The Schafer Hardware Co. HOME PLANTING SWEEPS THE NATION AND THE Jfe SCHAFER HARDWARE COMPANY JF i Xi * co-operation of E. B. VVilham- m son, have made a personal LEADS THE WAY. selection from the Famous Edgewater Nur- —- *-w*- M series of all stock for this great sale. Every- (KJ THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SAT. M > “GATHER YE ROSEBUDS thing listed is state inspected, true to name jU/ILJICF APRIL 20 -21- 22 Jfej UJ> 1 9 WHILE YE MAY." diia guaranteed to grow. Never again will «w* v - eiass h Xck"t"he worlds hiS prkcs ghcst .Positively The Greatest Value Giving Event Ever Staged Century of Progress Evergreens ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS FRUIT TREES A HIIVQ Okll V 0 All freshly dug from old Mother Earth. Those listed are just the Will beautify your lawn and add much value to your property. AH Northern grown, rigidly inspected trees, true to name f I 111 f \ I|IV I g H •dt-rfi site for planting. They are all personally selected and arc Ne --r ggain will you have an opportunity to buy at these WORLDS anfj ill varieties especially selected for this sale. All W Ms 181 Ks wJF Illd I %F Suaranteed to grow into beautiful specimens. LOWEST PRICES. standard Varieties Pfitzer Juniper, 18 to 24 inch spread ... $1.25 Barberry, Japanese, 2 foot up ... -15 c —— - —. habina Juniper, 12 inch spread - -35 c Barberry, Japanese. 15 to 24 inch 10c Apples 40c Grapes, “The Best That TLi.u fkl C* Sabina Junipe r lß t ° 24 inch S p read $125 Barberry, Red, 2 foot up 20c p cars |(Jc Grow,” big rooted, healthy |ni|| - F|! ’ 1/18 White Spruce, 24 inch spread 85c Barberry. Red Japanote, 12 to 15 meh 10e pi...... |( )( . s ) Of .|, Concord Niagara I HUI a I Ila Mil Ha Norway Spruce, 18 to 24 inch * -75 c Cornus (Dogwood), Red, 3 foot up . 20c • ItllllS UK SUHR, Concord, (Niagara, Norway Spruce, 10 inch, 10 to bundle GOc Co, nus, Yellow, 3 foot up 20c Cherry 4<>C Moore S Early ID - - Colorado Blue Spruce, Bto 10 inch, 10 to bundle SI.OO Flowering Quince, 2 foot 15c Peach 25c and Delaware . ...IvV /k < a JHk — Afc •IK — Jugho Pine, 15 to 18 inch spread sl.lO Dcuztia, Pride of Rochester, White, 3 tout 20c <*Ul 14 JL Mugho Pine, 1Q f 0 bundle 600 Deutxia, Gracellus, low growing, 1 foot 20c Cuthbert Red r* Eldorado p- Special Prices in Lots ustrian Pine, 10 to bundle 60c Forsythia Golden Bell, 4 foot 20c Raspberry MV Blackbeiry t)v of 100, 250, 500, and — American Arbor Vitae, 18 Inch ._ 60c Forsythia Golden Bell, 2 foot 10c 1000. If EvPT Thf‘l"P W?l<4 ‘I TitllO t<k QIIVP Py/amidial Arbor Vitae,'ls inch 60c Bush Honeysuckle, 4 foot 20c » UHI IHtlt d 11111 IUJ EMU Siberian Arbor Vitae. 18 inch ... 60c Bush Honeysuckle, 2 foot ... 10c HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS I Money by Judicious Spending .. . I oriental Arbor Vitae, 3 foot 60c Hydrangea, White, 3 foot - ... 10c q,, , . ... , _ T , oriental Arbor Vitae, Compact, 15 inch 60c Hydrangea, Pink, 2 foot 15c Most satisfactory of all garden flowers; once established, I mil I IDIC IS Kight I\OW. oiiTitTiao Lilac, French, 18 inch 10c | as t f or years, growing more beautiful each season. More - SHRUBS Ph’adeiphia’Mock Orange 4 foot ' 15c than ' ,O ’ a,icties including Iris, Phlox. Blue Baptizia. Snowberry, white, 3 foot 'sc Hardy Privet Amoor River or ibota, 24 inch 10c Red Hot Poker, White Daisies, Baby s Breath, Day Lilies, Jk T 'J Snowberry, Red, 3 foot 15c Hardy Privet, Amoor River or Ibota, 18 inch 5c Assorted Hibiscus, Red Pinstemon, Blue Statice, Etc., Etc. /•* W/ grl | Ig I£* Spirea, Van Houttei, 4 foot up . .. . 15c WORLD'S LOWEST PRICES, x *• w A J-IL Vi. Kjf AKz . X s. ROhES Eath c w-, ... Smwh.li Viburnum, 4 lont° . . ZSe t roofed, vmll* branched. 21 "varieties (bush Z I ROCK GARDEN PLANTS I 1011 Weia r eH. m P en u tat r; 3 . ,00t - cli i mb of brilliant, dazzling and lovely A complete collection of all popular varieties in,. vv mgelia, Pmk, 3 foot . 15c f colors, 50c to $1.25 value and priced Qjl , . 1 II •.> 1. I I III* And many other varieties at these remarkably low prices. for this sale at each ’>UL an " I>UI<‘C(I al XVFV/ FillCSt CLIMBERS W : T1... er thousands o f people w.ii pa» s Plant a Tree .. . Plant a Rose ... Plant a r Clmgmg Bittersweet. 2 foot ’oc through Decatur on their visit to the Century Shrub ... Plant Something This Year .. . M* SMC* V BloVli Goanese Honeysuckle. 2 foot 10e of Process Exposition Lets make Decatur . , ° W uteri : .. . wo I ,c - ,; ' e 3 I AnjDol | EVER SOLD IN DECATUR. — —
