Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 211, Decatur, Adams County, 7 September 1933 — Page 5
Holding Coin ■ ni.ve ' ' I,oW ' K*J|etn>l’ u, ’* , ‘“" 1 order •’ reHldt ’ nl ■»" , VlV!l ,i ;■>. 1933. tonof Gold Coin. Gold u d " C-Heates. may u .,on application to ■ c !’ l ' J Zih- I ' , ' 1 ' ■*• ‘ haliaiiaP" Indiana. nuG I ' I,U " ol U ‘ er K„ HVIUU- order of August ■L requires returns to bo ■’ ,; h In the person in posseseo.tr gold bullion, and ■ 'r ifiea.es and by the Q ' „.l, c 0.:., bullion, ami eer ' Tinis. ... every case in o«r<d by one person *. the possession ot another. „turns m ist be filed relative wh.-r. the coin, bullion. rt.rt.tb.il-' ■' ' 1:; I'ossesspels -i eaniiig tile same , o | h . i. turn n< l d lie filed relaHereto. Penalties tey .ndividn-C partnership, asuioa. or <a. por.ition required ukea.nl ide •> return under the * !ive order of \ugust 28. 1933, fails to make ami tile areas required by such order, lining in.'' and complete in Ution r. l.i'iv« to all gold coin. I Letter Will Bring Jot To I at F olks and Neuritis Sufferers tear Sirs: I a .<s so «i ipph-ii. with jtis all d■« 'I rt side of lay head a,vl i.<-t ■ hmes so swollen h-.uld hardly get up ami down. times my het pained so badly 1 m> "ss would break oft. mid everything. Tile doctor told if would be no better while 1 here but 1 stopped in a drug rt in Brooklyn, X. Y... one day I yuvember and the man in Itfc tdd no t" take Krusehen >f weeks stc.'ly and 1 would get jefwlu. h 1 did. 'ever fell better lilsnw «llh I', hate lust weight, reighed -l» thi-u. • weiKh IM futile Im aver S» yra. old I feel | ,„„k It lor one thiiig—got two non hate « others here luklug 'Mrs. A. V. Carr, Ft Tilden, N. Y. It's the Utile daily .l ine that does so take a half teaspoon!ul of Bihen in a glass of hot waler try morning ■- fore breakfast. Get wchen at llolthouke Drug Co., or y live druggist in the world—a < lull 4 weeks and costs but a fWE CORT Last Time Tonight - “PLEASURE CRUISE” daring drama, wonderfully told, with Genevieve Tobin. Roland Young and Ralph Forbes. ILSO — Broadway Brevity and Cartoon. 10-15 c SUNDAY I COVER THE WATERFRONT." COMING SOON “GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933.”
jp~~— •* • ■• 'nK«.ft»..*+nU RS-- !'• i. 2* if ‘ eof .~ pv •• ixi • • : : j '.: |.:-T <ij Ft ►t4 ' : - £•£*? *ti* ~ Brand New Print Tweed Crepes : «fl r> ID 19c ■ Yard 7"u'll find an almost endless va- | ril ‘ly of patterns here .. . out every yard is smart. Ideal fabric for fall i gjj|| reuses. y ou can mO ney by f”1 niaking your own dresses this fall. Bfcjpi ■ t rlr^rr^'.V! The Schafer Store jlpigl Hardware and Home Furnishings
I gold bullion, amt gold certifleatds lin the possession of such person •nd ail gold coin, gold bullion, and ' gold isrtlfleates owned by such person shall upon conviction be fined not more than SIO,OOO, or. If a natural person, may be imprisoned for not more than 10 years, or ’ both; and any officer, director, or agent of any corporation who ' knowingly participates in such vloI lutioit may bo punished by a like ! fine, imprisonment. or both.” I I oARRIVALS Jackie Allen is the name of tho ’ eight and one-half pound baby boy born to Mr. and Mrs. Glen Baumgartner, route 1, Monroe, at the ’ home ot Mr. and Mrs. Albert W»t- --' J ling in Preble. This is the second child in the family and the first 1 ( son. Mrs. Baumgartner was for- ' tnerly Florence Werling. Both mother and babe are getting along I fine. ‘ r-il > OBITUARY What doth the Lord require of ’ thee, but to love mercy, do justly. ' and walk hutdbly before thy God? John Washington Brodbeck. son of Michael and Anna Brodbeck. ■ : was born in Cleveland. Ohio. July 1 8, 1850, and departed this life ‘ I August 30, 1933, aged 83 years, 1 < month and 22 days. At the age ’ | of 10 he came with his parents to ’ i Adams county, where he spent his ' i entire life. On March 19. 1874, he ; was united in m;Triage to F.mmel-. line McCullough, who preceded I him in death September 1, 1926. I To this uaion were born eight 'children, three of whom passed 'away In infancy. The remaining I five sons are: Clarence of this , community, Will and Rufus at i home, Oliver of Elyria, Ohio, and ii Charles of Decatur. He also leaves two sisters. Mary Brodbeck of Union township and Mrs. Sophia 'Dustman of Urbana, Ind.; twelve [ grand-children, five great grand- , children and a host of other rel- ’ atives and friends to mourn hu departure. n In early manhood he united with t the Mt Tabor M. E. Church and r has since been identified with its i- activities. • He was also a member ot the • Order of Maccabees of Wren, Ohio. “ His death marks the passing of * a kind, indulgent father, an honest, * upright citizen, and a loyal neighs bor and friend. Although he no longer walks t among us in