Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 228, Decatur, Adams County, 27 September 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES * FOR SALE FOR SALE—Three day old calf Mra. Fred Bulniahn. Hoagland Phone, Decatur R. R 7. 226t3x FOR SALE — Purebred Shropshire yearling rams. J. C. Bultzell, route 5,226-31 X FOR SALE —Poland China male hog; Robert Bovine, Bobo. 225t3xeod FARMS FOR SALE —SO acres in French township, nice home, can be bought for *4,500. so ecres, close to Monroe. Nice home,. Can be bought for *5.600. 43 acres in Blue Creek township, can be bought for *3,100. See The J. A. Harvey Realty Company, Monroe, Indiana. Sept 22-27-x FOR SALE— Barred and White Rock pullets, 35c and 50c. Shropshire buck. Lynn Stewart, Wren, ) Ohio, 2 miles north. 228a3tx > FOR SALE—One H. B. Air Com-1 pressor. Fine condition and priced . right. Telephone 8721- 2J7-g4tx I FOR SALE —Truck load of Michigan Concord grapes Wednesday morning. Appleniaim grocery. 227-3tx FOR SALE- Potatoes, and pop corn both yellow and white, tiecar Koenemann, 2% miles north of Preble. 228-g3tx FOR SALE — Cook stoves. SIS. Laundry stoves, *5 to *7. Kitchen heaters, *B. Dining room chairs *3 each. Rugs 15c to *BS. Bridge lamps *1.50. Table lamps.! *1.50. Mattresses *7 to *3O. Bed; springs. *4 to <18.50. This is all i new merchandise. Sprague Fur-| niture Company. 152 South Second street. Phone 199. 227G3t i FOR SALE —Two stein sprfnger vows. Victor Byerly. % mile east of the Kirkland. highschool. 228g2tx| FOR SALE—New Idea All Steel) Wagons. A. M. Mauller Pleasant) Mills. 228-a3tx | FOR SALE— Cornet. Cheap. 1414 ) West Madison street. Phone 747. FOR SALE—Our Entire stock of ■ 9x12 ft. Congoleum Rugs at *5.95 | each. These are the extra heavy grade, all the newest patterns, i Save *2.00 and more on a rug. by 1 buying now. Also several 9x12 1 Congoleum rugs at *4.95. Medium weight grade, but very good pat- ‘ tern” One only. 12x15 ft. Genu- I ine Linoleum rug, new pattern. j Special Price *15.00 , 11.3x12 ft. Armstrong Quaker i Felt Rugs, excellent patterns, each *9.75 11.3*75 f:. Armstrong Quaker RffSs. each *11.95 One only Armstrong Rug, site 11.3x12 ft. *8.95 9x15 ft. Heavy Congoleum Rug *6.95 I 6x9 ft. Heavy Congoleum Rug *3.75 7.6x9 ft. Heavy Congoleum Rug 9x10.6 ft. Heavy Congoleum Rugs *5.75 ; 4.6x4.6 ft. Stove Rugs *1.39 I Cover your entire floor with extra heavy Congoleum 50c ft. , 7 only 6x9 ft. Rag Rugs to close out at only *1.89 each NIBLICK & CO. FOR SALE —10 tube Crosley radio and one 8 tube Crosley Clock model. Also 2 baby carriages; occasslonal tables: smokers and lamps. All below cost. Beavers i & Fryback. 22Sa3tx i FOR SALE— Ice cream stand, | corner Monroe and Seventh., Phone 46, 227t3x | FOR SALE—Michigan Apples. Me-1 Intosh, Maiden Blush, and Wolf Rivers, 55c and up. Bring Containers Pure Sider Vinegar, 20 cents a gallon. S. E. Haggard, 1 mile north 3% miles east of Monroe. ?25-g6tx WANTED WANTED—Canner and cutter cows Also fresh cows and springers. Have horses and mules for sale or trade. L. W. Murphy. Phono 22. 174-g-ts WANTED TO RENT:—Small modern house in city or county. For occupancy in next ten days. Inquire at 1509 West Monroe St. Violet Mlllieor. 228-k3tx WANTED —Two used glass doors. Phone 625. 228t3x WANTED —We are now booking soy bean jobs in combine. Steffen Bros.. Decatur route, Craigville phone. 227t6x WANTED—To rent five or six room house located in Decatur. Telephone 8721. 227-g3tx WANTED —to rent small modern house or furnished apartment during winter months. Address Box 40, Daily Democrat. 226-3 t MISCELLANEOUS — 12 head of Shropshire she-ep to I®' out on shares. Phone 680 or 333. 226-3 t w. w O .... Do We Eat Flab7 The United State* consumes approximately 2,662,000,000 pounds of fish each year.

