Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 100, Decatur, Adams County, 27 April 1933 — Page 11
SEWS gs, . ..niTa'"- ',, Hip ;| u!. I Mrs. . Bloemker , , King. Mr. ami B ' ( ; .1 bimil.' of Van ' ■ Hu David (Ircther Mr. and - '. K s. al con vent ion of Bjfr Preble townships il.ule-r, Misses K,. B|; J .it ill im-i Snml.iv ■ ex, ;e Mrs. A,l i..iiiion Sumi iv ufi-i Nucleus Obtained ■H U.R) Nucleus for ii < Brin- lace stockings l»i> Brs o. 1 'id watch ami chain l
I National Business i Revival Underway! America is fighting for a business revival and get- ; ting results, says the United Press, folk,whig a nation wide survey which shows that: 1. Millions of dollars are pouring' into new enterprises. ; 2. Thousands of new jobs are being filled and many thousands more are opening up in the beer industry. 3. The speed and energy of the new administration at Washington ; is being echoed bv the whirl of factory wheels in many cities. Here are a few significant facts: York Ice Machine Corp, receives orders for SIOO,OOO Cle eland Tool and Dye Makers report 20 c : inworth of refrigerating equipment. crease in demand fcr products during last month. ' Anheuser-Busch orders 400,000 cases and 400.000 We' nqhouse hrd more crdcrs in the last week ' gross bottles. than in any simi'ar period in three years. J St. Louis has given employment to 10.000 more Fisher Body recalls 3.000 men. men, with an added weekly payroll of $250,000. _ , , . In Oklahoma, 1,200 men were recalled in Tri-State Pabst has spent $2,000,000 for supplies and equip- Minina Area ment. $2,000,000 in orders for bottling machinery receiv- New Orleans will provide steady work for 2.000 ed by Milwaukee concern. for 2 X ears the . $13,000,000 Huey Long Bridge across the Mississippi. Supplementary jobs In Chicaqo. $10,000,000 is being spent on brewery will require 4.C00 more. equipment and supplies. One Thousand men returned to the Mountain Valley Charlestown. West Virginia, opens large bottling Coal Company in Pennsylvania after several plant employing about 1,000. months shut down. Imports of Boston up about 25%. Kansas City puts 2.500 to work on municipal Im•Vermor* sugar season gives employment to sever- provcment program, and will add 2,500 more, al thousands. The Marvine and Coalbrook Mines in Pennsyl- < Department stores report increased buying. vama resumed, giving jobs to 1,500. Chicano Auto plant and Auto Equipment concern At Muskeqcn, Michigan. 1,500 men were rehired by add 1,571 men. 3 ,irm makin o bar fixtures. Plan For Increased Business, Decatur Merchants’ t In the Decatur Daily Democrat you have an advertising medium whose completeness of local coverage is equalled by few 'mail town newspapers in the United States. More than 3.000 circulation, with nearly 100 coverage in the city of Decatur and the only county daily that reaches the rural people. The successful merchant i 1 the consistent advertiser. ** Advertise More Than Usual—Do More Business Than Usual! Decatur Dally “In nearly 't-t hon e” •ai S••••e •e• • • • •e®®*••••<
of 200 years ago, a sewing box made 150 years ago, an earthenware custard set over 100 years old and a Norwegian trunk 162 yens old. o— Coin Has Odd Inscription New Bedford, Mass. — (U.R) |“Mind your business” is the inscription on one of the oldest coins minted in this country. It is a copper piece, dated 1787, part of a collecition of rare coins which Mrs. Alice i Lapointe inherited from her mother. o , ■ Depression Hotel Opened Quincy, Mass.— (U.R) — Because j she could not collect rent from her ' six houses at Quincy Point, Mrs. 1 Sarah E. Stelfox has opened a ! “Depression Hotel," In order to i help support herself, she rents I rooms in the houses for 10 cents a week. — o— — Planes to Warn Japs ! Tokio. —(U.R) —Emergency air raid | alarms, broadcast from planes in i the air, are being tested by the i I army in connection with anti-air--1 craft defense here. Special planes equipped with radio telephone apparatus will carry out the tests. o Two-Mouthed Lamb Born Plymouth, Ind. (U.R) — A two- ■ mouthed lamb born on the William Furry farm lived only 36 hours. It '■ ■ is being mooted by high school stu-' ! dents under supervision of the I biology instructor. The freak lamb ate with I. >th mouths. ——oLambs Get Cold Aeception Corvallis, Ore.— (U.R) — Benton county lambs are getting a cold | reception this year. Many are being born in snowdrifts. “» Dead Doctor Cancelled Bills Plymouth, Mass. (U.R) —Needy I patients of the late Dr. All. n 1.. I Shirley will not have to pay the , bills they owed him. He specified iin his will that all bills due him from such persons be cancelled.
Glad to Leave “Fool World’’ Sft y. 'gw ■-jjw * JI \ W i Q ~' »-■ f “’■■’sEFtFiS.sfe - ‘SOW (Tircnee barrow, famous Chicago lawyer, the old master of the : courtrooi.i, whose battles for those for whom hope seemed gone has won him w rid fame, posed for this picture on the eve of his 76tli '■ lli iiy In an interview he s ated that be deserves congratulations because hi . stay on this planet won't last mtn h longer, and that he ‘ ■di be glad to leave "this tool world."
Jap Tea Exports Increased Tokio.— (U.R) Japanese tea ex-> ported during 1932 amounted to 27,-1 924.0(H) pounds showing an in-! ■ crease of 4.072,b00 pounds over j 1931. The large.st amount was [ shipped to the United States.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THFRSDAY, APRIL 27, 1933.
I Bank Employes Got SIUO Each 1 Brockton, Mass. — (U.R) —Each of I the 42 employes of the Home Nat- ! tonal Bank was bequeath SIOO in the will of the late Fred B. Howard. chairman of the board and former president of the institution.
CITY LIGHT, POWER & WATER DEPT. Your Municipal Plant
The Nation Has Faith in its President and we believe in the community LEADERSHIP has taken the reins and headway has been made. History-making problems are being solved and each day sees an improvement. Gradually we are coming into the New Day. In this community we have so many • splendid people, believing in God and Country, that confidence was never shaken. True we have been adjusting ourselves and now have our house in order for grander and better things. Surrounded by one of the best agriculture communities in the world and with the added bulwark of a score of progressive industries, we cannot fail. We Say Better Days are Here Again
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