human form, his spirit r, will continue to live in the hearts i of all who loved and revered him. a pointing us.to higher and greater 1 things. His departure closes the career I of one whom might well have said | as difl the disciple of old. "I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, 1 have kept the faith.” . Twilight and evening bell and one clear call for me. And may there be no sadness of ’art-well when J put out to sea. But such a tide as moving seems asleep. I"; Too full for sound or foam, when that which drew from out the boundless deep , Turns again home. Sunset and evening star, And after that the dark. And may there be no moaning at ■ at bar When I embark. " For though throughout the borne ot time and place, The flood may bear me far, I hope to see my Pilot face to face ® When I have crossed the bar.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1933.
s .K U. 9. Wt OO OU* THE SCOPE AND PURPOSE OF THE PRESIDENT’S EMERGENCY RE-EMPLOYMENT CAMPAIGN The President** Emergency Re-employment Campaign may he described briefly as a plan to add from 5,000,000 to 6,000,000 persons to the nation’s payrolls within the next six weeks or to, through agreements made with the President of the United States by tom* (,000,000 concerns or individuals, employing two or more persons each. In order that this number of jobs may be made available, it will be necessary, of course, for employers in many cases to thorten working hours. The plan also provides for certain minimum wage scale* which also in many cases will mean added lalxir costs for the employer. The President’s Agreement, however, includes a pledge of cooperation from the consuming public, and it is thus anticipated that th* employer while undertaking a larger expense as the direct result of his agreement with the President, will gain added patronage as the just reward of his public spirited attitude. The fact also is to be borne in mind that where all employers act together to put people back on their payrolls or to raise wages, no employer, as the President himself has pointed out, “will suffer becaus* the relative level of competitive cost will advance by the same amount for all.” It is to be understood that this plan is supplementary to the plan es code adoption by various industrial and trade groups which has for its purpose the elimination of unfair competition, the establishment of more equable rewards for labor, the spread of employment and the control of production. This plan for speeding business recovery, launched under the provisions of the National Recovery Act passed by the last Congress, is rapidly being made effective, and there will be no let up on the drive to make its adoption widespread. The President’s Emergency Re-employment plan will bridge time and bring the nation out of the depression more rapidly than if the code adoption plan were depended upon exclusively. Ihe Presidents Agreement also covers many business groups that would not be amenable to any of the code arrangements. And what is still more important, perhaps, the President’s Emergency Re employment campaign carries certain psychological values that are as priceless as patriotism at this juncture of our economic history. The President himself made this quite clear in his recent radio address to the nation when he said: “On the basis of this simple principle of everybody doing things together, we are starting out on this nationwide attack on unemployment. It will succeed if our people understand it—in the big industries, in the little shops, in the great cities and in the small villages. There is nothing complicated about it and there is nothing particularly new in the principle. It goes back to the basic idea of society, and of the Nation itself, that people acting in a group can accomplish things which no individual acting alone could ever hope to bring about.” Thus we have all the power and potency of mass attack directed along sound lines of organization and system. Here briefly, is an outline of this organized attack on unemployment: In every community, organizations are formed along military lines, which is fitting enough, because the President’s Emergency Re-employment campaign is Uncle Sam's war on unemployment and the nation is rallying to the colors just as loyally as though we were actually engaged in a war against a foreign foe. The local committee is made up of the active heads of the leading business and civic organizations, ami includes also the mayor- These committees in the thousands of cities and towns throughout the country were formed following telegrams and letters sent by General Johnson to the presidents of Chambers of Commerce or similar trade bodies in every section of the United States. These local committees elect a general to have charge