Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 290, Decatur, Adams County, 7 December 1934 — Page 4
Page Four
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published n 4. ,k THE ivary Eve- Wjfar DECATLR Bing Except DEMOCRAT Bunday by CO. Sintered at the Decatur, Ind., Poet Office as Second CUM Matter. 1. H. Heller I.President A. R. Holthouse, Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies 9 .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier— $5.00 One month, by mall .35 Three months, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mai11.75 One year, by mail3.oo, One year, at office .. — 3.001 Prices quoted are within first and second zones 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. ' Are you one of the Good Fellows? < Get that Christmas shopping' completed Saturday. Make Saturday your Christmas shopping day in Decatur. Visit the local stores Saturday and get that Christmas shopping job done. Old Santa will be in Decatur Saturday and it will be a treat for the children to meet him. Jean Harlow has the latest ex-1 tuse for a divorce. Her husband. I number three, sat up late at nights reading and disturbed her rest.' Result: suit for divorce and another fling at marital blissCan you imagine a more dismal condition than to be so unfortunate : as to be missed by Santa on Christmas eve. There are many families in Decatur in just such a plight. • but you can turn sorrow into joy i by donating a dollar or two to the Good Fellows club. The Good Fellows Santa Claus will visit these homes and see that they are cared for. The march of time has claimed ; Jonas Neuenschwander, long a familiar figure in this community,: former public official and prominent in many walks of life for a couple score of years. Mr. Neuenschwander's death occurred Tuesday from a heart attack. He was past 74 years of age and Fas a venerable gentleman, honest, true and progressiveThe airplane tragedy at Richmond in which two prominent Indianapolis doctors were killed is not an argument against plane travel, but rather a precaution as to the hazards around a landing field. The plane struck a tree| near the landing point. The field is not equipped for night flying. I It’s something to talk about having a landing field, but it’s more ini-; portant to see that the area around ' is clear of trees and wires and other hazards. Records show that more accidents occur when planes are att emitting to land than when flying high, so it behooves the industry to see that proper fields arc p ivided. The county will be organized to carry on the National Emergency ; Educational prog r am, Walter | Krick, city superintendent of schools, being selected to act as chairman. A county supervisor will be appointed and a survey of the needs will be made by a group of teachers, it is the purpose of the relief measure to extend opportunity to adults for education, the classes being in charge of unemployed teachers. It is a program having for its ideal the uuturlug of man's desire for educational auu spiritual advancement and is very popular i u counties where carried on.
The Central Sugar company of this city will pay to growers approximately $250,000 for beets delivered to the factory up to DeP cumber 1. The advance payment iis four dollars a ton and will be j made December 15, according to 1 1 the terms of the contract. Much of the money will remain in this ■ comtnuninty and local radius. The ’' mill will continue to operate until I about the twentieth, a run of more than 70 days, during which time I I ’ i 75 to 78 thousand tons of beets will have been processed into sugar, molasses and pulp- It’s a great inI dustry and not only this common- | ity, but the ejilire state appreciates it and wants to see it expand aud i prosper. BANK FAILURES: | Further evidence of improvement in the banking situation is furnished by a Washington dispatch which reports a total of fifty-seven j tailures for the first eleven months of 1934. How small this figure is. I judged in the light of earlier ex--1 perience. may be seen by comparI lug it with 1.285 failures during the | same period of 1932 aud with 1,936 . 