Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1934 — Page 4
Page Four
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published jb|»a THE Every Eve- DEC AT Lil Ding Except DEMOCRAT Sunday by ESX CO. Entered ut the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. J. H. Heller President A- R. Holt house, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies $ .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrierls.oo One month, by mail .35 Three months, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by ma 113.00 One year, at office 8.00 Prices quoted are within first and second sones. Elsewhere 83.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER. Inc. 1 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies, i
Ask for products made in Decatur —and say it out loud so the others will catch the enthusiasm. Some weather we are having and there is no more beautiful spot in the world than Indiana during October. The Dean Brothers will probably get farther if they stick to baseball and forget about the stage, writing and showing off. Crystal White sugar is popular here and ought to be. It’s the finest on the market and it's made here by local labor and with the raw product raised in this locality. The young folks Democratic club is gaining m< mbers each day and is already a powerful force in the campaign. It's a fine organization and one that should be kept alive even between campaigns. Work began today on the government's experiment of fortyeight homestead houses, just south of Decatur. That will be a busy eighty acres the next several . months and a delightful section in / which to live after that. Sherman Minton will speak here the afternoon of the 29th and you should hear him. Much has been said about this splendid candidate and we are sure you will be pleased with his personality, his oratory and his good and sound argument. Tom Kysar of Indianapolis seems to.have been a man of the determined type. He tried to commit suicide and the load of shot went info his thigh. He calmly reloaded the gun and took another crack at himself with the desired results. | He was dead when the doctors arrived. Help build Decatur. That's the program of the candidates on the city ticket and a worthy one. With yonr help, these candidates, if elected, pledge to do every thing they can and in every way to make this a city of prosperous and happy and contented people. What more could we ask? The lifetime of Harry Pierpont, one of the Dillinger gang, is getting shorter with each passing hour. He is scheduled to go to the electric chair tomorrow and there I v A. ]Loan WheriYou Need It Sudden and unexpected needs of money hit ail of us at times. t At such times yon can get money from us quickly, easily, confidentially. Our company will lend you up to 8300 <m I your own signature and security, at lawful interest rates. ' You can pay us back in small < weekly_ or monthly payments. FRANKLIN SECURITY CO EaMiiTw Decatur. Indiana Phone 237
seems no escape. Extra guards have been put on and officials are determined to carry out the court orders. He has had a colorful career of crime and the end is what he certainly anticipated. i 1 —~ — Wc drove over a part of the improved highway 527 and found It al) that has beet! claimed—one of the finest in the middle west. Twenty feet wide besides the burms, smooth and with the curves taken care of, It will prove a delightful thoroughfare for those who enjoy driving and taps a territory of great importance to this city. It will be formally opened November 9th and with due ceremony, attended by the highway commis. stoners from Ohio and Indiana. Political speakers are deploring the fact that relief will be necessary, but what would they have this great nation do? While relief has been expensive the past few years, no one will argue that we can do any thing but take as good care of the needy and unfortunate as we
can. That has been done the past year and will probably continue for a time in those sections of the country where permanent relief I has not come. There is no doubt , that conditions are better in this , county and that relief will cost less the coming year than during the past. t For the first time since January, , 1932. according to the Department of Agriculture, the average pay of farm laborers has gone up to $1 a ■ day and board. The $1 a day and > what you need to eat seems small. > but there was a time when a Presi- . dent of the United States complained seriously that he could not hire a really good American workman 1 tor less than SIOO a year. Times, bad as they are. improve. But actual wages mean little. The important question is not how much ■ are you paid, but how much can you get for your money?—Arthur Brisbane. The death of Arthur E. Smith, i purcbasing»Ajjent of Allen county. ' has brought genuine sorrow to his I many friends here. In his youth 1 he spent his summers here, being a relative of the King family and since he became a man he frequently visited here and was well known. An earnest Democrat and always a good fellow, he was very popular and quite helpful. For years he had charge of the raising of finances for his party in Fort Wayne and Allen county and as t county agent he has made an excel- ‘ lent record. Art Smith will be , missed bw many because of his i personality and his ability. WmcL® .-.J A3 C«A»fo' OIARi-EY orant j A nice limb has put many a chap up a tree. There's a lot o' sap where there ain't any trees. Gals who re all wool are easier t’ cotton to. ■ Yep. a stubborn will is as bad as a stubborn won't. When a gal gives a feller too much rope it's harder t' git him tied. Some chaps act as though their ' better half was their worst enemy. Household Scrapbook ROBERTA LEE ♦ —♦ Wall Paper Cleaner Wall paper cleaner can be mad'’ as follows: Mix 1 cup of flour and tfe-cup cold water to a smooth paste. Add 2 tablespoons salt. 2 tablespoons vinegar, 1 tablespoon kerosene. Boil until it thickens, stirring constantly. Allow it to cool, then knead thoroughly. Use the same as the manufactured kind. Lemon Juice Ruh lemon juice into the bread board. It will whiten the wood beautifully and will absorb all grease and dirt from the board. Luqfheon Diab A palatable and novel luncheon dish can be made of a baked apple stuffed with ham and bread i crumbs.