of the city campaign and a lieutenant general who , is a woman. The general selects three colonels, each of whom is to take over a certain part of the campaign work. For example. Colonel No. 1 has charge of the “man power” or organizatiou department. Under his direction block-to-block canvasses will be made to check up on compliance with the President’s Agreement, and to make a survey of the unemployed, as to adaptability by experience as to trades and industries and thus be able more readily to help in the processes of assimilation of labor by expanding industries. Colonel No. 2, briefly, has charge of newspaper publicity and kindred activities; and Colonel No. 3 ha* the training and direction of public speakers under his charge. Each of these three colonels has seven or more majors on his staff, and each major has about the same number of captains. Each captain has seven or more field workers. All of the local organizations are, of course, constantly supplied with educational and inspirational material of all kinds from the National Recovery Administration in Washington. Literally tons and tons of printed matter has been shipped to every nook and corner of the country. The N.R.A. emblem, known popularly as the Blue Eagle, is one of the most interesting and vital features of the campaign. All employer* who sign the President’s Agreement are entitled to di-play the Blue Eagle with the initials N.R.A. and the words “We Do Our Part.” Merchants, manufacturers and all others who have the right to display the insignia by reason of their having complied with the President ■ Agreement, are permitted to hang it on their walls, or in their windows, er on trucks and cars, and, if they so desire, to stamp it on their products or merchandise. It is, in fact, the desire of the Recovery Administration that all make liberal use of this badge of patriotism. Any person in the United States who wishes to cooperate in the President’s Emergency Re-employment Campaign and be considered as a member of the N.R.A. may go to the authorized establishment in hi* locality and sign a statement of cooperation as follows: “I will cooperate in re employment by supporting and patronizing employers and workers who are members of N.R.A.” Any such signer will then be given and may thereafter nse th* insignia of consumer membership in N.R.A. Every phase of the progress of this mighty campaign will be flashed in the newspapers of the country and announced constantly over the radio. In this way everyone will be in a position to know just what the campaign is doing from day to day in actually putting people back on the payrolls and adding to the mass purchasing power of the country. While, as has been stated, it is desired that liberal use of the insignia be made by employer and consumers, it is to be remembered that the official N.R.A. emblem is the property of the United States Government and may not be used or reproduced without authority of the National Recovery Administration. The lists of all employers who sign the President’s Agreement ar* displayed in local post-offices and it is urged that all employers wh* have not yet signed the agreement do so immediately and deliver them to their local post master. With some minor exceptions, the terms of the President's Agreement with employers is, briefly, as follows: Any employer of a factory or mechanical worker or artisan must not pay him less than 40 cents *n hour or work him more than 35 hours a week, except that if the •mployer were paying less than 40 cents for that kind of work en July 15 the employer can pay that rate now, but not less than 30 tents an hour. As to all other employe*—those on a weekly rate th* employer will pay not Jess than Sls a week in a city of over 500.000 population; or $14.50 a week in cities of between 250,000 and 500 000; or sl4 a week in cities between 2,500 and 250,000 population; or $12.00 * week in citie* of less than 2,500 population, and the employer agree* not to work this class of workers more than 40 hours a week. As to employes who were getting a higher wage, the employer must not reduce their wages because of a reduction in their hours and he should generally keep the usual pay differences as between the lower and the higher paid employes. And after August 31, he must not work children under 16 years of age. There are. of course, some other rules which apply to special eases, but the terms of the agreement a* here outlined cover the large hulk of case*. Candidacy Reduced Him ■ gess Noir reports he had lost .. .. n, /..bv pounds during his campaign for t Kittanning, Pa.— (U.P.) —And an- 1 other way to reduce is to run for His weight cards she public office, as Burgess Thomas i he has dropped from 305 poum N’orr, Kittanning, will attest. Bur-' to 275 pounds.