1 for the corresponding period oft I 1931. A still more interesting com1 parison is with the boom year ■ 1929. That witnessed 590 failures during the first eleven months, or more than ten times the present i figure. Moreover, this year’s croc> ‘ jof failures has fortunately been; | confined to smaller institutions Only seven of the banks which i have suspended operations thus far in 1934 were members of the Fed-1
AND IT CT IRREGULAR PRICE OF CAII)M£TW 3AK4f BETTER I BAKING POWDER 1$ NOW I —IT ACTJ !=£*,/■ v WfW, *paaaX Saturday-Calendar Day at our Store WE HAVE ONE — Homtuuia t-n —, Rexall Fold QQ., vanay z‘ 2 lb pkgOVC FA 11 Vf||| Tablets Morions ana wngms I UU DeVilbiss Perfume AtoSmoked Sait mizers in the beautiful o lb. package QQ a ..-ivr none transparent shadesSpecial Ouv PLACING (.ARDS 4 A CP "I 4144 Almond Hand Lotion, 9£/« <£l IQ 4vC to th-I.VV ?l ascals . 49c —VCto <5 1.1*7 Lavender fi*-| £A .’ ? Z ,‘ !, ‘ zt . Stationery in Gift Boxes Shaving Set tvI.VV facial Tissue, wrapped Q _ • m r A A PIPES paper* SS»49c 25c... $3.00 25c, SIOO Cashmere Bouquet Soap Cascade Stationery otp • Cake, 10c OKn Vellum finish April Shower Sets 3 cakes for .... 21 Envelopes consisting of Eau de Nursery Castile Soap Note sheets Cologne and I’owuer Cake 10c, -g £ 1- letter sheets Lovely Xmas pkg. " r 29c 75c a.,51.00 rX wo.- 1 7 ,. S 3 <. $13.50 * T *Tii. h 9 ° c hoi, full pint ... 14 C t 0 Yardley English ShavAspirin ()fi Distinctive and ,r,g Bo " 1 $1 (1() 400’s Z./C Appropriate • wl,vv Glycerin and CHRISTMAS CARDS BILL FOLDS 25c '2“- 50c.53.50 Cod Liver Oil, plain and Lucien Lelong Colognes mint flavor 1(lz. Wrap vour Gifts and Perfumes bottle < 4t/C Attractively (PI (?1H Milk Magnesia OA Wrapping 1 A totDlV lull pint Paper, pkg Penthouse 4 Glorious Nasal Spray with Ephe- ( rvslal 1A Perfumes under one drine for relief of the Ti ’ IOC roof * <R? discomfort of common »PZj.t7*7 hla " "" ,ls 25c X k 5c a„a 10c $5-00 $lO ™ rrsffl drug co. THE REXALL STORE
f era] Deposit insurance Corporation, c Their average deposits were leas - than $250,000. The other fifty tall- • ures were of State institutions, t with average deposits in the neigh- , borhood of $750,000. The total amount of deposits involved in all i fifty-seven failures was less than j $40,000,000. This compares with j more than $600,000,000 in 1932 and 1 with more than $1,400,000,000 in j 1931. s Doubtless a large number of inI fluences have played a part in the , highly favorable record made thus . far in 1934. Three in particular may be readily identified: the ; elimination of many of the weaker institutions during the hard years from 1930 to 1932; the subsequent rise in the value of bonds and other property representing the assets of banks which survived that drastic shake-out; most important of all, the passing of the spirit of panic which prompted runs in ail sections of the country and forced the banks to attempt the impossible ask of convering a great pyramid of deposits into ready cash- —New York Times. o- — RECEIVE WORD FROM REASONER .CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ing the book covers found in the ‘ council room. No trace has been' found of the books, including the; j receipt stubs and receipt blanks. I . The destruction of municipal books I a statutory offense. Mrs. Reasoner bis moved «Ter I household goods in with her mother in Geneva. She is now living in Fort Wayne where she has stated that -he is "keeping house for an elder-: ly couple.’’
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1934.