I ducted espionage activities under I . the direction of a high British of-1 ficial of his company. He repudiatI '-d the confession during the trial. Thornton now stepped forward. "I pleaded innocent at the very beginning.” he said, "and I repeat it now. The entire evidence against me is unreliable.” 'Dedicate Song To Mr. And Mrs. Kunkel Oklahoma Bob Albright of radio station WLW in Cinci nati, Ohio dedicated a song to Mr. and Mrs. Calvin D Kunkel of north of Decatur, in honor of their Golden Weddmg anniversary, this morning. SENATORS BOLT ROOSEVELT ON INFLATION PLAN! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' Ito follow closely that of the de ' seated silver amendment embody- ■ ing the exact program with which I William Jennings Bryan roused I the debtor west in 1896. School children have been
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1933.
In Forestry Army Camp at Capital tis > ft (I fti****'. 'x-» L—: — —...........5*.- v -, »h ■■■ 1 - • '-"imM ' s’*$ ’* Cw-'T .'w ’ w'p'*’ ■W - .i' /».... ~ ’
Here are two sidelights in the daily life of a reforestation recruit at Fort Washington, Washington, l> C., where several hundreds of the erstwhile unemployed are being trained for President Roosevelt’s
I taught for years and statesmen! | had come to believe that the issue i had been effectively killed and de- | cently buried. Vet the senate wan | able to defeat free stiver by a 1 | margin, of only 10 votes —43 to 33. | The same proposition was reject- | i ed last session by 56 to 18. Senator Wheeler, Dem.. Mont., I ; offered the 16-to-l amendment I i against warnings by colleagues ‘ I sympathetic with silver rehabili- . I tation that he merely was inviting humiliating defeat. The silver [ bloc, instead, is jubilant at the rei suit. Observers today interpreted the j vote as meaning that Mr. Roose-1 j velt cannot avoid some form of in- ! flation and that he must select his ! i own plan in the reasonably near j I future to avoid dispute with con- I i gross. The concensus points to a vast ! i bond issue in some multiple of I $1,000,600,000 (B) to finance pub-1 ■ lie works and perhaps aid private i ■ industry but for the primary purpose of putting to work many of i I the 13,000,000 or 15,000,000 unem j
■ w relief forestry program. Top photo shows a squad of the men undergoing setting-up exercises under the direction of an army instructor, and lower picture shows them getting a lesson in the use of the saw. ■ - —
ployed. Issue of currency against such. bonds and expenditure of the cur-1 rency by the gnvemmen- in pay-! i ing of its public work bills would I J be merely a round about means of i i issuing paper money — so-called ■ i greenbacks. It would have cer-1 I tain safeguards calculated, how- | ever, to provide measures of con-! trol not inherent in a greenback issue. Free silver was rejected in spite I of warnings from Senator Borah, Repn.. Idaho, and others that inflation was essential to re-estab-lishment of normal prosperity in i the United States. He said the j world wide civilization could not survive continuing fall of commod- ’ ity prices. Borah pleaded for co-operation I between congress and White House to make inflation successful ami when he learned tha.’ Mr. i Roosevelt opposed the Wheeler ! amendment the Idaho orator deI liberately ( hanged his vote to support the president. — -o— — Get the Habit — Trade •? Home
History of Prohibition -— From the time the first Europeans landed on the shores of the ’ I New World down to tiiis moment—the question of beverages of I ; alcoholic content has been subject of legislation, regulation, dis- I i mission. From (he enactment of legislation prohibiting giving 1 "fire-water” to the Iqdians, down to this moment, the regulation’ I control and prohibition of the sale and transportation of alcoholic | j beverages has plagued legislators, social reformers, business inter- I I ests, mid jus: plain people. Here is the whole storv—a condensed, - ! '"'"(pfeliensive HISTORY OF PROHIBITION IN THE UNITED 1 ' S fr\ I b.S contained in our Washington Bureau’s new bulletin on I the subject. The facts are drawn from authoritative and offlcal ! I sources. The bulletin contains no opinions—just the facts. With i the question of repeal pending before the states, you will like to I have the facts of this question at your command. Fill out the coupon ■ i below and send for the bulletin: CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. 230, Warhington Bureau, Daily Democrat, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. i I want a copy of the bulletin HISTORY OF PROHIBITION IN I THE U. S. and enclose herewith five cents in coin or postage stamps ' I (coin preferred), tu cover return postage and handling costs: ■NA M E | STREET & No ..’ j CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat.