f PREBLE NEWS | * —• Mr. and Mrs. Melnz and son of Fort Wayne visited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bleberick and family tor a few daysMr. it nd Mrs. Victor Bultimeier and children visited Mr. and Mrs. George Bultimeier and family Saturday. , John Kirchner, who lias been u patient at Adams Comity Memorial Hospital at Decatur, returned to his home Saturday. Clyde Elzey of Rome. New York is spending a few days visiting his parents. Mr. and Mr :. Douglas Elzey. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith spent several days at the World's B'a.ir at Chicago last week. Mrs. Robert Sherlock of Corunna is spending the week visiting the Milton Hoffman family. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Grandstaff and daughters of New York City spent several days last week visiting Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Giandstaff Aldine Bule meter attende the State Fair at Indianapolis Friday. Mrs. Louis Stelter, Paula Stelter, Robert Marshall, Adolph BiebrLk, Alvena Biebrich, Mrs. John Hey, Fred Hey and Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Hey and family of Fort Wayne visit ’d Mr. and Mrs. John Kirchner and family Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Goldner and daughters of Decatur visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed Goldner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kirchner and daughter Viona, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Goldner and daughters of Decatur visited Mr. and Mrs. John
GREATEIT /FOOTBALL NOVEL Kz ° F ALL! Th ATI MY BOY BY FRANCIS WALLACE ■'v ' --.m Author of HUDDLE WH ... the career of Tommy Randolph projected by his brawn and elusive hips from S factory to college ... blazing a comet-like 4 - P at h across the football heavens ... mixing A * n Societ y ■■ ■ an< i f^en the \ problem of changing himself from a footI ball god into a real man! ... mL Here is bigtime football with all the thrills, v r—color and heart-bumping action, written 5 ’’'"Mai J f fOm ie thick of the scrimmage by the i S A aut h° r whom Knute Rockne called the best M nove^st ie game. Don’t miss THAT’S I/, MYBOYI V Mi iIK 9 Begins Friday, Sept. 8 love under the ancient elms * * of the campus.... Decatur Daily Democrat
Why Do We Do Things? Every human being has at least two personalities—ono tile conscious, the other the sub-conscious. The science of psychoanalysis has been working to enable human beings to distinguish between the voices that are talking to us from tho pust and those that speak from the accumulated knowledge of the present. If you wish to have a simple ; statement ofthe uses of psychoanalysis and the methods employed in i 'the treatment of both normal and abnormal mental conditions, our; Washington Bureau Ims ready for you a bulletin on the subject that I makes fast intaing reading. Fill out the coupon below anti send for it; CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. 250, Washington Bureau, Decatur Democrat, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin PSYCHOANALYSIS and enclose herewith five cents In coin or postage stamps for return postage and hani tiling costs: NAME - STREET & NO CITY * STATE 1 uni a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.
Kirchner and family Sunday even- | ingMrs. John Hey, Fred Hey, Mr. I and Mrs. Thurman Hey and family Adolph Biebrlck and Miss lAlvena ! Biebrlck of Fort Wayne visited Mr. land Mrs. Henry Kirchner and fai tnily Sunday. Miss Margaret Bultemeier spent ' several days visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Conrad and sons. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reinhart i and son of Elkhart sp nt Sunday ‘ visiting Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Elzey I and sons. Mr. and Airs. Orville Heller ami ■ family spent several days at the ' World’s Fair at Chicago. % i Mr. and Mrs. E. Ehlerding ami daughters visited Mr. and Mrs. Hen-
ry Ehlerding Sunday. Misses Lortae and Irene Kirchner and Roger Bebout and Darrell Shackley attended the HagenbeckWallace Circus at Fort Wayne Labor Day. Mrs. Lena Sherlock of Corunna, Mrs. Milton Hoffman and daughters Dorothy, Benieta. Gertrude and . Miriam spent latlwr Day visiting Mr. and Mrs. Earl Straub and ta- ; rally of Spencerville, Ohio. ’ ' Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Biebrick ' and children and Mr. and Mrs. Melnz and son of Fort Wayne spent I Labor Day visiting Mr. and Mrs. • Rupright and children of Newark. Ohio. I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Homeyer of - Fort Wayne visited Mrs. Katherine
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Linnemter and son Rudolph Sunday. o Doesn't Need Spece Webster. Mas*., — (UP) —Louis Medvllle, who will be 90 years old October 25, still reads without the uid of spectacles. ADAMS THEATRE ■ Last Time Tonight - BARBARA STANWYCK in “LADIES THEY TALK ABOUT’ with Preston Foster. Lillian Roth, Dorothv Burgess, Lyle Tai hot. ■ Added - Comedy, Souvenirs. Organlogue with Nick Lucas. 10-15 c Friday and Saturday “INDIA SPEAKS’’ Richard Halliburton, daring adventurer, lifts the veil from deep India, mother of ten thousand sins! Sun. Mon. Tue.—"THE STRANGER’S RETURN” with Lionel Barrymore, Meriam Hopkins, Franchot Tone, Stuart Erwin. The picture that has the whole country talking!