■| FOR RENT I FOR RENT 6 room house, large I chicken park and fruit, on West Madison street, inquire of R. A. Donnel, 816 North Second street , | Phone 1219. FOR RENT Five room apartment near IjlberI son Service Station, Mml-modern. Forty acre farm near Monroe, 178 acre farm adjoining Decatur > neat Monroe Street River Bridge. . | A. D. SUTTLES Agt. 227-3 t ! i FOR RENT House and acre of > ground at south edge of city, beyond Winchester street. Phone I 220 or inquire at 322 N. 11th st. ■ 22813 i — ——o — —— LOST AND FOUND 1 LOST or STRAYED—Pure white kitten. Saturday evening or Sun- ’ day ufiming. Had brass bells around its neck. Finder return to Harry Fuhrman at Decatur cemetery or call 5143. 228-g2t • LOST —Bunch of keys on or near North Sixth St. Two bank vault box keys on the ring. Reward. Cali I Plioue 154. 2281tx MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Sept. 27 No commission ana no yardage. 170 to 230 lbs *5.10 ! 230 to 260 lb« *4.90 I 260 to 300 lbs ... *4.60 . 300 to 350 lbs. *4.20 ■ 140 to 170 lbs. ... *4>o I 100 to 140 lbs. *3.80 I Roughs ................................ *2.75 ; Stag* *1.75' | Vealere $6.75 ‘ i Lambs ... *6.00 ; Decatur Produce Company i Egg Market | No. 1 dozen 23c I I No. 2. dozen _ 16c | i No. 3. dozen 12c ■ — Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 5c up: 200-225 lbs. *5.30: 225-250 lbs. <5.15; 250-275 lbs. j *5.05; 275-300 lbs. *4 90; 300-3531 ' lbs. *4.65; 160-200 lbs. *5.20: 150-1 j 160 lbs. *4.80; 140-150 lbs. *4.55: ‘ 1130-140 lbs. *4.30; 100-130 lbs. | *3.75; roughs *3.50; stags *2.25. j Calves *7; lambs 25c up at *7. East Buffalo Livestock | Hogs on sale S.OOO, including I 5.600 on government order; little) i done; most bids and scattered i | sales steady with Tuesday’s aver-' I age: bulk held 10c higher; few j 170 to 220 lbs. sold at *5.65; mixed I j offerings *5.35-5.50; few 145 tbs , *5.25.Cattle receipts 100; cows steady I to weak; cutter grades *1.60-2-40; I grass heifers unsold. Calf receipts 100; vealers un-| I changed; bulk better lots *8.00; , [ common and medium *5.75-6.75; i > common grass calves *3-4. ■ Sheep receipts 6o0; lambs fairly I active, generally 25c under Mon- • i day’s average; good to choice ewe ) and wether lambs *7.50; medium i kinds $6.50; throwouts <5.56. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May' Wheat 87% 91 95% ! Corn ..... 47% 51% 57% j Oats 37 39% 43%! LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Sept. 27 No. 1 New Wheat, 50 lbs. or l better ... 75c | No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. . 74c; Old Oats 32c j j New Oats . 30c | White or mixed corn 52c Good Yellow Corn 58c Roy L ’ S. & Johnson Auctioneer | Now booking early fall and winter sales. Claim your date early, i imy dates are tilling fast. Follow-) ing is a partial list of the sales in | near future, watch this column ; for other sales to be soon. Oct. 10 —David Storm. 2 miles i north of Middleberry. General farm sale. Oct. 16 —Owen McClelland. 5 mi- ‘ north and % mi. west of Convoy, I ’ Ohio. Sept. 16 — Decatur Community Sale at Community Sale Barn De- ! catur. i Oct. 19 —Stewart Hi Kline, Camden, Ohio. Pure Bred Duroc hog ; sale. t Oct. 23 —Bruce Pullen. Liberty, Ind. Pure Bred Duroc hogs sale. f Oct. 25 —Thomas Yeazel, German1 town, Ohio. Duroc hogs. 1 No”. I—Brantt1 —Brantt Bros. Rockford. Ohio. Pure bred registered (guernsey cattle. Office in Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg. Telephone, Office 104, Res. 1022

