Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 112, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1933 — Page 5

’lTE POLICE JkINGS GIVEN ■L ll>H Not Permitted Ko Drink 3.2 Beer ilWhile On Duty Miiy 10 .“ classed as inliH p " l " '‘ hP: " ] - ' ''' IIK- ■•• ■ iui iuli " s 1,1 ,lir " Eio " hil ,lllty slKI " kin( | of intoxicating 11r ,. a ,| s one of the 69 rules

7 SALE OF REAL ESTATE undersigned, as administrator of the estate of Sylvester rw nod. deceased, will, at the hour of 2 o’clock p. m. on May 15, 1933, at the law offices of Lenhart, Heller & a t private sale the dwelling house and real estate of said U located in-Pleasant Mills, Adams county, Indiana. ■ Bi- sale will continue from day to day until sold. Terms will * I J cash 011 d ay sa ' e - 'M Byron Whitright, Administrator pUBUfSAL? - ■ COMMUNITY AUCTION SALE ■ Decatur, Indiana ■ SATURDAY, May 13th ■ 12 Noon LIVE STOCK OF ALL KINDS. FARM MACHINERY. Household Goods, Fruit Trees, Miscellaneous, in your surplus property and turn it into the cash need. ■Decatur Community Sales Johnson, auct.

■ STRIKING VALUES in a I ,/W\ Timely and Sensational r COAT SALE V; Our entire stock of Coats now offered at drastic price re t ductions. We tire attempting Io dispose of every coat in stock and offer them al prices that are most inviting. ■■" Better come in I'riday or Saturday and make your selection ■■ P Priced in Three Groups |< $5.95, $8.95, $12.50 I — - 7 ----- MB ' DiAUOi'ir’O '?any New Dresses in the wanted Mg IlKp'SkVpV colors, all cleverly styled and |W' $2.98»55.95 I BEAUTIFUL DRESSES I FOR GIRLS L 0 O K I fg | Made of Voile, Organdie, and A ± * fn I H • I Sheer Cotton Materials. Sizes P riim fl PW Wt 7 ! lo 3. and Ito 11 years. The colors VUI Id 111 OfllC I arc guaranteed fast. Many new numbers just <jW~ "TW I rn rrn d*i Mil arrived. All arc beau- A__L 1 g DOC, /"C and M.VU ties. Lace and Ruffled RT ML patterns. ■■Lace Curtains, 2*4 yard (shadow Lace Curtains -- - Ruffled Curtains - - fine ißlong, 29 inches l ine weave, 4 new pat- quality, full width cur '■wide, pair /MC terns, 50 inch wide, 1 tains, figured marquisette M u ... . 1 2>4 vd. long, each. 1 with colored ruffles. Also ■ wide Lace Panels, aO inch ' rnHn.ro <<>t Curtains .11 ■ wide, 2'/ 2 yard long. Ecru Rutiled Curtains, choice ‘ ‘ ■or Natural Color. The best of Priscilla sty le or Cot- color®. 1 Idin MarquiM-tk ■ value we ever had in lace tage set curtains, green. Ruffled ( urlatns in ecru ■ curtains r?n gold. Blue or rose »)A , I <»r cream color. H(U. ■ each colors, pair O«/U I 2'4 yard long. patrr J./L ■ Plain Cream Color Cushion Dot 7JT„ Chintz Cretonne Pillows, with (? IMM ■ Ruffled Curtains, 2/ 4 yard long iDL rutiled edges 35c each; 3 for tPI.VV I RUFFLED CURTAINS at SI.OO pair Awning Valancing, 18 inch wide in (Cream Color Marquisette with red. green, or scalloped edge, per foot - ±UV ■ blue dots. Good full width with U| MM New Curtain Materials 1M , ■ wide ruffles, 2’4 yard long, pair rp 1 •’/” Figured Dot patterns, yard JLvV ■ Alco Beautiful Rainbow Stripe Cottage WOOD POLE SETS—Finished in beautiful ■ Curtains in Lavender, Green or (PI MM colors . . complete with rings, brackets, ends ■ Go, <L pair and 4 foot pole ... (I*l f!Q II New Cretonnes, 1(L. choice of 2 patterns $1 »W ■36 Inch wide, yard - .1 W CLOTH WINDOW SHADES, size 3x6 foot, B Mew Fast Color Cretonnes 1 <E. mounted on sturdy rollers, QQ . B 36 Inch wide, yard ' Green or Tan, each - I Niblick & Co* i.iii.iir-.:TTfTin~~~— *

drawn up by Al. g. Peeney> sta , te director of public safety Although the rule does not Inchide beer specifically, the force | received verbal instructions to drink no beer while on duty. Smoking is prohibited the men while in uniform and on dirty in public. No state vehicles may be used by officers off duty and they may not be used unless the driver is in uniform. Argument over religion Mid politics, as well as any kind of gossip is .not allowed by the rales. Members of the force, too. must leave all lodge and organization jewelry and -insignia at home while in uniform. One of the usual policeman's -attending shows free—-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 11, 1933.

