Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 180, Decatur, Adams County, 1 August 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES • ♦ FOR SALE FOR SALE—BuII cult, three <U.v« old. Inquire of John Felty at Court House. 179a.1(x FOR SALE Mattresses. Just received large shipment of mattresses, cotton, felt and spring tilled. Selling price $4.50 to $23. Sprague Furniture Company, 152 S. Second Street. Phone 199. g Ist'2t FOR SALE Used Furniture. One large leather davenport, $6.5®; 1 leather couch. $2.50; 1 Favorite cabinet heater, large size, SSO. Sprague Furniture Company, 152 South Second Street. Phone 100. FOR SALE —Cuniumbers, Otto D. Bteberich, route 4 Decatur 179-3 t ] FOR SALE—Five piece oak dinette almost new. Also will sell rabbits j and pens or trade for small tent or camp stove. D. L. Petit Phone $724. 179k-2tx FOR SALE OR TRADE—National Cash Register. Late model. Like new. See it at 127 Nort.i Third street or Phone 1229 176 g2teod FOR SALtE —Good used ice box, reasonable. August Walters, phone 207. 178g3t WANTED HELP WANTED —Dependable ladles wanted to do local work. Good , pay. Call 304. 180-G2t-X WANTED —Tanner and cutter cows Also fresh, cows and springers. Have horses and mules for sale or trade. L. W. Murphy. Phone 22. I 174-g-ts WANTED -Live stock, farm Machinery Household 'goods or anything you have to sell at the Community i Auction Sale Decatur, 7 p. m. Friday August 4th. 179-3 t FOR RENT~~ FOR RENT—Two rooms suitable 1 for offices; plenty of light; newly decorated; heat and water furnished. Inquire Niblick and Co. _________ 178-3 t FOR RENT —Rome City cottage. Accohimodates 15. Lake view. Screen porch. Lights and boat. Mrs. F. W. Mahan, Monmouth. 178-k3t ARRIVALS „ Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Myers of De-' troit, Michigan, are the parents of 1 a seven and one half pound girl ■ baby born July 30. The baby has been named Barbara lAnn. DO YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR FARM FOR CASH? If priced right, it can be done. ( all or see Fred Reppert. of the National Realty Company, Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg.. Phone 610, or 312. 180t3 I NOTH i: TO XO.V-HESIDEVIS In the IduuiM Circuit ( ourt. Sriitrui’iuTi 11 -??’ ! S * 3X , ( \ o 14BST, 1 HL is I A IE <)!•’ INDIANA ADAMS COUNTY’ Alva D. Baker, as exe utor <»f the last will and testament < f Philip . Baker, deceased vs. Nancy 13, Baker! et al. Now comets the plaintiff, by Lenhart Heller & Schurger attorneys, and files his complaint herein t<»Kether with an affidavit of a ?onipetent person that said defendants Lester A. Barkley, Julia G. Barkley' his wife, Nellie Schiemmer and Carl It. Suhlemmcr her husband are not residents of the state of Indiana, that said action is for partition of real estate and other property is said Adams county and that said non-resi-dents defendants are necessary parties thereto. Notice is therefore given said Defendants, last named, that unless i they be and appear on 16th day of j September 1933, the same being the I 12th Judicial day of the next term j of the Adams Circuit Court, to t>e j ikolden on the first Monday of Sep- { tember A.D. 1933 at the Court House in Decatur in said County and State and answer or demur to said complaint the same will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness my name ami the Seal of ' said Court, affixed at Decatur, Ind-I iana this 24th day >f September A.D. i 1933. Milton C. Werling, clerk Lenhart, Heller A Nrhurger, Uty*. July 25 Aug- 1-8 | KOTKE or FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. Notice is hereby given to the ere- I ditors, heirs and legatees of John I Herscher, deceased, to appear in the 1 Adams Circuit Court, held at Deca- ■ tur, Indiana, on the sth day of Sep-1 tember 1933, and show cause, if any, i why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified io then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. John C. Grandstaff Administrator Decatur, Indiana Jirly 24, 1933. Attorney Nathan C. Nelson July 25 Aug 1.