g Principals in Kidnap Plot former Helen Hatcheller. who was threatened with kidnaping failing navment of *IO.OOO. Below, Virginia de Palma and James Medley who fell into police trap when they attempted to collect dummy package of • money Mrs. Dougherty is a niece of Russell C. I.effingweil. New York financier and Morgan partner.

STATE POLICE CHIEF S \YS ESCAPED PRISONERS MEMBERS OF (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) was interpreted as outlining part of the plans for recent bank robberies at Daleville and Montpelier. Its concluding paragraph said: "Mary, the minute you get this get it to John. Then get word to your brother just what you was able to do. If you ever showed any speed, do it now. In case message is not understood send some one to see one of us quick." Two other inmates of the prison. Clifford Mohler and Sam Goldstein. both of Fort Wayne, are members of the same gang, according to Leach. Goldstein has been held in solitary confinement since his return to the prison recently as a parole violator. Mohler, serving a life term on a murder charge in connection with slaying of a Fort Wayne policeman, is a tubercular case tn the prison hospital. He robbed a Kentucky bank while on a 90-day parole from the prison to

In Kidnap, Murder, Robbery Gang Roundup *? f w 1 .T - i «w , I • b 1 i 11 ■ •- * at A O* «L I v Si» fl i wr iyr i lW IP Jki | I? ~1 . Seized Arsenal Emma Russo Eleanor Scarnki John<Z O Connelu.JK, With the arrest of a gang, composed of five men and two women, in a series of raids in and about New I York, police and Federal agents believe they are nearing a solution not only of the mystery surrounding th® | kidnaping of John O’Connell, scion of the Albany political clan, but also of a number of gang muiders and bank robberies that have occurred during the past two years. The gang, trapped after • 1 tective work, are Leonard Scarnici, Anthony Reino (ring-leaders), Philip Ziegler, bred Prentil and Charlea ' Herzog. Also netted in the raids were Emma Reino and Eleanor Scarnici, wives of the ring-leaders. Although a small arsenal was at the disposal us the gangsters when captured in their hideouts, they ran truer to color, cowering in terror and submitting tamely when face to face with police guns.

THIMBLE THEATER - , NOW SHOWING ’’ON HIS LAST LEGS” BY SEGA! OH.DOCTOR.U)HAT 15 THlstl l HA\JE RECORDS OF ONE 2| IHE TAKE THS. \ / » YAMA> ~ZT] 1/ c.flF^ THING CAVUEO THOUSAND CASES ANO/ FAG-OVER V WO AU)AT FROM A / i 2kac?v \ f —X> u ON- *7 OF THE KONKUS 7 15 EUERV ONE OF ANS MINUTE-] "STRONG . HibA-OON'T HURT ) ( Y-YoY ) UJ °Y? 1 ?O -vd AS SERIOUS yifsiieNMOßE THEM D'ED-THERE//7"T THAT'S UJHT J MAN TO < T H| ) <COVJBOV) K 'O t^., WOULD > f AS'T'S y J ccd.Xma iZ IS NO HOPE FOR r~'i / VO UKE TO A T AHE \T HE lb ' — iTOO?/y 1 Y geFtSe S u OS <X r r At • liy </ Aa£ ' lOicyi 4WBra3j ’“'F’Tg-'ji B S 1 Z i "gnggv anSr Saj A IBH -XHy. Wk 7 . r2MP HoM . -a ~ —HK — ——■ 'jf ■

DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1933.

receive special tubercular treat-) ment. Farm Produce Tuition Fee Springfield. Mo.— (U.P) — D™ry College officials have announced they will trade college tuition and Niard at the commons for farm produce at market prices. To date.) two students have entered college on the "garden terms." One contracted to nay tuition in vegetables and the other in eggs. Mi l■< i: n* < ki:i>i I <>«' *<»*•• wfhrrw <»■ partial rrpwrt r«*<i<*iri<ip CiMMI a«*tia«« <k*ia«rd. Probate Cause No. 2530. N«>ti«e tiereb* given that liessi E.‘Erwin anti Janies 1., Ko. her, Ewcutors of said estate have filed their! a< um and vou« her ain j%*rtia! settlement thereof, but final as to all matters contained in >aid account.] and that the same will owe up for. tile rX t 1 111! I< I •• i i ’ ■ 1- ■ 1 . ourt ~n th, .lay of November, I ISS3, being the IM Judicial .lav of the November term of said court, at I which time all persons interested in, said .state are required to appear in. said court and show . auae. if any.! why said a,«-vuiit and vouchers should not be approves!. Witness my hand and th. sell ofi said court at my office in l>e<atur Indiana, this 26 day df September,! MILTON C W KiII.ING I Clerk Adams Circirtt Court. John 1. Kell,, tftorne., Sept .’.-<l-1

a 0 I Test Your Knowledge 1 1 I Can you answer aeven of tbeso j test questions? Turn to page > 1 Four for the answers. T - - ■ — 1 *♦ 1. Where Is the U. S. Mentor ! 1 . • i lunt? 2. Who wrote "The Chambered j 1 Nautilus?" ' , 3. Name the widows of Presidents of the U 8, now living 4. What is the full name of the Nazi party in Germany? 5. To what country does the Island of Tasmania belong? 6. N ime Victor Hugo’s most famous novel. 7. What Is chamber music? 8. Give the Spanish word for crazy. 9. Define taxidery. 10. What te u moriane? COURTHOUSE Real Estate Transfer Jennie Baumann et al to Elisabeth Gregory, part of outlot 201 in Decatur for *1.06. RANSOM MONEY IS UNCOVERED BY FEDERAL MEN (CONTINUED FROwi PAGE ONE) I I Harvey Bailey. *7t)V was found on) George A. Bates, and *5,000 of tlie i ransom money had been circulated ! in St. Paul by Kelly through his ! St. Paul contracts, this making a total now of *79.t’50 of the *200,090 ransom money." Attorney HeM Memphis. Tenn., Sept. 27 —(UP) , —Langford Ramsey. Memphis ati torney and former brother-in-law of George (Machine Guu Kelly) has confess d that he was sent by Kelly auq his wife to a spot uear the Cass Coleman farm near Col. man, i Texan, to get part of the Ursvhel I For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Offic- Hour*; 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS; 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. , Telephone 135. — ,

ruMom money lul led there John M I Keith, h. ad of the Clilcaao bureau j I of hUxitiflcatlon, said here today ) Keith is In charge of the Kelly 1 case and questioned Ramsey today. I Keith said federal ageut.i found *73.250 of the money after Ramsey , left. He said that of the *200.000 ransom paid for Urachel’s release Kelly was to receive <75.060 a< hi*, share. Hearing Delayed Mempliis. Tenn., Sept. 27—(I’l’l

. ■ - ■■■■ 'IM— . "Kk SI HAT/ My Roy'l _vi_ bu FRANCIS WALLACE | “ author, of “HUDDLE’ I