is denied by another rule. I As for politics, “Members will not make efforts to influence legis-1 lation affecting the force, nor. . . request the aid of any citizen to i have him promoted or restored to any position from which he h'as 'been removed.’’ Incidentally, officers may have no interests in any other business or work. Profane language is taboo and to anyone who asks of an officer his name and number, he must answer and “in a respectful manner.’’ f barges against an officer, which may lie brought by a citizen as well as by a superior officer, will be served on the officer and a hearing held. If he resigns under charges, his guilt will be assumed. Punishment includes discharge, suspension, reduction in rank, fine, and loss of vacation. o GENERAL SALES TAX PROPOSED BY GOVERNMENT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ♦_» nope that he may be armed with a whiplash of compulsion against any recalcitrant minority in an industry which rejects agreements to 1 control prodmtion, eliminate “cutJUST 46 POUNDS OF FAT GONE Feels 20 Years Younger ! “I surely can recommend *KrusI chen Salts. I reduced from 158 to 110 ' lbs., my natural weight and 4 feel i 20 years younger. “A pinch a day. I keeps the fat away.” Mrs. Vale WalI ter, Seattle, Washington (Dec. 30, I 1932.) i Once a day take Krus hen Salts j —one half teaspoonful in a glass of i hot water first thing every morning. I Besides losing ugly fat SA.FELY I you’ll gain in health and physical | attractiveness — constipation, gas I and acidity will cease to bother — I you'll feel younger—more active—- ' full of ambition —clear skin —sparki ling eyes. A jar that lasts 4 weeks cost but ■a trifle at Holthouse Drug Store <>r I any drugstore in the world—-but demand and get Kruschen and if one I bottle doesn't joyfully satisfy you I 111 ■>r i» v back.

| WAT IS LfijOTF 11 HOME ZNa i ' Spicy Evenings in the Garden

The garden filling the evening air with spicy fragrance makes a double appeal to the senses. A very handsome annual admirably adapted for bedding and producing a wealth of flowers for the house which gives off a rich fragrance, particularly in the evening, is the ten-weeks stock. Stocks and asters tor many years were standards in every garden. The aster has gained in popularity and is now indispensable for the midsummer and fall I garden, while the equally valuable > stock, which has a much longer ■ season of bloom, has lost favor, j The chief reason is that while the I aster is easy to grow and sure to give a fine crop of bloom unless ! a flight of beetles or one of the [ new funguses attack it, the stock ; often does not prove a success j and will not bloom. We now know that this bloom-1 less condition is due to a lack of lime in the soil. When the stock J bed gives thick bunches of vigor-! ous foliage but no blossoms, time is being demanded by the plant. Spade the ground thoroughly and 1 when the stocks are set out give |

throat” competition, reduce hours j, of work and stabilize wages at a ' fair scale. This unusual power, to which Mr. i Roosevelt is not committed but ' which he hrs informed some sen- ' ators would b? desirable, would rest on regulatory taxation. NAZI BOOSTERS DESTROY BOOKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tai ’suppression of the Marxist op-1 position. A raid on the socialists faction i rooms in the Reichstag building; definitely ended Marxist parliamen-i tary opposition. The rooms were sealed and the party legislative! records were confiscated. Verified reports from Wittenberg |. said 21 socialist leaders were ar- i rested and their homes searched ■ for documents as Nazi officials ; throughout Germany proceeded l with confiscation of the party’s! funds. — -o GIVE PROGRAM OF CONVENTION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Devotional Rilph Pynchori Song Calvary Quartet Reading Lucile Manlier Methodist Church Pleasant Mills Duet Bobo Methodist Church Address C. D. Teeplc County Supt. I Young People's Departme n t. Business Session Reports Collection). Song “God Be With You Till We . Meet Again ' Congr gation 1 Benediction Rev. .1 M. I’y. ihon BOARD ADOPTS NEW TEXTBOOKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I a nee. Other new adoptions at wholesale prices were: Good Reading for high school. Cross-Smith (Ginn and Co., pub-1 Ushers), American literature, $1.59. and English, $1.71. The' United States of America, ; Wertenbaker Smith (Scribner's), . $1.29. Geography, physical, eeonnmic and regional, Chamberlain (Lippin- ( cott). $1.23. Modern chemistry, Dull (Holt Company), $1.35. o GASTON MEANS TELLS STORY IN SUPREME COURT i ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I ed. It impressed me very much — I the seriousness of it. I "I reached the conclusion Hint j i Irving Fenton and Wellington I Henderson had knowledge of the ! kidnaping or an active part in it. 1 believed they would return the 1 child.” Means said that on March 4. I when the baby had not been returned. he went to ex-judge Marion Devries, of Washington, and | told him that he had valuable in-! formation on the Lindbergh case. Means then described his negotiations to get authority from Lindbergh to participate in investigation of the crime, and added that meanwhile he had writ ten to Fenton, telling him to come 1 to Washington immediately. On March 4, he said, he received a phone call from Mrs. Evalyn I Walsh McLean. "I had no idea what Mrs. McI Lean wanted to see me about.” Means said. That same day Means testified he was introduced by telephone * ‘

