Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 226, Decatur, Adams County, 25 September 1933 — Page 5
Zfcl SCHOOL "Bules strict ■ SV,. !. -U.R> Will. inc <>' W#l1 " " allil , •>l^Bp'» 11 ' mliool year. ''•■‘’■•"■“'■""J ■Wfc drin-h I® IV".. -hall | '"’“”. r K, d r.-a.h !■ i: Il, ' a IKd parentsIV ~. f cosmetics de , ..imp;,' l>< auty “I trirl IK*--' "i >P'"‘ Rs ami IVi " '" U ‘" J “ |w >"■ ■' * 1S ’ I Vj".||.;i ' -"' l-rniitted. IK. -in- ■•" 'i‘ ii|,! " s iun SKh. ’ Swearing will IV" ' i ' ■ ■ ||K shall ! "' 50 . “ S ' ,lallc, ' s ' I >a;ahl'' places of' I V^' 1 ■ and K I ti'b ~, ~|U. lie I'l Ill'l'llial ||V’',|. >, . ■ 111. I'll’ imcn IK | ' •'•nolle churi Il * air ■PETEK><)\ NFAVS '■ |K- ( ... . i ’W M M W It. W. ,ly „ IK Misses |K 'l' ’ '' ’' l "' all l! ' ;gllt i ■ ■ ■ el- M 1 '• \ Al'lintt Sunday. IK li -' Moore and IK•>: Troy. Ohio IMtla: M' W.. :Mi ITri.l. ||K j; d <. ' V '"“ l M ' ’ A!l,IUr 1 . Helen, Mr. w of Vera [H i<I .. ■ ■ H im. I ' were. Mrs. Win. i. . M I M:IK:., : 'll!'.. Mr. ami Mrs. IMI S' an-i family. Mr. and i; Mr Mis. I I B W.-i,K Ml - Malih Marsheli I M" and M- • Frank I I Mrs. Nel,.on Ab- , ami Francs and
IBuy Fence I AT OUR LOW SELLING & PRICES AND SAVE fl - ■ ~, <~ A ~" zHsterling fence Jll COCD THRU _ ' ■ ?'-->^3^'’ c Sv~Jkandthru j zC JCz , . * jfl •* '."' • ■ BECAUSE YOU ARE GETTING THE VERY ■ HIGHEST QUALITY AT THE LOW EST ( OST. ■ In ‘pitc Os the fact that Fence has made two adfl vanees in price within the last six weeks, we are fl still selling fence at pre-war prices. ■ Our Zinc Coated Fence is drawn true to gauge fl and is heavily and uniformly coated with zinc and z B copper by a process that has been perfected after H fears of intensive study. ■ Ihe Wire is then woven into various specificaK lions of fences. Every joint of which is hinged toM ?>'ther making it flexible and easily straightened ■ should it ever be mashed or trampled to the ■ ground. ■ Remember. His only because of our exceptionfl ally large purchase that we are able to offer you ■ *his price on Field Fence. ■ Our Sterling Fence will gauge full size fl and for this fact weighs more. [The Schafer I Store W ■ u Wl DO OVD M«T m hardware and Home Furnishings ■L
Checking Byrd’s Polar Bird ’ ijsri ' M *'' ■ irl Vi i' -fl li i Wfi ■ 3 M iff —_—;—_ • Admiral Richard E. Byrd and members of the expedition he will lead on a new Antarctic venture are pictured at the Curtiss Airport. New York, after inspecting the plane they will take with them to make an aerial survey at the South Pole. L. to R. are: Paul Swan, W. F. Bowler, Admiral Byrd and Harold 1. June, chief pilot of the expedition.
■—— .•- | William Spade of Vera Cruz and . Mr. and Mrs. Jess Moore of Troy , Ohio. I Earl Straub of Spencerville spent I the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. . Al. Straub. Mr. and Mis. Ralph traub and ■daughter Virginia spent Tuesday | evening in Dec utur. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Fruihte and daughter L-ona called on Mr. and I Mrs. H. »A. Briener Wednesday ■ evening. Mr. and Mns. Donovan Bright of i Bryan, Ohio, calhd on Mr. and I Mrs. George Bright Sunday Miss Fern Pass water of Decatur j spent Sunday night with Mr. and i Mrs. F. W. Spade and eon Ralph. Miss Patsy Abbott of Bluffton is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Abbott. Body Still Unclaimed After 24 Years Marianna, Ark. <UJD— Still uni claimed, the body of a man who ■ died here in ISOS still is in the N. ’J. Williams funeral home here in a perfect state of preservation. The man died of natural causes | here while a member of a railway I crew graveling the roadvwd In t sumii'er of IX9. his name was
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 25, 1933.
