Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 11 November 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published w A THE Every Evo DECATUR utng Except jKp DEMOCRAT ■•:nday by CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. f. H. Heller.... Pres, and Gen. Mgr. uR. 1 tollhouse Sec"y & Hus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller..— Vice-President Subscrlpticn Rates:' Single copies I .02 One week, by carrier 10 One year, by carrier —. 6.00 Jne month, by mail .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office..— 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second sones. Elsewhere $3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc. 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Get your dollar membership ready for the Red Cross. The. solicitors will call upon you tomorrow or soon. Without the Red Cross this nation would have had no organization so well equipped to take care of the needy. They deserve support and the membership drive in this county should l>e easy. If you want to enjoy yourself and | I i can arrange it, slip over to the i I • high school gym tonight and see ■ the big circus. It’s as real as those given under the big canvass in the., summer time, with the best acts |, and every thing right and proper. The bandits seem to have decided that Indiana isn’t after all a , very safe place for them to pig , their trade but of course it would 11 be ail wrong to give Governor McNutt and Al Feeney any credit for the excellent manner in which they , solved a tough problem. Those farmers who are burning bridges and destroying property in lowa must have a queer idea if ■ , they think that helps any one j ( Some one must pay the damage ■ ( they cause and always that goes ( back to the consumer. Plans must ■ ( be constructive if we are to get I any where, not destructive. j t ' ! I If R. Earl Peters and Sam Cleland . i both become candidates for the Democratic nominatica for United Slates senator, the folks of the Fourth district will need no other I entertainment for a few weeks. \ Each is skilled in politics, both live in Fort Wayne, each has his I supporters who will go all the way j | and of course each would want the | vote from his own district. — Armistice Day was appropriately | <>l erved here today as it was all 4 over this country. It has been sis- < teen years since that day when , news that the greatest war of all time had ceased, that the men had 1 lain down their arms and the world went wild with joy. The program ! 1 rendered at the Country Club at j noon today under auspices of Ad- ( ams Post was one of the best ever given here and was largely attend-] Mr. Davenport, writing for Collier’s Magazine, devotes some three pages to the story of Indiana under Governor McNutt. One gets the id a in his get-away that. he is try- j ing to make the new deal machine in this state look fiercer than the ] Tammany tiger but he winds up by boosting the governor who he ADAMS THEATRE - Sun., Mon., Tue. - “ONE MAN’S JOURNEY” with Lionel Barrymore. Joel McCrea. Dorothy Jordan, Frances Dee, May Robson. TONIGHT — ‘‘ R A FT E R ROMANCE” with Ginger Rogers, Norman Foster, George Sidney.

admits is honest and smart and for the people. It makes a good story and these writers you must remember are paid by the word. Governor McNutt will confer with Harold Ickes, administrator of public works at Washington next Wednesday and among the matters to be discussed, will be the building of the lake near Geneva and the Improvement to prevent flood damages along the Wabash river. Needless to say the Governor will use all his persuasive powers to convince Mr. Ickes and if successful, deserves the boosts of a good many who have been knocking recently. Attention of every householder is called to the suggestions as offered in last evening’s edition of this paper, advising how to take care of meters, frozen pipes, faucets and how to shut off the water to avoid damage. A stitch in time saves nine, some one once said and it still holds good. If you will fol- ! ! lows instructions you may save | yourselves a bill of some size and ‘ considerable inconveniences. The I city department is trying to serve you as nearly perfect as possible. Call on them if you need them. An epidemic of dysentery front Chicago hotels and restaurants has caused so much anxiety that rigid cleanliness has been instituted. It might have been better if some system had been used during the past six months, since thousands who visited that city recently may 1 still be subject to the disease which is more severe than ordinarily. Tit? symptoms manifest themselves in from thirty to ninety days, according to the experts who are investigating. We are a great people to lock the barn after the sliver has ' been stolen. Republican newspapers continue to howl each time one of their faith is bounced so that a Democrat can take his place. They argue that interfers terribly with efti-t ciency. For sixteen years the G. j O. I‘. was in control in this state and if there was a single Democrat employed in the state house or in any other place under their control, he had to keep might) mum. Its all somewhat silly on their part, it seems to us. for they know full well that when they get in. every clerk and deputy will bo ’fired’' so quick he won’t know how it happened. And that’s about all there is to that question, regardless of the columns now being written by the "outers.” 0 — • Answers To Test | Questions I Below a.e the Answers to the | | Test Questions Printed on Page Two. 1. A female student at a college or university for both men and women. 2. Bureau of Engraving and printing, Washington, D. C. 3. Couplet. 4. Into the English Channel at Havre. France. 5. Nathaniel Hawthorne. 6. (Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani. 7. Shakespeare. 8. Courts martial. 9. An instrument for recording earthquake shocks. 19. Guglielmo Marconi. Q TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Dally Democrat File ♦ « Frank Wagoner and Miss Lila Boegly are married at Hillsdale. Rev. Freiberger officiates at wedding of Miss Louise Teeple and Mark Braden. Eggs in New York are selling at 75c per dozen. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Sholty and daughter, Mabel, are in Fort Wayne. Mrs Schnable of Louisville, Ry.. Is visiting Fieri Bloemker and Louis Conrad families. Miss Jennie Gast returns to Cleveland after visiting Miss Mayme Harting. Miss Ramona Smith is recoveri ing from scarlet fever. Bumper crop of rabbits is making things interesting for the ’Hunters this year. Miss Rose Voglewede is Hostess to the Bachelor Maids; prizes were awarded to Miss Mayme Terveer an dAdelaide Deininger.

' ' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1933.

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answers to inquiries —— Q. What wage and hour provisions apply to musicians? A. Not more than 40 hours per week and pay according to the following schedule: Not less than sls per week in cities of more than 500,000; nor less than $14.50 in cities between 250,000 and 500.000; nor less than sl4 in cities between 2.500 and 250,000. In towns of less than 2.500, 20 per cent increase it that brings the wage above sl2 per week, otherwise minimum of sl2. ! Q. Pending the signing by the President of the permanent code •or retail stores, may a retail store; operate under the testative provisI ions of such proposed code in pref erence to operating under the modifications of the President’s Reemployment Agreement as applied to .

In Step! ; WWA Kfl now <i«te>v et no j STEPPING ON EACH I OTHERS TOES'. I L i ■ ' — Ceartew .TasTivi/le Tenneuean

retail stores? A. No; until the permanent code • for retail steres has been signed by the President, any such store j displaying the Blue Eagle is ex- ■ I pected to operate under the Presi- , I dent’s agreement, as modified by 11 substitutions applying particularly I to retail stores. 11 Q. To what extent do substitut- ;; ed provisions for (11 grocery stores and (2) restaurants apply to delica1 tessen stores selling food products land serving meals? A. They should be classed as grocery stores unless they have a j restaurant in connection, in which ease they should comply with the restaurant substitution. Q. In the case of chain-store I branches which desire to display I , the Blue Eagle, who signs the'

I President’s agreement and the cer•'tiheate of compliance? i A. The managers as applying ' only to employees under their coni trol. Q. Whenever tolerance is allowed in working time in approved ; substitutions, is time and one third for overtime paid for hours workled in excess of stipulated weekly hours, or for hours worked after . tolerance is exceeded? 1 A. Time and one third begins I for hours worked in excess ot toleri ance. Bottle of Beer 40 Mears Old I .“oerty, Mo.-HU.B —A bottle of beer brewed 40 years ago was dis- | played at a nantique sho where recently. The exhibit card didn't explain where it was hidden all those I years.

