Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 132, Decatur, Adams County, 5 June 1933 — Page 5

■MS COUNTY Rills ME EETIHG llcali Club Held Meet- ■ Si" At Monroe Last || Friday Evening \d .'ii County 4 II Calf Club MB, \i,, : I'l i'lay ■ ■ v.-ninii with ~ r ,. ni attendance, which large considering ■“lason Cl ulys Harvey. Helen ■K(\ ~.; . i Lester Mazelin gave talks on their Purdue Kl-np trip. Miller was elected veil and anixi'tited to lead in the walk. The following K;- ('t>il> members signed up work: Ernestine ■ Hirschy, Elnore |K (< \rdoii Mosser, Lester |;,.ii.ri Striker, Marion Malil.- Harvey, (lien Grif■M p,,i0., Lehman, Juanita -hi.'tit Hirschy, James |M \',.vle Hill. Hugh Richard atnl Millard Steiner. 11,...! regular meeting will be hl . .itiernoon. June at BF 1.. V . ,T home tn Jefferson Tins will be held con-! with the dairy herd imassociation dairy field discussed for a Calf Hp-. which will probably be JulyMm — - - —o —— ■ tRLEY REPLIES I TO INQUIRIES KAtinl T.l> FROM PAGE ONE) In the Crop Production < 01 of tile Department of are limited by regu Batt'll to S3OO each and are grantEg jci'i h to provide minimum ex fcensi of putting in a crop where resources ara avilable, Lid lie ■■ - urity taken is generally 6 wy- hen. Direct refinancing and pro-, loans of the Regional Agri-! Credit Corporation. in larger amounts’ iSans described in parafajapl 2. hut are also of a tempor-l emergency character, gen maturing in one year. The I taken is varied and may 1 warehouse receipts and on chattels as well as • |ain:- Applications are handled one of ute twelve regional | on their branches, of

South America’s Official War Provides Big Test for League * * * * * * Paraguay’s Declaration of War on Bolivia Opportunity for Geneva Body—of Which Both Nations Are Members—to Justify Its Existence. ) x. <$ • '**. >lwr! C\ Bolivia. \ * |I ' [disputed L_x / Y* tQ >. ' j' ■ 1 ' [ territory | * I f A- E-' ’ r--' P/ /<?>? hMMiI v l ' ARGENTthTA / ! / MsWHI I ; 6 a^ s *^ / j >uth America Theatre q/’W'Ar, &es Daniel ' /S 1 jB \ i /A ; I 7 / \ * ■ •- • X<X . X • / \ V i / "" _ _ General Hans Ruwt Pres Evsebjo Ayalap/Papw ben President Eusebio Ayala of Paraguay U rHhe two coun►neighboring country of Bolivi., he did >nor e f Notion , O n trial. •• at each other • throata—he put the Le«g . ue ant ] if that Itn Paraguay and Bolivia are member. . ( m « >( admit fai | U re gust body cannot control it. own member.. Although there has carry out the purpo.e for which it wa. cre t d. Europeßn cafac | y , m , «n fighting in many parts of th» world h , 5 had dea l since I. is the first official war with which the Le g |, r j nl , it. refractory conception. And should the Geneva body fail to bnnfe imbers into line, there is little it can offer T , .j, era }, a , been raguay-Bolivia trouble has been br * w “J*[ “ r , y n ’ mon ths 40,000 men fifing for the past eleven months. In tho. oos.ession of the ve been killed while the two countr... fought Ncithcr 0,000 square miles of wilderne.., known a . | neighbor., Pre.ile Would listen to the peace-making effor |j e and President nt Ayala asserting that Paraguay wa. fig, ' « ’ eountry merely miel Salamanca of Bolivia : vastly superior in manI. defeuding itself. Incidentally, Bo B o ]jvh»n Army ha. been and equipment to Paraguay. Too, Be niu». But again.* lined by General Hans Kundt, German ■ most stubborn it, the Paraguayans are known to be nation ,, Argenhter. in the world. Back in the 1870. It h fi a d | o . t a, Brazil and Uruguay, five year, to vanquj.h her alter over eae million men.