— believed to have been Tom Moon ! Williams was to give the man an inexpensive burial. But the undertaker was too busy the day of the man's death ' to bury him, so he partially em-. balmed the stranger. Then he. learned that probably the fami'y i of Moon lived at Detroit, Mich. He decided to complete the embalm itig and try to locate the man's relatives. But the relatives still. remain unlocated. Williams says he has been offered as much as SI,OOO for the well-preserved body, but he has refused all offers. Get the Habit — Trade at Homi
A President and His Warwick lißlir I O The first to congratulate Dr. Ramon Gran San Martin on his elevation to the Presidency of turbulent Cuba is Fulgencio Batista, the sergeant who became head of Cuba’s army and who did more than any other man to make Grau San Martin President. They are shown embracing at the . Presidential palace alter the new ruler of Cuba had been inaugurated. , — , Moon Magic on Memorial Mount | ■ - i v * •. VS- x *'j'Stft. ~ --g * i *■ *• SM ; ‘>Si • g±_. The charm of moonlight lends an added beauty to the gigantic profile of George Washington, carved out of solid granite on Mount Rushmore, in the Black Hills of South Dakota. This is the first moonlight picture ever made of the national memorial which, is being carved out of the mountain by Gutzon Gorglum, world-famous sculptor.
PLAN MEETINC AT FT. WAYNE Annual Teachers’ Convention Will Be Held October 19-20 Plans for the annum convention of the Norf heaslern Indiana Teachers' association, to be field in Fort Wayne, Thursday and Friday, October 19 und 20, were furthered by Supt M. F. Worthman of the Decatur hclumilh, secretary-treasurer of the association, and Supt. D. O. McComb of the Allen county u lioo’s, during a cmilerence in the latter's office, at Fort Wayne, Sat-fij-day. The association's membership comprises teachers of Allen. Steuben, Lagrange, DeKalk, Whitley. I Noble. Kosciusko, Welltß HuntingI lon, and Adams counties. In addition teachers from some of the nearby counties in Michigan and Ohio attend the annual meetings. Ptincipal sessions of the convention this year are to be held at I the Shrine temple. Dr. W. A. Sutton, superintendent lof the schools of At’anta, Oa.. is to make an address on the subject, | “The Three Objectives of Education: Health. Scholarship and Education." at tile Shrine at 10 a. m., October 19 In the afternoon Dr. Sutton Is to discuss, “Opening Hie Power of Knowledge," before teach-1 I er sections in industrial arts, home j economics, art and Red Cress I work. Dr. S. i’arkes Cadman of New , York city lecturer, author and I • degyman, is to talk on “AdjustI ment" at the Shrine at 2 p. m., OcJ toiler 19. In the evening he will speak on Hie subject, "Our Rei sponalbility.’’ "Directed Study," is the scheduled topic of an address by Dr. George D. Strayer, head of the department of education, Columbia . university. New York city, at the I Shrine at 10 a. m„ October 20. Robert W. Hutchins, president • of the University of Chicago, said i to be the youngest university president irt the United States, is to discuss "The Curricula" on the if morning of October 20 at a thus
i 1 Champion’s Greatest Reward j / ’C mW \ I i X 7 * -TaJ \-- Greater than the title he had successfully defended and greater than the plaudits of the throng who watched him fight, was this greeting of Barney Ross by his mother, who traveled from Chicago to see her son do battle in defense of the lightweight title against Tony Canzoneri at New York Polo Grounds. Photo was made in Ross’a dressing room after bis victory. Blue Eagle Brothers in Arms z*iK'- k ■ 1 »e,i w • anes ■wawwwwro General Hugh Johnson (left), NRA administrator, greeted by Grover Whalen, administrator for New York, when they met at the gigantic Blue Eagle rallv in Madi.'ja Square Garden. New York. The General told his hcarers’that 85 per cent of U. S. employers are now NRA members.and that America will “tear through the remnant of the depression.”
far undesignated meeting place. / Tlie All-District chorus and or ; diestra. under supervision of Wil | liam R. Sur. music supervisor of | North Side high school, is to pre-1 sent a musical program at the. Shrine October 20 at 1 p. m. This ' will be followed by talks by Messrs. | Hutchins and Strayer, the latter | of whom is to speak on the sub- L ject. "Public Support for the Schools." Tlie Steuben County. Choral club is to sing at 8 p. m., • the same evening. Annual business meeting and i election of officers of the associ- i ation is to be held in tlie courthouse at 3:30 p. m. October 19.