SYNOPSIS “Big JdT' Randolph, now in his seeood year on the great Thorndyke Varsity team, is the talk of the football world—"he’ll be an alltime back before he’s through", etc, ete. But to the folks back home in Athens, a tiny midwest factory town . . . particularly to his Mom and Pop . . . the great “J..T” wax always little Tommy who was such a sensation on the local high schtxd team that many colleges sought his favor until Snally he picked swanky Thorndyke, s far-famed eastern university. On vacations, in college-cut clothea. Tommy is the social and sartorial) sensation back home much to the neighbors’ scorn and the delight of local debutantes excepting Dorothy Whitney, daughter of the town'* biggest citizen who owns the glassworks where Pop and his other son. Pete, work. Dorothy doesn't like the crude and cruel high-hat influence of Thorndyke on Tommy. She twita him about this until the ego of the young giant reaches the exploding point. . . . Meanwhile Pete and hi* girl friend. Steve, provide Mom with a radio and arm chair. . . . The family now i* all set to hear the broadcast of the much moot game between the Indiana Stale team and “my boy'*’’ Thorndyke millionaires. ... CHAPTER NINETEEN Mom shook with excitement inside as she heard the announcer’s f voice, just as it happened to cut in, i like it was just for them: •Big Jeff Randolph just kicked • beauty—the boys are limbering up before the game, you know, and Jeff just place-kicked one from the 35-yard line—that's 45 yurds in all, you know " Uncle Louie sniffed. “That Busing—always showing off.” He said to Pop: “Why don’t you get McNamee? Husing talks too fast” “Shut up,” Pop said, “and listen,” • —you know Big Jeff is all set fur this game today. He’* had two big years as a Thomdyke fullback and today he's playing the boys from his own state—he’ll want to look good in there against them, you know. All the Hoosiers within 100 miles of here are in Thorndyke Stadium today folks. . . . The Indiana band is now marching on the field, spelling out Thorndyke, I think—-yes, there was a T—H —now they're making the O—oh boy, I wish you could see that big bass drum on wheels and the way that Hoosier is beating it. Let’s see if we can’t give you some of their music ” Pop looked at Uncle Louie and smiled. “That’d be a good job for you, beating that bass drum,” he said. Uncle Louie came right back at him: “And you’d do good on that flute.” Pop took it good-natured enough for he knew what Uncle Louie meant, all right. Pop had an old flute up in the attic and he’d been trying to play it for twenty years but never stayed at it. Uncle Ix>uie kept right on: “And if it wasn’t for you we’d be right there looking at them right now instead of listening to that box.” Mom was afraid of that; but before she could say anything Pop < came right back at him: “Sure you would; but I'm funny that way— I'm one of them that believes in i taking care of a job when I’ve got one.” Uncle Louie didn’t accept the ! hint. “You wouldn't have lost your job—he’d kept it for you." ' “Sure—and I suppose he’d give ; me the two days’ pay, too —and paid the bills and all that.” i “Sure he would.” t Pop said: “Well, I’m one of them 1 that believes in paying my own s ’►■lls and working for what I get.” t Mom was never so glad as when i

Gwirgo (Machine Gun) Kelly * hearing before a United State* cornmtasioner was Indefinitely delayed here today on orders of John M. Keith, special agent of the depart ment of justice. Exact reaHonM for tlu* delay wan not announced, but It wax aexumed < it bore some relation to the sac t | that authorities feared an attempt | to liberate Kelly blight bo made, quickly by his confederate* Kelly, national desperado No. I