which there are twenty-one. “4. Marketing and facility loans to farmers co-operatives. | “ T hese are now handled by the Co operative Division of the Farm Credit Administration, which is the successor to the functions of the Federal Farm Board under the Agricultural Marketing Act. Later it is proposed to decentralize this activity by setting up co-operative banks in each one of the twelve Federal Land Bank Districts. Cur rent applications should, however be made to the offices of the Farm Credit Administration, 1300 “E” Street, N. W„ Washington, D. C. 5. f apital stock loans to cooperative credit corporations. “This function was taken over from the Secretary of Agriculture, but its development depends upon I the grant of additional funds by congress, as proposed in the Farm i Credit act of 1933, now pending i before Congress. ' Permit me to emphasize that no other function or activity than those listed above is carried on by the Farm Credit Administration. - Hie work of this Administration has to do solely with loans and (credit to farmers and farm co-oper-atives.” Jc. E. STRIKER IS REELECTED TO THIRD TERM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ( shy. The law which designates the county auditor as a member of the board and specifies how he shall . cast his vote reads: “In all elec- ( tions of a county superintendent, II the county auditor shall be the ( clerk of such election; and in case I of a tie vote, the auditor shall cast I the deciding vote. In case any 1 1 one candidate shall receive a num- , her of votes equal to one-half of ! all the trustees of the county, the i county auditor shall then and at ■ ( all subsequent ballots cast his ■ I vote with the trustees until some • candidate shall receive a major- , j ity of all the votes cast in the i county, including the county amli- | tor. Acts 1899, Page 240, in force I March 3, 1899.’’ ( Tlie trustees met behind closed ( doors and secret ballots were cast. ( All of the trustees were present. , The four candidates milled around I the 'auditor’s office and in the : corridor of the court house wait- ! | ing for the results. T. R. Noil, ( trustee of Washington township j was the first one to leave the i room where the election was held and as he stepped into the lobby I of the auditor's office he offered congratillations to Mr. Striker.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1933.