52 ARE LISTED ON HONOR ROLL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Corolene Townsend 2 1 Betty Tricker 2 1 Wilma Andrews 1 4 Pauline Affolder 1 4 Helena Ray! 13 1 William Elston 1 3 Harold Zimmerman 1 3 Mary Jane Schafer 1 3 Dorothy Little 12 1 (Robert Martin 1 2 1 Harold Sauer 1 2 1 Elmer Schultz 1 2 1 Evelyn Adams 12 1 Martha E. Calland 1 2 Madeline Spahr 5 Evelyn Kohls 4 1 Roland Reppert. 4 Roselyn Foreman 4 Rosemond Hart 4 Ratherine Jackson 4 Ruth Porter 4 Vera J. Schlickman 3 1 Margaret Campbell 3 1 I Kathryn Engeler .... 3 11 James Harkless ... 3 1' Marceil Leatherman . 3 1 Martha Jane Linn . . 3 1 I Leona Peck 3 11 Lewis Beery ... 3 11 Albert Keller 3 1 ; Josephine Ivetich 3 1 ! o Tillman Gerber was a business I visitor in Bluffton Monday. o Opening Square Dance; \\ ednesday night, Sun Set.
Boy Slayer’s Death Sentence Commuted Springfield, 111., April 18—(U.R) — Gov. Henry Horner commuted to life imprisonment the death sentence of Russell McWilliams, boy slayer who was to have been electrocuted at Joliet shortly after next Thursday night. —_— — o ■■■ - — BEAUTY WINNER FREED ON BONI) (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) fell on me and the knife.’’ The father, W. F. Carl, East St. Louis contractor, took his daughter to police headquarters where it was said his version coincided with that of his daughter's. Miss Carl was chosen “Miss East St. Louis” several years ago in a
DON’T LET COMMON CONSTIPATION DULL THE JOY OF LIVING Kellogg’s All-Bran Brings Relief —— — Constipation takes the sunshine ‘ out of your days. It mgy bring headaches, loss of appetite and energy, j sleeplessness, sallow skins, pimples. If neglected, it can seriously impair ' health. Fortunately, you can avoid this condition by eating a delicious cereal. Laboratory tests show that Kellogg’s All-Bran provides two things needed to overcome common constipation: “bulk” and vitamin B. All-Bran is also a rich source of blood-building iron. The “bulk” in All-Bran is much like that of leafy vegetables. Within the body, it forms a soft mass. Gently, it clears out the intestinal ■wastes. How much better than dosing yourself with patent medicines. Two tablespoonfuls of All-Bran daily are usually sufficient. With each meal in chronic cases. If not relieved this way, see your doctor. Get the red-and-green package at your grocer’s. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
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i beauty contest sponsored by me’chants here. Young Carl graduated from high school in February and was a member of the football team last year. When Nervous-Rundown t/\ L L women a t ■lx some period of their lives need a str' ngthening tonic like Dr. Pie r c e's Favorite Prescription. Hear what Mrs. Minnie A. Schultz of 310 J St., 1-a Porte, Ind., says: “I think Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is he greatest tonic and nervine for women. It vas very helpful to me during expectancy. My lealth was better and I experienced less rouble when I took the Prescription.’ I aave also taken it for nervousness, sleeplessness, and when weak, worn out and run Town. Each and every time I luck it I got Jie help 1 was seeking.” Sold by druggists everywhere. Write to Dr. Fierce** Clinic, Buffalo, S. Y., for free medical advire. SPECIALS For Wednesday Martins MEAT MARKET Phone 261 at MILLER’S Grocery ; BEEF BOIL. 3 tbs. 20c BEEF STEAK. Short Cut, Baby Beef, 15clb BOILED HAM . . 25ctb FRANKFORTS, 2ib 15c BACON, 2 lbs 25c EGGS. 2 dozen .... 25c PORK LIVER ... 6c lb > HAMBURtiER, 3 ib 20c FRESH COUNTRY Sausage, 3 Ib. ... 20c VAN CAMPS PORK AND BEANS, can Sc SAUER KRAUT, can 5c FRESH COUNTRY BUTTER, lb. ... 23c Free Delivery ■neoHeMNeeMManHeennMML