II V 4 .A I LflEfi’ Jay jßhp, r \ Big Jeff (erstwhile Tommy) hit for the sidelines, stiff armint «w

the announcer broke in again. “Listen,” she said, “you’re missing i something.” 1 “ the teams are off the field i now. back to the clubhouse for 1 final instructions and the old pep 1 talk. The Thorndyke band is march- i ing now—but these bands over here 1 don’t begin to match the boys out ' West. Here's the lineup, official. I’ll start with Indiana. Got your ' pencil and paper? All right, we’ll i start with left end. Ready?” Uncle Louie snorted. “Go on, you ■ dummy, start if you're going to and quit talking about it. You like to hear yourself talk.” “He gets paid good for talking,” Pop said. The kitchen door opened and Mom thought maybe Pete had come from the garage to listen but who ' was it but Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Flannigan, with their shawls over their shoulders and heads because it was right cold. “We just thought we’d come and listen awhile,” said Mrs. Johnson. “Sure,” said Mrs. Flannigan, “on : account of Tommy—that is if you’re . sure we ain’t in the way.” They had already sat down and Mom really wished they hadn’t i come because they might be dis- I orderly; but then it was real neigh- ( body of them and Mom always be- ' lieved in being nice to neighbors ' when they came in her house even i if she didn’t go around gossiping I herself. So she said: “No indeed, 1 you won't be in the way—just let me have your shawls and make 1 yourself right to home. The lineup ( is just coming in now.” < “I just said to Mis’ Flannigan,” 1 said Mrs. Johnson, “that I'd rather < listen at Mis’ Randolph’s than across the street because over there > we’d be hearing too many remarks, 1 don’t you know?” ) “And I just thought the same thing,” said Mrs. Flannigan, nod- < ding her gaunt shoulders with her ’ bony head and smiling at Uncle s Louie. He didn't answer nor even s look at her. t “Yes,” continued Mrs. Johnson, 1 “since Tommy got so great I guess r you ” t Mom put her finger to her lips s and pointed to Pop who was trying 1 to hear. Both Mrs. Flannigan and k Mrs. Johnson nodded quickly and H smiled and gave their attention to the game as if they understood men-folks perfectly. p

. p V 13 C.b Equal.. h:\i.m i i w '‘■'’•Mr'

“ —Randolph has it, the t, in for::.inc ■ •• ■ r r.ftri the middle back • f it ... tn still mov.-.c t »i,f them and is : ’ • e : •:m t lines : * arms the first an I r.jwonij, Coffman of In : a -e m .-.jpg oh boy, oh boy. "h bey. »m tackle. Jal- 1 h:m aoc S went out of bou-.Js on the T) dyke 40-ynn: . ffmu u a sure tou> • i u ■ :!.a: :.t« ... Jeff was on his way. All r.ptyour charts ready? Thcrnijl ball, first down on their on The field is lightning fas: at* slight wind will bother iri“ Thorndyke's I'r. ’g up, ur.bala line—Rand 'st. -they me Warner systt ■: . y u know ... diana’s using -■ are defensein backfield, all four men up fa close, the center out of the I they’re massing to stop Th dyke’s shot passing game fid terals. . . . Smart maneuver-e Big Jeff Randolph wall tar* step to get through that defa .. . There he goes—it's a latsn uhoh—the end g t him ...»!> three yards- s. c •» : and sevenmany red-shins in his way t time and they wouldn't be mo out . . . They're lining up aga the ball is passed—Jeff's runs wide—he's dropping back—oh, 1 a beauty, it’s a pass, a long ? straight down the middle. o»eri head of the Indiana backM* Thorndyke mar is racing for d he’s got it —he’s clear-two » are chasing him but they « catch h i m — he's over. It) TOUCHDOWN! Listen to! crowd . . . can you hear me? W scored that touchdown after cat ing a beautiful pass from Big J Randolph on the second play ■ a 57-yard gain. ...” Pop was winking at M'Sk ear close to the radio. LneleU was smiling —it wasnt o‘tes smiled anymore. Mrs. Flans* and Mrs. Johnson were suit too like they knew all about it Mom knew they didn't know more about it than she tii-'f* that she knew Tommy h»d something great again a y G heart was warm with P™* - . , body was talking but Pop P his hand. (To Be Continued) CApvrUtbt. 19)2. hr « Distributed by King