Class Roll 1933 < MON TOWNSHIP Susie B. Yates MO.VROE TOWNSHIP Catherine Monee rinv/i t.. Ilema Shady John Plummer Susan Dehner 0 ” John Baumgartner Catherine Smith Eugene Stauffer Rnhort nik ner Samuel 11. lager Marietta Mover Edwlnna Stuckey g»nnAi, tl u n Frederick Kae.hr RHin Ghort Hilma Studtar Ray SbLu Sey MclVena Kehrn Edward, Sprungcr Harold Zeigler Marguerite Myers WASHINGTON TWP Leioy E. Rich Otto Krueckeherg ;’ can Huger WAR ASH TOWNSHIP Linda Marbach Howard Reinhard Lester Habegger Richard Miller Freda Whitright corrine Llechty Ireva Baumgartner Leroyed Stetler .Margaret Poling L ?!, ar ' ha Amstutz Helen Weiland Juanita Lehman hlfrieda Liechiy Ell Sprunger Zelno Drake Fave Martin ilufine Llechty 1-nances Mason Rosali Miller Jean Strickler Robert Steiner Bertha Neuenschwander Julia Krueckeherg Pauline McKean m'.i'T i Agnes Norr Carl Bischoff Chester Feasel J'laid M M1 Itosie Schwartz Amanda Krueckeherg Russell Stump Ruth Landrum Sherman Neuenschwander Monema Blakey Ruth Chilcote Otho Andrews Arveda Neuenschwander Margaret Hehamerloh Kenneth Longenberger wm'." n Ser MUrtrej! Marie Hire, hy Marcella Blceke Doris J. Andrews 1-rankhn i.ybarger Catherine Fairchild Harry Brown „ *!. " 5 Robert Derrickson Gertrude Schultz Harvey Teeple J, 5 .f t,y ru ?s er Glel ‘ Beerbower I reta 11. Fairchild George Engle I bora Knutfman Maryan Ferry Bryce Burger B Earl Stucky Donald Glassburn Victor Grove ST. MARI S TOWNSHIP Harold F. Fricke Pauline Wilier Ermal Leon Gilbert s'alvin A. 'teeter ROOT TOWNSHIP Ruby Bragg Harvey W. Laughrey Frances Wheeler Marion Hague irginia Reinhart diaries Hendricks Robert Wm. Franz Doris Durbin otis Kermit Hocker Harold It. Smith William L. Fritzinger Paul McCullough Stanley Ayala Sam Kuntz Ellen Schug Ro'bert Pynchon John Lynn Grile Harriet Kunkel Robert McMillen T'RENCH TOWNSHIP Huth Nelson I'lleanor G, Johnson Mary Louise Sovine Keith Byers Banta Eleanore A. Koop Jolin Human ... Kenneth Wanner Thelma Ray f 7 L,,, » Jal k Conner PREBLE TOWNSHIP Robert Suntan Bettk fenard i? ane B . rU w% a Georire Rav 4. ’W n . IH “ Margaret E. Snyder Aoelbcrt Conrad Eatliyl Tinkham Har nd l’’ hbcrger a Edgar Wente Gorden Welker Dale Mot’ -mhbTrger Margane-t Cline Paul Kiess Dale Harshman Fynlim Ila wg-mr ' '’'"’l! 1 M, a hyS Alvin Macke Zeffie LaTurner Ve?na Viola Beer Everette Pyle i Evelyn Fuhrman Earl Williamson V’era Irene Beer lobertchew , Waller Hoffman Ida May Cottrell "n lo „i Ifelen D. Affolder Velma Ehlerding Hugh Death F ovd Gerber Virgmia Egly ' Viona Kirchner Is'ffie E. LaTurner . . •. . < Pauline Llechty , Leona Selking Richard Robinson k' aO mi L. Miller i Mary Fruechtle ... . ... . K ..... ~ Gladys Bertsch Paul Millet I I.OUIS Zwiek BLUE < REM* I Ml. Chester Isclt j AJvena Autnann Floyd Engle JEFFERSON TUT. ; Alwina Bultemeier Elfcen Fay Spencer Ty> i Beer | Fredrick Mailand Frieda Myers ' inoirhpn ' I.Jllda Fuhrmann Lucile Parrish Helen ineichen .\ri»nld BuuH'k Grace W. Bolinger HA RTFORD TONY NSHII* Lucille Boze ( Norwin Siuppenhagen Virginia Parrish jra Ineichen Nellie Miae Hunt Lester Zimmerman Hush Lavid Mosser KIRKLAMJ TOWANHIP Bonita Meyer Jeanette Moshherger , , " Harry Young John Martin Joseph Grogg i Paul Arnold Gerald Fellers Maxine Jenkins Imogene Reef Robert Bucher Alary Margaret Riff Ruth Gottschalk Naomi Rian Max Houck Pelbert Hoffman James Garhoften . . ~ . » | Margaret Diehl James Parr Naomi Denny I ram is r. lesbi I Donald Hoffman Delmar Girod Anthon Brewster Ro Hand Dale Engle Henry L. Bieberich Pauline Carver Margaret Bixler Arbie Tumbleson i Carl Harvey Mildred M. Manley Floyd Beitler Richard Borno Rebecca Teeple George Bierly Don l ’- Abnet .Jarnos IL Moore, Jr. Maurice Miller Gilbert Bears Mary Helen Moran ! Luella Warthman Mary Ray Chester Augthurger Augusta Morningstar i Violet Arnold Gerald Bixler Elois Amstutz r»«i n ri« \ Dale Mankey Glen Lautzenheifler Calvin Lehman ’ e * r,s 1 j Robert Henschen Faye Myers Kathryn Pearson Paul Deloyd Sipe ■|;■ ?. WWWwwwwwwww

i / I wiraouT a . iARDEN?J Thinning Out—A Stern Duty

JU 4- $ A* - 4 A 4 ROOT CROP NOT THINNED OUT. ag s ! I ' 4 ’ 1 ! i ’ I i same crop showing more HEALTHY AND VIGOROUS GROWTH FOR. HAVING E>EEN thinned out at proper Time Only a hardened professional cr an amateur gardener calloused by long years of experience will thin bis plants properly without some hesitation. The pulling up of some seedlings seems wasteful, but usually from one packet of seeds many more plants than are needed are raised, and a few properly spaced so that they may develop to their full capacity in the long run will give far better returns than three or four times their number too thickly planted. There is every danger that the average gardener will transplant