98 INDUSTRIES NOW UNDER CODE President Roosevelt Has Approved Agreements for Various Lines Washington, Nov. 11. — (Special! The National Recovery Administration’s stupendous task of super vising the drafting of codes of fair competition for all American Industry is well past the half way mark. Already the President has approved 98 such business chartem) destined to vastly strengthen the country's commercial structure as well as afford employment to many more hundreds of thousands. Hearings have been completed on about ISO others, some of which are subject to revision. The work is arduous because the NRA has adhered strictly to the letter and the spirit of the President's public assurance of Jane IS. when he signed the Recovery Act. that the ’ new government controls’’ displacing the "old principles of unchecked competition.’’ "must, above all, be impartial and just,’’ and that ’’the antitrust laws still stand firmly against monopolies that restrain trade and price fix ing.” Hearings have been called on more than 50 additional pending codes, and it has been estimated that less than 400 will be required to complete the huge job of fixing rules of fair competition, wages, and employment for all trades in the country. This figure is based on tabulations of the last census and certain regroupings of sonic lines to fall within a single charter, subject to acquiescence of the mem bers. Ten classes are governed under the general retail code, but because of peculiar variety ot stocks, drug stores are under a separate code. Conversely, since the code covering electrical manufacturers was approved on August 4. four separate cones under it have been sanctioned. The codes approved by the President are as follows: Artificial Howers and feathers, automatic sprinkler, automobile manufacturing, advertising specialty, asbestos. Bankers, bituminous coal, boiler manufacturing, boot and shoe, builders’ supplies, beet sugar, business equipment, buffing and polishing wheel and buffing and polishing composition. Cast-iron soil pipe, coat and suit, compressed air, corset and brassiere, cotton textile,* cap and closure, canning and packing machim ery, crown manufacturing, copper and brass. Dress manufacturing. Electrical manufacturing and electrical storage battery. Farm equipment, fishing tackle, fertilizer, fabricated metal products. floor and wall clay tile, and funeral supplies. Gasoline pump, glass containers, and gas-cock manufacturing. Heat exchange, hosiery, handkerchief. and hair and jute felt. Ice, iron and steel, and industrial supplies and distributors. Knitting. Lace manufacturing. lai'iMt.y ami dry cleaning, leather, legitimate theater, lime, linoleum and felt base, luggage and fancy leather, lumber and timber products, and leather and woolen knit gloves. Men’s clothing, motion-picture laboratory, motor-vehicle retail,

Repair Your Own Shoes COBBLER SETS IN TWO SIZES. ' ; ’* B *^ W j Made in Decatur by Jimmie Cowan. I ’ ■ 3 lasts and stand—per sets 9 A ■ 4 lasts and stand (high standard, [Jj H same as cut) —per set Rubber Heels and Rubber Soles, the cement on style and the heavy ones to nail on. <■ FATHER of all kinds and qua lltieS ?' jV-tS ’ aJc soles, squares, and strips, any quali.,' <‘ n d ? " you ma - v nec< *’ W omens Good Half Soles per pair tSr Mens Half Soles in al! mades 1 (L. AVV The Schafer Store HARD Wake a.nD HOME

I mutual savings banks, marking devices, motor bus, millinery and ' dress trimming, and men’s garter. I suspender, and belt. 1 Nottingham lace curtain, novelty , I curtain, draperies, bedspreads, and ' I novelty pillows. Oil burner, optical, and office : 11 equipment. Petroleum, photographic manufacturing, pump manufacturing, plumbago crucible, packing machinery. paint varnish, and lacquer, 1 l>etr<>leum equipment, and piano ■ manufacturing. Rayon ami synthetic yarn, retail ’ lumber, retail drug, retail trade, ■ road machinery, and rock-crusher mamifacturing Saddlery, salt, shipbuilding, silk ; ■i textile, steel tubular and tirebox j • boiler, soap and glycerine manu-1 1 facturing. steel casting, and stock-

raueVnivmnawMiF 1 ii-« ra. ’/Jdamatd-- - - : 1 Z /H ' / /I- / u z k / // I'* |\ i l ' \ a* / fl MRS. KENNETH BUTLER, east of Decatur. k| * = the I" $59.00 LIVING ROOM SUITE I; in our North window, Saturday, at 543. W. H Who will be lucky enough to get I the other two articles? $49.50 I.X.L. Large Kitchen Cabinet I Price Today . >2’B| $59.00 “Free” Sewing Machine Price Today SH If you are going to buy a good Kitchen 1 tbiulf a Sewing Machine you will never have a w* opportunity. Although you save a dollar every day that yoi’i please remember that there are only one of fli item on sale, 1 And don’t forget that a great many people! watching these two items that are left so l>ur would be buy it today and what a bargain you*® get. I i Just as a suggestion, why not buy one of items for“. Mother” or the wife's Christmas presMß Watch Our North Show Window. I ■ The Schafer Stal 1 HARDWARE and HOME Fl RMSHINGS | 0

?SBM 1 ' r ' i-., ! " ! • s’.,? ■ c * V I Tr» | ; ‘ lllh " •' 30 lr-te il