a good coating of hydrated lime and rak'e it into the topsoil. A sufficient quantity to whiten the soil like a light snowfall will do the trick. Give aother dressing in a month or six weeks and the stocks will do their duty. The dwarf German ten-weeks stock, the cut and come again, and the Beauty of Nice type are favorites. The last-named is the i latest to bloom and the first is the earliest. The cut and come again are in between. It is always best i to grow some reserve plants for a ; small percentage are bound to ! come single and when the singles i appear they can be removed from ! the bed and double plants substi--1 tuted from the reserve garden. Do not be deterred by past failures with the stocks. Lime the ; ground anil they will respond | nobly. They, like several other i members of their family, the cru- ; cifers, have a spicy fragrance which is strongest at night. A I dose relative, the night-blooming , stock, will scent up the evening i , from a small group of plants. It j is insignificant ami weedy in ap- | pearance but at night it is a deI lighttul plant.

•to Col. Robert Guggenheim, I friend of the Lindbergh family, i Means said he thought Guggenheim could assist him in obtaining I authority to investigate the case. ' o INDIANAPOLIS BANK TO REOPEN I K’ONTINI’ED FROM PAGE ONE) I lernmcnt will invest $1,800,000 ini I the preferred stock of the American National. The R. F. C. will I i loan an additional $1,200,000 on | segregated assets. The new financing pian follows: $1,000,000 common slock; preferred stock $1.800,l)i>0 held by the government; surplus of $400,000 and undivided profits of the same amount, to be subscribed for by stockholders, depositors, friends and the public. Fifty per cent of the restricted ba'ances of depositors will be available upon completion of the plan. The new bank will assume tile unpaid and unrest/icted deposit I liability accrued in deposits since; (lifting of the national bank moratorium. A federal conservator will be ap-1 I pointed for the Fletcher American (as part of the reorganization. The bank, however, will pay anil receive the unrestricted balances. Management of the new bank! , will be subject to approval of the j [Comptroller of currency, the Federal Reserve board and the Recon-i ! struction Finance Corporation. The new bank will have no sc-’ curity affiliate, it was announced. ■ It's a Long Time Since John Had RIiEUM A T I S M Happy Now —No More Idle Days —' His Wife Joyfully Asserts As lont; as you ha\ o an excpss of I | uric acid and other rirruLn I iug pois- | ons in the joints, blood and tissues j you are going to have r!iruni:itir i ’ pains, aches, twinges and joint ; ( sw dlings—you ' an't help but h ive j i them. So start t'xliy with th' swift. i safe, popular prescription Io get rid! of annoying rheumatic troubles —j Just ask Holthou.se Drug <'>•.. or, any druggist f >r one '•'> < cut boitiej j of Allenrtl—a sensible scientific f< c multi free from opiates "f n• i - deadening drugs —it drives out pain! and agony in IK hours —or mum .. , | back. Excess uric acid poiron starts to leave loody in 24 hours —the samel guarantee holds good for Sacil ica, I Neuritis and Lumbago from the j same caus«—why n >t start to get I well today. Big Penny Dance Sunday Sunset. Don't miss it! Say Dad! Why not bring the Kiddies to our Greenhouse and let them select the flowers they wish to send to Mot he r next Sunday—Mother’s Day. PRICES REASONABLE 7/ (i i/hßioux'/')'' PECATUR FLORAL CO Nultman Ave PHONE 100 I

WREN NEWS Mr. amd Mrs. Bryan Myers spent Saturday morning in Decatur. Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Jake Gephart were Mr. and Mrs. Basil Gephart and children of Wren and Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gephart of Ohio City. Harry Furry and Frank Standiford have been engaged in collecting shade trees for the Moser Memorial Park, At this time 133 I trees have been planted. These | ti . es have been donated by differ-1 ent persons. Lumber was also donated for the purpose of making rustic seats. This work will be done by E. D. Hurless of Willshire, a former resident of Wren. The garden club has also taken special interest in helping beautify the; park. Mr. ami Mi's. Warren .’.lras ami ! little daughter Annadell of Zanes-! ville Ohio, ale visiting in the home I of Mrs. Morris’-parents, Mr. and I Mrs. Frank Standiford. The Sunlight Oil Company held a ! free gift distribution Saturday evening. Clifford Oeschsle is employed at the D.catur Foundry. A number of persons have been stopping it the Frank Standiford |