FARMS FOR SALE No. I—Boa,1 —80a, in Monroe tp„ nice home, can be benight at the right price. No. 2—4oa, in Monroe tp„ with good house and barn, ideal home for some one. No. 3—3oa. Monroe tp„ 1% miles of town, right price. No. 4—2414a, Wabash tp„ 1% mile from Berne, house with basement, and furnace. Nice home for some one. No. s—4oa.5 —40a. Kirkland tp.. with good house and barn at right price. No. 6—4oa. nice home, right price for quick sale. No. 7—lsa, for SI,OOO. quick sale. If you want to bhy or sell, see The J. A. Harvey Realty Co. Monroe, Indiana.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL | AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET ■ | Corrected August 1 1 I No commlssloD ana no yardage. ■ 170 to 240 lbs $4.50 ' 240 to 300 lbs $4.35 300 to 325 lbs SL2O 140 to 170 lbs $4.10 ' 120 to 140 lbs. $3.10 ' 100 to 120 lbs ■ $2175 Rougi s $3.00 Stags $1.50 . 1 Vealers $5.50 Spring Lambs $6.50 Farm Bureau Ass'n. Open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings Egg Market No. 1, dozen 14c No. 2, dozen 9c • No. 3, dozen 7c EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 1. —(U.R) i — Livestock: Hogs: on sale, 200: slow, steady; 200 to 250 lbs., quotable at $5.10$5.15; 150 lbs., down, $3.75-$4.50; 1 packing sows, $3 25-$4. Cattle, receipts, 125; slow, steady with yesterdays decline, one load 1850-lb„ short fit yearlings, $6.00: ■ plainer kinds down to $3.25. Calves, receipts. 25; steady; good to choice. $6-$6.50; medium. $5.50-$6; culls and commons. $3.50 1 $5. Sheep, receipts, suo; nominally i steady to unevenly 25c lower; few! I good top ewes and wether lambs, I $8; medium, light and common, j slow; sheep steady, good to choice ; ewes, $1.50-$2.50. — FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 1. —(U.R) — ! Livestock: Hogs. 15c off; 200-250 lbs., $4.60; 350-300 lbs., $4.50; 300-350 lbs., $4.35; 170-200 lbs., $4.50; 160-170 |lbs.. $1.35: 150-160 lbs., $4; 140-150! lbs., $3.75: 130-140 lbs., $3.55; 100-! 130 I*-., $:'.10; roughs. $3.50; stags? ; $2.00. Calves, $5.50; lambs, $7.50. Cattle, steady, unchanged. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat .97% 1.00% 1.04% Corn .53% .58% .64% I Oats .. .39% .43% .47% ■ — LOCAL GRAIN MARKET August 1 No. 1 New Wheat, SO lt>s. or better .......... ................................ 74c I No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 73c ! Old Oats 29c ' New Oats . 27c White or mixed Corn 65c ; Good Yellow Corn 70e o > . # Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these test questions’ Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. On what Strait is the French | city of Calais. 2- What is the minimum constitu tional age for a President of the U. S.? 3. Who was Saint Vitus? 4 Who wrote th- poem “Abou Ben Adheni?” 5. iln which state is the city of Kissimmee? 6. Whom did President Girfield appoint as Secretary of State? 7. In what group of islands is Mindoro? , 8. Name the Spanish subjugator I of Cuba and found r of Havana. 9. Lu what German state is the famous watering place, Kissingen? 10. Os what recent amendment to the Constitution was Senator j George W. Norris of Nebraska th- ' author? o nvw. MII'IIEMEVT OF ESTATE Ml. Mig." ' N 'll eis hereby given tn the ,-r—- --' ® n 1 ? < ‘ irs a,ld legatees of Albert I”- y! abe r- deceased, to appear in I the Adams Circuit Court, livid at Decatur. Indiana, on the tth day of September 1933. and show cause, if I any, «hv the Final Settlement Ac. counts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved: an I said heirs are notified to then and : there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. i Bil liard D. Graber, Administrator Decatur, Indiana July 25, 1933. . Atty. J. W. Teeple. July 25 Aug 1. t the Habit — Trade ar Home

i N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: i, 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 I ; Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. . ' Telephone 136 I S. E. BLACK iI FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1 Because of our wide experience in conducting funerals we are able to give perfect service ata very reasonable cost. Dignified But Not Costly. 500—Phones—727 Lady Asst, Ambulance Servlet

I AIRPLANE WILL 1 GATHER BLANKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) <<A *««««***** ♦ ♦ a ton. Vincennes, Evansville, New Albany. Jeffersonville, Madison, Connersville, and Richmond. Meanwhile, distribution of agreement blanks was continued by postmasters throughout the state and many codes of fair competition 1 placed into effect. > At South Bend, the Studebaker ) plant began operation this niorn- > Ing with reduced hours and increas- ) ed wages, affecting approximately >i 6,800 employes. Plant workers were given a 151 1 i per cent wage increase and salar-1 ) i ied office workers ret-eived a 10, l ' per cent raise. The change placed I the minimum factory wage at 401 cents an hour for men and 35 cents ' an hour for boys and women. Fac- j lory workers will be employed not] more than 35 hours a week and of-, flee workers will be employed not . more than 35 hours a week and; office workers were limited to 40, hours a week. hi addition to the Studebaker; action, other South Bend employ- i ers announced nearly 1.000 workers had been added to their payrolls. Codec of three state organiza- , tions were under discussion here today.. Groups conferring wore the Associated Theater Owners of Indiana. th- Indiana Florists Association and the Indiana Automobile Dealers Association. The Indiana Hotel Association and the Indiana Bottlers' association have meetings scheduled here i tomorrow. Stor s in Elkhart will remain j | closed Saturday night, for tne first , time 'history. A blanket agreement providing a six-d iy week was