Answers To Test Questions Below are the anewere to the Tert Questions printed I on Page Two. 1 ! 1. Albert Einstein. i' 2. German violin maker. , j 3. 1886. 4. “Mud Anthony”. ' 5. Utah. 6. India. 7. A reeeptacls for preserving sacred relics. 8. A lion. 9. "Big Bill”. 10. Ada. Ohio. GIVE EVIDENCE THAT BUSINESS IS ON UPGRADE CONTINUED from cage one have ranged from one to nine per cent. Building trades employment still is only 56 per cent. Green’s praise of FHA was important because spending plans are in dispute as Mr, Roosevelt prepares his budget. One new deal group wants private capital to loosen up. The other group has' toki Mr. Roosevelt that business will not deliver; mat k would be futile to wo it for private capital to begin spending at a rate which; would provide appreciable employment. Here are some sample arguments I of new dealers who want business I to spend to create jobs: Housing Administrator James A. Moffett in Pittsburgh: “In the past five years corporations have piled up at least $lO,- ■ u 00.000,000 which they could begin spending tomorrow for moderniza lion and repair. Large corporations I could life the country over the hump in a few weks." Secretary qf Commerce Daniel I C. Roper in New York: "For the most part we have every reason to believe that a : sound foundation lias been laid for 'recovery and that we are definite-
ly on the road to setter days.” Director Donald Rlchberg of the executive council tn New York: "The time has arrived when private enterprise should begin to lift the load of unemployment from the shoulders of government.’’ o — Preble Walther League To Give Farce-Comedy A three-ait farce-comedy “A Poor Married Man,” by Walter Ben Mare, will be presented by the Preble Walther League. Saturday and Sunday. December 8 and 9. at the PreMe school hall at 8 p. in. The play bakes place in a small college town in the middle w*«t. Cast of charac-
Floor Show 10:45 p.m. and 12:30 a.m. Every Saturday and Sunday Night Sonny Boy Williams Sonny Boy Williams and His Rythm Brownskins direct from Radio station W. G. L. with singing, dancing and music. UNCO BEER GARDEN I 1 - mile east of Decatur State Road 224
HITE’S GROCERY PHONES 31 and 204 Potatoes l ° w Gr ° und - bustie > 59® Fresh Roasted 1A _ ew Dates 1Q A Peanuts, pound Ivt pound IvV Sweet Potatoes OSn 3 cans Corn A Prunes 9 Aa Cranberries IQ,, 3 pounds pound 10l SunKist Navals _ Oranges 15c Little Elf Early AQ English Wai- A June Peas 2 cansMt/C nuts, lb ttWv Raisins Hominy JT „ Van Camps Baked Dessert Powder P /4 Ik ans. can Ot package OV Cabbage XZSf sl.lO Large cans 99 A Perfection Gin- | A 4 Pineapple ZieJV ger Snaps, tb. .. 1 VC Tomato Juice P „ can £)C Peaches, large cans in Peaches, fancy ICp heavy syrup 9^A evaporated, tti... JLtJV 2 cans OUV Christmas Trees-Beautiful Spruce 25c up J ■■■«■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■«^ ■ ■ M 8 B V W*WL ■ 8 Bi i »ss ' vaw s SSkTB ■ ■ BOS ®Bi HI 1 8 ■ aft W BK HulJa BLJB » ■ mOHraBraHHBBBBBI ■ Extra Quality In Our Specials "* Swift’s Premium B ■ Z? va Hams, whole or ■ • /A\ string ? alf iß‘/2c: ■ pound • • • \® \ ■ C \. Swift’s Hockless H ’ Panics 11 /» ■ ■ pound ■ • Z B Hamburger 10c lb., 3 for 25c J ■ Boiling Beef 6c tb B J Choice Beef Roasts 10c tb ■ ■ Minced Ham 15c lb., 2 for 25c J ■ Pork Steak and Roasts 15c tb ■ Z Pork Chops 20c tb J ■ Liver Pudding (home made)... 2 lb. 15c B Swiss Steak (no bone) 15c lb ■ B Sausage (country style) 15c tb “ ■ Heinz Pork & Beans 4 varieties 29c ( : GERBER 9 S : [J MEAT MARKET ■ B FREE DEUVm PHONE 97 "
tors': Professor John B. Wise, a poor married *uau—Arthur H. Bieoerich Doctor Mathaw Graham, a country physician —■ Oaxar Koenetnann Billy ilia-k. a popular college boy—Robert WerlUig. Jupiter Jackeon, a black trump, —Victor Bieberlcch Mrs. lona Ford, some mother-in-law,—Esther Keen eman n Zele, her charming daughter — Leota Bittner. June Graham, a little Freshman — Helena Koenemaan. Rosalind Wilson, a college reporter—Margaret Bultemeier. Dance Sunday, Sun Set.