ONE OF THREE IN THE NATION Fl A z—k FINE/A—rO L job//schools — I KEPT OPEN through A'DHOfX h EpßEss|oN f - ' —- MIgMEEsELa. .mG z 4 i // Jr ■ Sra 7 Hi/ ' k '
> ♦ Answers To Test Questions Below are the answer* to the Tect Questions printed on Page Two. . 1. British Columbia. 2. Guayaquil. 3. Paresis. 4. Dumas. 5. American. 6. Amherst, Mass. 7. The Lord's Prayer. S. The Island of Guernsey, one of the English Channel Islands. 9. Scotland. 10. Instrument nsed to measure the intensity of an electric current. 1. New Mexico. 2. Mexico. 3. Those which have ■ rgini that are shed periodically. 4. Portland. 5. Typhoid fever. 6. South America. ff. Yes. 8. Distinguished French physicist. 9. In the South Shetland Group, Antarctica. 10. Heywood Brown. • ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File Oct. It-German army takes Ostend and are n w in possession of all Belgium. Clay Engle falls down stairway at the Erie restaurant, sprains his wrist and breaks his none. Mayor Ross Johnson of Gary de-
New Jersey Makes Ready for Hauptmann Drama V n'W I
Hunterdon county, N. J., is making ready to receive a new “guest” at its county jail. Anticipating favorable action in New York on the request for his extradition, officials of the New Jersey county are w awaiting the arrival of Bruno Riehard Hauptmann for trial on murder charges in connection with the kKinaping of the Lindbergh baby. Top, the court-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1931.
I What The Indiana New Deal Has Done For The School Teachers 1. Paid $530 on the salary oi each teacher in the state of Indiana. 2. Kept doors of every school open through 1933-34. 3. Enacted throe law- which fulfilled the constitutional mandate that equal education should be established. 4. Total cost of education ir, state reduced $15,000,900 siuce 19J1 without sacrifice to school standards. 5. Made banks safe for teachers' savings. 6. Secured by a modern and accurate accounting system the Teachers' Retirement Fund. 7. Paid approximately one-third of the total operating expenses of the public schools during the school fiscal year. > 8. Met the school financial problem squarely and solved it. 9. tine of only three states in the Union where not a school door closed, not a teacher went unpaid due to lack of state aups*ort, and not one of 650,000 children in public schools was denied the privilege of an equal education. 10. School book costs have been reduced to Indiana school patrons. '
man-ts the resignation of Jt>? M rrls as safety commissioner. Earl Crawford of Wayn- county i gives a Pr gressive speech at the court house. C. M. My rs and sons of Celina. Ohio, visit here. The Hawkins-Runyon stile of pers nal property in Blue Creek township. totals $4,500. L. G. Ellingham and J. C. Moran speak a: Democratic meeting in Monroe. Miss Ruby Miller is hostess f r the Euterpean Society. Fifty car loads of automobiles for use in the war fronts of Euntpe go over the Nickel Plate railway. Miss Lydia Miller gives a shower for her cousin. Miss Effie Miller. o — Get the Habit — Trade at Home
house at Flemington, the county seat, where the trial will be staged; left, Warden Harry O. McCrea, left, and Sheriff John H. Curtiss, standing outside the cell selected for Hauptmann; right, Mrs. Margaret McCrea, wife of the warden, who will d® the cooking for Hauptmann. The sfupsct is shown, center.
Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. When a small card c.hfo is' lacking in one or two players, is it permissible for the hostess to extend a “last hour” invitation to one or two other friends? A. Yes. Explain the situation frankly and truthfully, and if the! other person is well-bred, and can - do so. she will accept the invitation without hesitation. Some other time she may wish to make a similar request. Q. Is it correct to use the suf-1 fix “inJaw?” A. It is omitted whenever possible in good society.