• • ear^cm. UNTIL WE LEARNED BETTER Until .e learned better, .e used to .lx wood and steel In our car “Tt thrust way to make bodles-then. But the state of the art has advanced. all-steel body than to Os course, it is more expensive to make an all steex make a wooden frame and nail steel pane s q d llars for new dies, volves an Initial expenditure oj Beveral 9lpenslv9 cars which renders a change very costly. • ? d t J is beca use the dies :“?a: r L P cbTr ed on‘”e S a"r a “ tJl’tl- plains .b, allStee^ 0 oi e r S b:::c n po t llcy d f r 1 o n . a t 1 h leZin„lng 1 eZin„lng is to .ako. dl r e :X:pben --carded .cod steel u u:: M first, and then adopt the better all-steel body. But we deciae aualitv was more important than expense. rhantrp the reasons, for and against, before .e made the Change. we coild see only one reason for retaining a mixed .ood-and-steel body S ‘ r Z “So:? body .ere these. A .ood-steel body is not much stronger structurally than its wooden fra . American climates, wood construction weakens with age. - gives evidence of this. Rain seeps in between joints and the + w °^.^ cayS - . tear mly have a metal surface, and yet not be Under extreme shock or stress the steel body remains in ac Osteel doos C^t I 'ntd .ood for strength or protection. Wood Is flue for furniture, but not for the high speed vehicles of 1933. In the Ford body there are no joints to squeak, no seams to crack X The all-steel body is more expensive—to us, but not to you. Bv all odds, then, steel bodies seem preferable. +n^a iiv Wheels also have become all-steel. No one argues that an electrically welded one-piece steel wheel, such as the Ford wheel, needs to be ” et ””hfo“-pie« all-steel°body js the strongest, safest, quietest, .ost durable body made. That is our only reason for making them. July 31, 1933 \ ‘

| THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“WIMPY STANDS CORRECTED” BY sSI YAM GO NER TAKE HIM N VD LIKE VERY MUCH TO Z OKAY, YA KIN CARRY \ I/ROCK-A-RVEL-'' Amaat \l !""<> r -RSZFI TO ME BOARDINHOOSE .CARRY THE LITTLE FELUOuA f HIM PART WAYS BUT k BABY UP TSU AR^ThS? ' ’ LUNAKICkA AN KEEP YER HODKSj I OF ( LCDTTO JNA GOT TO BE MIGHTY \IN THeYI NO WAY TO s "f ( n£^ ST F OPF ‘N I CERTAINTyJNcOME AWNG, YA,WIMPY? ( CAREFUL AN’ DON'T BREAK f TREE 7 A ( \? E CRAXVj LEARNS GUMPIN j g rwi rJOfc =w > At fl TF # ASi SmA 7- .W -Ad ■' '■ F I , \ ( V ( J jO o. G'«> »™r» * T/ — • llil l>J ln<. 0 J

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TI ESDAY, ALGI ST 1,1933.

adopted by 290 merchants in the , Elkhart hotel. ’ Hailing tha recovery program as “The Golden Opportunity of LaIxu." Union organizers addressed approximately B,WO workers i' • Indianapolis last night. Speakers on the program, among them representatives of the Central Labor Union an dthe American Federation of [.abor, called attention ■to the clause in the National 'lndus- . try lAct allowing unmolested collectiv. bargaining and urged organization of Unions before expiration of the law two years hence. RECOVERY PLAN” BEING ADOPTED OVER COUNTRY ——— ' FBOM PAGE ONE) j : some semblance of order out of , I the chaotic oil industry was regis-1 , tered in a new code drafted by, NRA officials and representatives of the The new code ; j proposes a work week of 36 hours i ' in the oil fields generally and a . 40-hour week In the marketing ; i end of the industry. These new | proposals, drafted in Sweetering ' Hotel and conference rooms, will I be the subject of new discussions ! before submission of the code in final form for President Roosevelt's approval. The blanket code was modified for retail stores to enable most of j the nation's retailers to come , under the recovery act immediate- < ly. Many had complained that the original terms would work too : great a hardship. The thousands of retailers who already bad sign- ; 'ed the original agreement are I permitted to change it now in ac-! cordance with the new schedule of hours and wages. The modifica-1