potr ■••••■"Vi'4 “Believe me, I know a low price when I see oneI’m buying my tires NOW!” Right now Goodyear is concentrating on two W main lines of tires. This saves money for the factory that builds them —for the dealer who sells them —and for the car owner who buys them. T f .al 1 f a 1 cants recommended by your jf yOU Want tO MOW hOW TCal thCSG SHVIOgS HTC SPRINGS Thoroughly array with f and how much they mean to you— just check up on penetrating graphited oil to . • ■ fai • i eliminate s q ne»ks,make riding today s price of the size you need, and at the same easier. Inspect car underneath. *' r doors oil hinges, locks, handies. time take a careful look at the nnest quality that hood lacing i-übric.te with ever honored the Goodyear name. graphited solidified grease. J “ T !b’LX7. c «olr e a X?u«: This stepping up of quality, this stepping down of oi^’ih^rX'kAbs"here.spark price leads the way to a better deal for everyone inspect and check each (or proper I —and that’s what we a I want now. and efficient working order. TIRES Remove small nails, tacks, Best of all —it means that everyone can afford new Is glass, stones, etc. Inspect and _. . . " inflate correctly. g Goodyear 1 ires, especially it you buy now while (Regular Sat. QC 9 . J .... price 51.25) only QJC pTICCS HTC Still lOW. Change Oil! GQOD>YEKH We Recommend Texaco Quaker State All-Weather I Pathfinder] rse qt. 30c qt. Supertwist Cord Tire Supertwist Cord Tire —■ SCBS SA-65 EXIDE Batteries AND UP I AND UP WHFNITSAIM 13 PLATE sq7s 13 PLATt IDEX ' A* S 4 95 -change 50 c a week buys new EXIDF JF J ' j&KpStSr «/ / ? Rental* - fferharijinM - Road ServieK X /''’G A • T TS*irn -1 A wi'EK on ridr ■ jL zMWBW?-. J 1 J I Into *’ i. vou pay r 4VZBWBSHSay IIHL.U -* tvtnal! sum down ■ A GQOD/YEAR SERVICE INCORPORATED Corner Madison and Third Streets Road Service Phone 262 Vulcanizing—Battery Recharging*—Complete Lubricating

barn to see tie fine twin heifer calves, which are for sale Mrs. W. F. Oeschsle and daughter Dulsa called in the Frank Standiford home Sunday afternoon. Jean Devinney is recovering from an attack of tonsilitis. Members of the Clyde Jones family have been confined to their home because of sickness. Mr. und Mrs. Roy Clifton spent Sunday afternoon in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton were also recent guests of the Bill Burke family in Payne, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Furry of i Wren and John Furry and family of Elida attended the funeral of a relative at Craigville recently. Anyone wishing to hear some real hand music tune in on WEAO, Columbus, Ohio University station, Saturday, May 13 at 3 p. m. and listen to Boss Hurt and his blind j l)oys. Reginald Clifton, sou of Mr. p.nd Mrs. Roy Clifton, of Wren, i plays first clarinet. Mr. Hurt, the i leader, is also blind. Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Myers eitij tertained Sunday for Robert Drake, Mrs. J. P. Myers, Ralph Myers, Mr. } and Mrs. Arthur Miller and daughi tors of D catur. Christ Hitzeman | and Dorothy Myers of Fort Wayne. Aflflflw VJPB2 Rkooo E Return to Forests Urged BOISE, Idaho (U.R)- Return of

PAGE FIVE

Indians to the wilderness they once ruled was urged here by George P. LaVatta, Indian agent, Indians should be selected as members of President Roosevelt's reforestation army, LaVatta declared. o— Robbers Left Phoney Safe Seattle, Ore. —(UP) —A neatly constructed sale made of black pasteboard was standing in the office of the Cascade Petroleum Company one morning. Employes found robbers had tracked off their 1,500 pound safe with $2,280 inside.

K ou « Strength Builder? fTV/TANY folks IVI have thin, pale jjL blood—they’re weak, W feel tired, logy and ' - A dull. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery increases the appetite, eliminates poisons from the in- — testines, stimulates ■ the digestion, enriches the blood, clears I the skin of eruptions and blemishes and ! you gain in vim, vigor and vitality. Read what Mrs. Lorcne Rolland of 1123 W. Indiana Ave , Evansville, Ind., said: “I took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, when my health was very poor, and I found it a fine tonic and strength builder. I could not have believed that anything would so improve my general health as did this treatment with Dr. Pierce s Discovery.” Write Dr. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.