Late Garden of Annuals

A gay display of annuals is altogether within the range of practical gardening up lo July 1. It is only necessary to select those which are of slrbrt-blooming seasons and come into flower quickly. The cornflowers and annual poppies will give beautiful display. The delicate shades of Ihe Shirleys with the rich blue of the cornflowers are beautiful in bouquets. The annual larkspurs spin up in no time to bloom in warm weather and the French marigolds will get into bearing in time for a wonderful display during the fall when the cool nights bring out the rich crimson and mahogany in their flowers. The annual gypsophila needs sowing every two weeks all summer to give its misty white for bouquets. It can be sown at any time. Late-sown salvias come at just the right time with their flaming scarlet in (all. They are too hoi looking for July and August to be appreciated for their full value. Phlox Drumtnondi is a fast grower and comes into bloom qnlcklv from seed. We cannot expect to get the full value of the giant zinnias, but the little pompons may be planted late this

his seedlings from boxes and seed beds too thickly unless he watches himself carefully. The surest way is to take a foot rule or a stick cut to the right length as to the distance apart the plants should be set and to set the plants at each end of it, moving the stick along. In this way the planter will be held rigidly to the proper distances. The tendency usually is to "hunch" and think. "Oh, well, it won't make any difference if they are a little thicker." However. it does when the plants J mature. The proper distances usually are given in the directions on seed packages and it is the wisest plan to follow these strictly, particularly in the case of head lettuces and . other plants making large leaf growth and leaves furnish the edible portion of the vege- , table. ' Another way of making spaces , i« hy lying a piece of rope about a ’ rim of the wheel on a wheel hoe ■ at proper distances and then running the wheel down the row. the places where the plants should be i transplanted then being marked. Proper spacing always provides i for room to cultivate properly and cultivation is one of the most im- • ■ portant factors in a successful : | crop.

■i :■ J ‘ • S. - J. —- .’X —— -L ... I a*"*** — ; 4 PLANTING OP QUICK GROWING ANNUALS WILL BRIGHttN A • CORNER OF THL BACKYARD month and give a fine show of their brilliant little buttons. The ' everlasting may be sown now for ' late fall harvesting, the helic.hry sums being among the most bril- ' | liant. Asters "we shall have to forego ! unless we can buy plants which i! are still in the market In some ■ i sections. We may likewise be fj able to pick up plants of verbenas > \ and zinnias far enough along to J spring into activity in a short

| time. Portulaca germinates only jin warm weather and in a hot I spot ill the garden will fairly revel and burst into myriads of its brilliant blooms in short order. This seed will not germinate until 1 it is really warm weather regard- ! less of how early it is sown. We can sow four-o'clock now as they are rapid warm-weather I growers. ■More Than Million Men Back At Work Washington, June 5 — (UP) — nearly 1.590,(T00 men hive returned to work' since March 4 and there are indications of a definite revival in industry, budg t director Douglas told congressional leaders at a White House conference last night, it was learned today.

THOUGHTS and THINGS THE business of living, when boiled down and all the froth skimmed oft, is just a matter of thinking. Each of us is continually thinking ideas of our own and swapping them for the ideas of others. If there is a famine of outside ideas we shrivel up ourselves. Children with “nobody to play with” are unhappy and unmanageable. From thinking with our heads to doing with our bands is but a little step and then our thoughts become things. It is bc'cause men of America are so unfettered in their thinking and doing that this country is such a fine place lo live in. It is also because these thoughts are freely radiated and spread broadcast, in the distribution of manufactured things and in the distribution oi the facts about them (advertising), that this country is such a fine place to live in. The originator of an idea is not much better oft than before he originated it till he gets some one else to absorb ’t and enjoy it and benefit by it. The man or woman surrounded by better thoughts and things but who pays not the slightest attention to them is not much better off than the one wih “nobody to play with.” The advertisements in the papers are thoughts—telling you about the things that other men and women have created for your happiness. Read the ads. They are the voices from hundreds of thousands of looms, shops, foundries, studios, laboratories, where millions of minds are turning pleasant thoughts into worth-while things for your comfort.