NOTICE! We are headquarters for the famous LADY WAYNE and BRACH’S CANDIES 10c to 29c it. Pure and Fresh. Also LADY WAYNE 5 lb. box Light Milk d* 1 HA Chocolates ... tP 1 V Please look at these candies before buying for treat or home. WEST END RESTAURANT Phone 629 704 W. Monroe st.
' — ; Specials for Choice Baby Beef Roast < 1 Tender Swiss Steak (pounded “ Boneless Wattle Steak (Special) Young Tender Chuck Steak All I’ork Sausage (hulk). •)iXr Hamburger (fresh ground) Fresh Spare Rios 2 th* Fresh Pork Liver 3 Real Good Bulk Mince Meat 2 lh s ?|‘ LT’ Smoked or Casing Sausage Fresh Ground Veal Loaf.. 2 Wheel Swiss Cheese' 25c (Farmers Attention I \\ c will have some nice young -nii.il Beef this week end. out of choice corn fed Get our prices on custom butchering. beef hides and rendered tallow. Special will 1 lb. package of Hog casings ~~——— —- — —iBPiU £ Watch our window display of Fresh Meat*. Free. Prompt and Sanitary Delivery. KS-*’’*' Phones 95 and 96. ■Or W ■ M kII 1 M I I * I -jyX JHhTFM »1 1 J jm i »-1 Mi h-.y'■ uh* njl
FIRST Heat and Satisfaction SECOND PRICE We sell only such coals that we like to burn« selves. When you figure and burn our coal e,a low priced coal you'll be convinced. A ton goes further with perfect 'atisfacUH the last chunk. Try BLACK MASTER or “7-up” next Cash Coal & Supply Home of Stuckey's Hog-Glad.
Appelman’sGrogl FREE DELIVERY PHONE 215
Grape Fruit 1 A. ( 3 for LUU Good Apples t pound Mv Sun Kist Oranges, new crop QQ dozen 25c, 28c, Otzv Green Beans 1 pound IvC Creamery QI Butter, 11). ...Div 2 poundss9c Pancake Flour Q package «zV Cocoa, 2 pound i Q * can L»7v Grape Nut 1 Qr» Flakes, pkg. ... AtJ v Burco Flour QQz* sack c/UV Matches OCfcn 6 boxesv Kirks Hard- 1Q . , water soap, 4 bar JL«/ U Kraut n., can v Corn, Peas (V, CRD v L Green Beans Q ~ can */ L Hominy (|/» large can t/U Icing Powder Qp package ’’L Raisins Qz» box t/U Citron. Lemon n „ Peel Lima Beans pound U
Pork A Beans lAtl 2 cans Peaches 1(|l large ran .• ■ • ***l Rolled Oats 1(bl large pkgCampfire MarsbnuMß pound pkg. IwH Knox Gelatine IQ,. | package I J| .Milk Chocolate I(b| pound Soda Crackers IQfl 2 pounds . ■ • • Lux Soap IQf| 3 bars I els Naptha lUM Soap, 1 bars ■ • || Salmon 2Sfi 2 cans ... * Coco Malt W ran « Scouring MM Powder, 2 cans • I Sugar ,|jd 10 pounds Tomato Juice 2 can» Toilet Tissue iQf 4 rolls Macaroni 1 2 lb. pkg- A J Good Broom Swansdown OQC Cake Flow ' Large Budded Walnuts, in- • " ; Brazil Xuts pound '