SFF The New Glow Boyl with the new STEAM VAPOR Humidifier and the HOT BLAST Combustion Dome IS YOUR HOME AS UNHEALTHFUL r AS DEATH VALLEY IN C A LIFORNI A? Scientists have discovered that 50' pf stove heated &gi£9r7 homes have no more humidity th in dry. parched | ‘ | .I^<■ ' > Death Valley, California. Scientists c’aim the average IA; humidity of the average stove-heated home is only | ; y ’<aflEflHSM|9K&Jf j 15 to 25'-. The average humidity of Death Valley. BBWEI I . Ca'ifornia. is only 13 to 25' AND CONSIDERED 5 TjMmaMS Fm*iM ■■ DANGEROUS IO LIFE. Humidity in the average * |TH” ■,P JlLlLWfl|' home should be between 40 and 50 to promote good ■ la st health. EgR ißOjiri | I |fl<‘ yTOjggfryjaF IWfa J t LA Jft jm IMS $ Come to the circus and see what Globe engineers have ■ I built to provide your home with health giving heat at a humidity averaging 15',. Here's the most sensa- ■ Hj' 4 in heater can see it at the Stove Circus Saturday. Don't miss it. '|l — SpSSgjfl fl i&Z * Trade Your Old Stove Now! 00 Right now at the start of the Fall season we are 1 getting lots of calls for used ranges and heaters. We can use your old stove better RIGHT NOW than later and for that reason can allow you more for it. If you want to get the most for your old stove and buy your new one at prices that AjJF may never be so low again—NOW is the time to trade. Cfl -■■l - L - -- " THE SCHAFER STORE I HARDWARE AND HOME FURNISHINGS SJooSfer I
I Supt. Merle J. Abbett of the Fort I Wayne I üblic schools is president ' and Supt. Thomas H. Mahan of the ! Huntington schools, vice-president of the aaeociation. Primary, kindergarten, Latin, j music, grammar grades, social science, principal-superintendents . and literature sections wi'l Im? con- . ducted for teachers at different ■ glace \ on the afternoon of October ! 19. Art, industrial arts, home ec- ' onomics, commerce, athletics, science, Red Cross, primary kinderI garteu and oral speech sections art scheduled fir the following morning.
BACKYARD PLOTS AID JOBLESS 'Bouton, (UP) Backyard farming offers a partial solution to the un mployment problem, Prof. Richard P. Doherty, of the Bureau of business Research of Boston University's college of Business Adiniuistralion, believes. Development of backyard farming ho concluded after a survey of farming conditions hi Massachusetts, "is more than a temporary m asure to relieve the alarming unemployment problem. . . , Current economic trends such a-s the shorter working week, tire decentralization of industry, the growing 'lndustrial uselessness' of the middle-aged worker, technological unemployment and the trend toward lower wage scalee all focus* attention upon the extension of part-time farming.” Using highly-industriallz <1 Masi sai husetts to illustrate the advisability of Ills plan, Professor IFoliI erty pointed out that while densely i populated, "more than half the total I area of the state is in farm land. 1 Altog ther. there are 30 cities in i Massachusetts, each with a popula- | tion in exc ss of 25,000. These in- • dtistrial cities are surrounded by
■' : wamaHaHHannnMMßMaaßMHaßMßiaaHaHaHMMs*' These Baskets Will Make SHOPPING A PLEASURE! The Prices of /■ u Our New Baskets are as Low »«>>««»< wwmomnswAittuvuui am or Lower than j ever before. There will be no advance either as long as our present stock lasts. V A Motor Baskets hr Vanity Baskets Market Baskets 9c a, 39c The Schafer Store Hardware and Home Furnishings widoourfut ■ v.r _ _■ W-. aAK?
Page Five
small towns und communltlcH where part-time, or backyard farmI lug might be practiced.” —— "■ o " -— 2,000 Volunteers To Aid Foresters Mlusoula. Mont. — (U.R) — Armed wllli warruntu giving them authority to make arrests anywlierc In Montana, 2,000 volunteer fire wardens will aid state and federal offlclaU this year in protecting tlie 20.000,«9o acres of forest lands within tlie state from tire louses. Governor E. 11. Cooney was the firut to be appointed among the volunteers. Forest officials attribute a sharp drop tn the number and magnitude of man-made tiros in the foresU during 1932 to cooperation of volunteer wardens last year. o Barter and Trade Business Reached Peak Binden, Nev. —(UP)—-Barter and trade readied Ha leak here when L. Falette traded a truck load of onions for a similar amount oi California oranges. Local markets are glutted with onions with slow sale while oranges are in demand at $1.50 per box. On the other baud Nevada onions are in demand in Los Angeles markets.