SOCIETY WILL GIVE PROGRAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Kenneth Runyon, Roy Andress, and Paul Graham and Miss Alice Allwein. Other Friends—Mrs. I. W. Macy and the Misses Margaret Campbell, Martha Christen, Marjorie DeVoss, Miriam Haley, Corolene Townsend, Helena Rayl and Margaret Frisinger. Church Miss Florence Magley Indian Pauline Affolder Mexican Sanna Kunkel Emigrant Janet Shrock Chinese Harriet Kunkel Japanese Catherine Affolder Mrs. Carrie T. Haubold will be the accompanist and singers will be Mrs. William Shrock, Mrs. E. D. Engeler and Paul Saurer. EDITORS MEET IN INDIANAPOLIS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I was the speech of E. H. Harris, | editor of the Richmond, Ind , Pal- ; ladium, on relationship of the: press and radio. . He is chairman ( of the radio committee of the' American Newspaper Publishers, Association and made his first report today on the committee's findings. There need be no serious con-' troversy between the newspapers j and radio broadcasters so long as ! radio remains in its legitimate field and recognizes the rights of newspapers, Harris declared. | He pointed uot that under the I present set-up radio virtually is j a monopoly that can hamper freedom of expression through its I power to select and determine its ! program. As a result, he addeij, the Amer- ( lean press remains the only I medium which functions in the | interest of free speech and for the | protection of the basic rights of ’ the people. “Radio broadcasting undoubted-! ly has its particular sphere of, activity and its success will be . governed by its ability to perform I satisfactory public service,” Har ’ . ris continued. “An analysis of the assigned

; i If you owe several bills which you would like to pay—we will ; furnish you the cash to square ( up thpse bills. You may repay us in terms to suit your convenience and you will only have one . place to pay. You will find our service in such a transaction well | worth the cost. For full details, ■ call, phone or write us—no obligation. FRANKLIN SECURITY COMPANY Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur, Ind

subject suggests three divisions in this discussion. “First—The attitude of newspapers toward radio broadcasting as a competing medium in the advertising field. “Second—Radio as a means of broadcasting news and the protection of property rights of newspapers in news which the newspapers have collected and paid fpr. “Third —The attitude of individual editors toward the general subject of radio broadcasting as it relates to the common welfare and to the policy of the national government on radio.” Harris dismissed the first division as only a minor phase. He said that if radio actually has a legitimate place in advertising, it

I PUBLIC SALE COMMUNITY AUCTION SALE Decatur, Indiana I FRIDAY, June 9th ■ at 7:00 P. M. ■ Livestock, Machinery, and Household Goods, Cedar Fence Posts: One Horse Wagon with 3 in. tire, like new; Saddle m Mare, age 9 years old, weight 1,000 tbs., well broke to work. H Bring in what you have for sale. I Decatur Community Sales [J? Roy Johnson, auct. Vote Tomorrow Every Loy al Citizen Should Do His I) ut y Tomorrow by Going to the Polls and Voting Patriotically. Place an X in the first Column of the ballot for Ratification Let’s Help Put Indiana in Line with the Rest of the States. Advertisement

PAGE FIVE

eventually will find its sphere and operate within ft. oRalph Myers First Corn Club Entry Ralph My- rs, Hartford towaiship is the first corn grower enrolled in the 5-acre corn club. Enrollment will close June 15. The two leaders last year were Lawr'nce Blum and Carl Amstutz. Gold, silver and 'bronze medals will be awarded again this year. For Sale New and used Fordson tractor parts. Dierkes Auto Wrecking W. Nuttman Phone 323