I COURTHOUSE Cases Continued Kalamaho Stove Company vs. Paul Graham replevin By agreement of parties catwe is reset for Nobember 26 William Mesel Jr. vs. Howard A. Long. note. By agreement of partlea cause le continued until the next term of jourt. |H. R. McCleanajhnn vs. Adam Biberstein. professional services due. By agreement of parties cause is continued b the next term of court. ’Chirols H Snyder vs. Otho Lobenstein. etal. note. By agreement of parties cause is continued to the next term of court. Appearance Filed Lillian Heisfng vs. Wilber Leatherman et al, replevin. Appearance filed by Edmund A. Bosse for Walter D. Cross, rule to answer. Answer Filed Lena Weber vs. Willis H. Dett i inger. note. Answer in three para i graphs filed. Rule to reply b sec I ond and third paragraphs. Rule To Antwer Sophia Smith vs. Richard E. Ton-1 nelier and Rose D. Tonneller. damages. Second paragraph of Com 1 plaint filed by plaintiff, rule to I answer. New Case First State Bank of Decatur vs. ida Dugue. James Dague and Law-1 renoe E. Jacobs, note. Complaint I filed. Summons \ rdered to sheriff of Adams county for all defendants : returnable October 23. Final Report Approved Thomas M. Parr, ex parte, drain. ’ Superintendent filed final report l with vouchers. Final report exam- I ined and approved and all execu- > lions made as set out in said report, allowed. Spperintendent is discharged. Estate Cases Estate if William Zimmerman, i Report of inheritance tax appraiser filed. Notice ordered returnable, November 3. Estate of John Bucher. Sale bill number one filed, examined and approved. Petition an schedule to entermine inheritance tav file. Referr-
Schafer’s 60th w' /1> \NMVERS\RY BLANKET SALEU It’s no wonder so many of our customers and friends are buying blankets now even tho it is warm. During this big sale we are selling blankets as low or lower than last year price. Now is the time to prepare for winter. If you do not have the ready cash use our liberal Lay A Way Plan. We do not charge one penny extra if you lay them away until you need them. 8 $2.39 72x84 Cotton Doubles $1.49 pr. $2.59 66x80 Part Wool Doubles $1.84 pr. $2.95 70x80 Part Wool Doubles $2.18 pr. $3.75 72x84 Part Wool Doubles $2.68 pr. $4.75 72x90 Part Wool Doubles $3.49 pr. 72x99 White Sheet Blanket $1.29 ea. $5.95 72x84 PART WOOL WhHc The> I Beautiful Ne» DOUBLE BLANKETS u.t Fanc > ln^ n This beautiful large heavy warm dJQ O Qn fluffy blanket is guaranteed to con- , tain not less than 25'i wool. p a j r | HARDWARE HOME FURN IS‘H INCL
ed. to county aasesaor. Guardianship Cases Marb.ti Wuyne Stopher, wand, Samuel H. Mlnger, guardian. Current report filed, examined and approved. William Jackson ward. E. Burt Lenhart, guardian Appraisal of real estate filed, examined and approved. Application to sell real estate aiibmltte and sustained and real estate dteerfbed in petition ordered sold at private sale for ti rt less than full appraisal value free of liens nt one Mill’d cash, one third In six months and v«e third in 12 months after notice by ipublfcatt n by two notices in Decatur Dally Democrat. Three Men Rob City Treasurer Brockton. Mass., Oct. 16—i-UPI -Three bandits held up the city
WEDNESDAY SPECIALsI Fresh Boiling Beef Fresh Pork Neck Bones 3 lbs. 2(|fW Bulk Sauer Kraut 2 lbs. Fresh Creamery Butter 2 lbs. tJJ >1 Strictly Fresh Country Eggs Pilot Coffee, 28c seller 2 lbs. Home Made Ginger and 1 • I Sutiar Cookies, dozen Fresh Veal and Pork Hearts 2 Fresh Oysters Wednesday Only Plenty Fresh Cut Minute Steaks Mutschler’s Meat Market Phone 106 or 107. j
treasurer. Uo v fl-e at city Hali' to 4 '■ l| U *‘ih 812,811 m For sheer , UrlS|! 1 has had no !MriMel *nJ tlMial machine-gun !iI( M Needham Trust compel rnery. which murder and nett-d . lu.? M loot. "‘•‘•J Opening Square Dm. J nesday. H<?l tia Opening Sun»tl I‘arp Guarai ”<*<<lTrtrtZA I or Tender Dr. Emil's Adla quick relief from * between meals d M t „ ' " digestion and heartburutf [your money k refuaded. a house Drug Co, *