tion. however, fs subject to later action on the permanent retail codes. Healings begiu August 15. Food and grocery dlstrlt uto. s j are permitted I<> work under a 48-hour week, instead of the 40hour week in the general agreement. The 1,000,000 clerks in such stores have been working up to 73 hours a week. The other division of the relail Industry—dry goods, department, specialty, mail order, men's slothing a.nl furnishing, furniture, hardware and shoe stores will have a 40-hour week. YOUTH DROWNS LN GRAVEL PIT NEAR HOAGLAND T- , (CONTINUED FBoM I’A'J E ! body. The boy I was pronounced dead by Dr. Orvai I Smith of Hoagland. The struggle to save the lad last-j i ed only 15 minutes. Mr. Davenport | j stated, but resuscitation was ini-1 j possible. The boy was born in Hoagland | and was the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Saalfrfnk. who survive. He attended school at Hoagland. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. oTwo County Farms To Be Sold Soon Two more Adams county farms ; I will be sold at auction by Col. Fred I Reppert in the near future. Monday , (August 7. the Mrs. Samuel Kaehr j farm in French township will be I sold and the Louis S-lking 80-acre ; farm in Preble township will be! | sold in the near future. Real estate ‘

; iri( . ( . s are reported rising rapid*. I The KlopMistelii farm '“"N week for $7'1.50 per a cr ’' WILL BENEFIT HUNDRED HERE (Ct >NT! Xl' f I tOM, ♦ , lay , sil Johmm. 131; Kin«. Kosciusko. 163; Lngrang. 83, Lak* 1,568; Laporte. 364; Uwrenee 2 . Madison. 498; Marton, 2.536; Marshall, 152; Miami, 174; Monroe. 216 Morgan 137; Noble 135. Parke, 10b; Pike. !»; Porter, 132, Poae, 107; Putnam, 133; Randolph 150; St. Joseph 960; Shelby. 159. Steuben 76; Sullivan, 169; Tipton 92; Vanderburg. 680; Vermillton, 140* Vigo, 594; Wabash, 152, Wayne 438; Wells 113; . White. 95 Whitley, 96. *

ADAMS THEATRE Cool Comfort | - Last Time Tonight - “REUNION IN VIENNA” with John Barrymore. Diana Wynyard. - Added - Pitts and Todd Comedy. 10-20 c WED. & THURS.—Lionel Barry more, Lewis Stone in “LOOKING FORWARD'' with Benita Hume, Phillips Holmes.

COURTHOUSE Marriage Licenae Ri< hard Stepleton. laborer, D I- ’ pirns. Ohio and Beatrice .Miller, Delphos. Ohio. Miss Joyce Smith of Berne Is visiting her sister .Mrs. Walter Miller here this week. u>l ...lsn..e»< »f with win '<>• aw X,,fi. .■ is iH'i. lo alven. .Hmt tli<prohß "'^. o X n T. Bvwley. Adimlnstrator with will annexed &rt Heitor * NOTICE I will start my cider mill next I 1 Tuesdav, August 1. and will make I eider every Tuesday and Friday] I until further notice. I Peter Kirsch. liS-got

Public Auction .5-ROOM HO ME -5 We will sell to the highest bidder on the premises, at jpg street, Decatur, Ind., on ♦ t t WEDNESDAY, August 2nd, 1933 at 7:00 P. M. 5 Room house, full size lot, garage and outbuildings. is square bungalow type in good repair. Two bed rooms, sw, cellar, cistern, lights. A nice little home for some one. cJ look it over any time before sale. Possession within two weeks. TER VS—s4oo.oo loan may run long time; balance cash. Henry Myers, Nellie Myers-Ou Roy Johnson, auctioneer. Barber Shop Schedule Effective Today The following price schedule will be in effect: — HAIR CUTS 5 Children, under 12 years, week day Hair Cuts, 25c; Saturday,! SHAVES .........................1 Prices on all other work remain the same. Hours Effective Monday, August 7, the following hours will be observed:— MONDAY’ 8 a. in. tosp. Balance of Week Ba. m. to" p. SATURDAY’ 8 a. in. to 9p. The above schedule will he put in practice by the following Union Barber Shops: CLUB BARBER SHOP. S. Second street E. C. MARTZ, S. Second street FRANK (Red) HOWER. Adams street LOSE BARBER SHOP. Madison street O. K. BARBER SHOP. Second street PINGREY & CARROLL. Monroe street RUSSELL MELCHI, West End VERNE ( R A BILL. North End

!THE CM t?;4 Jimmy Cagnet and tIM >n a great xhof “PICTI’RE SNATCHER" N 7« r « n >‘hin < | k , " <>n the st air MADAM SIGNA. World Renowntd J 1 10c-I’/ Sally Eilers in "Mn% imin •' aIL® and Moran & M Hck I l»c ■ 20c *