Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 4, Decatur, Adams County, 4 January 1935 — Page 6

Page Six

SEE INCREASE IN RETAILERS Largest Number In History Os State To Operate In 1935 Indiana,,•'.olla. Ind.. Jan. 4—(UP) ,— The largest number of retail Mores in the history of the state ■will operate in 1935. Clarence A. Jackson, director of the atore licence groan Income tax division i said today. Basing his prediction on t ie number of upplfr.atlona for retail Keenaea received by the Mate store licensing division, Jackson estimat' d that the 1934 figure of 61,391 would be increased several hundred. Applications made out from records on file in Jackson s office, were mailed out to store owners several weeks ago. The number of licensed storee has increased steadily sin e the l>iw became effective in 1931. A total of 53,296 licenses were issued in 1934 : 53,451 in 1932, and 57,505 in 1933. Jackson pointed out that schools which operate candy and drink stands at athletic contests, churches bolding liaaians and any other similar organizations operating retail stores must be licensed the same as established merchants.

*BUYS HEALTH BOND* ♦— —— *i The Decatur Lions Club has purchased a $5.00 Health Bond from Bi | y the Adams ConnU I ty Tuberculosis 1 Christmas Association, ac-, seals cording to an j uamaaw announcement ' sfsiosscMtriHCS [ this morning by ■ *± 4 ' W. Guy Brown. i j ! president of the 1 1 • A 1 associat ion. ' ' Money from 1 [ these bonds is i , 11SP< | j n t| le fight to stamp out ; |-J t L P tuberculosis 1 rIcHT and is added to I tuberculosis receipts from Christmas Seal sales. CC C COLDS nnu W V fever . l.iqultl.TnblrtM firsif day < HEADACHES Salvr-\4»nr Drop* in 34* mlantra

1T11T55T37K55133 ®“"l9c and 35c SALE LOOK WHAT ig c WILL BUY Palmolive Toilet 14 TOM ATO JUICE I(|,. S " J "'’ ,al “' > ' i 4t COUNTRY CLUB. Pure Rich 410 OZ. CANS I«7L Milk, CountrV Club IFT „ COCOA lOp 3 Tall Cans '..... L/C OUR MOTHERS. 2 lb. Can L «7 V twinkle 19c X'£"loc i Six Fruit Flavors. 4 pkgs. <z V/ CRACKERS "17 I Potatoes, sand 1 T sodas. Salted. 2 lrs. AI V grow n, peek .... I DC CHILI SAUCE 1Q „ — country clur ? r nz. Rntties I«7C Crapefruit, ball of Ift CREAM CHEESE IQ p Juic«.sfor L/C Mild Cure. Full Flavnr. LR. Xe/C “SANDY” DOG FOOD |g c 25c dAvelcoffee 19c =:^ sc VALUES AT 35 P BUYNOW s™, Potato*. r a „„ GREEN BEANS 9”. "““ lilv - lb 0C AVONDALE, 4 No. 2 CANS DD U “ ~ T , — RED BEETS 35c K.Yoib ,’29c AVONDALE, Cut. 4 No. 2'/ z CANS MMV (ORN Carrots 1 CT STANDARD QUALITY, sweet ■ tender. 4 No. 2 CANS OMV ”* ’ I TOMATO JUICE Q f* | California, nice clean COUNTRY CLUB. 4 24 oz. CANS V PRUNES op* Butter lb. QI P Country Club, Roll. DLL MAX BEANS Fresh Churned COUNTRY CLUB. 3 No. 2 CANS DDU — CORN Bread Qp Country Club, Cream Style or Whole Kernel. 3No 2 cans DDL 24 oz. Twin Sliced Loaf vV PEAS O t I Country Club, Oven Fresh AVONDALE, Fancy Quality. 3 No. 2 CANS ODL SIFTED PEAS QJ- Sugar COUNTRY CLUB. 2 No. 2 CANS Granulated, 10 lb. bag V/ BANANAS lbs 25c APPLES 4 lbs 22c CELERY st£ Uree 2 Stalks 15c

GUIDE-for *f/wwl I I. H Mid-Winter <Jvvla

Attractive Recipes

- Boston Baked Beans Soak 2 cups dried beans overnight, cook gently till soft, drain off water. Place alternate layers of beans and diced lean pork in casserole, first rolling pork in 1 teaspoon mustard, 1 teaspoon salt and ’<4 teaspoon pepper. Top casserole with beans and lay strips of fat salt pork across. Pour 1 cup molasses over this and add sufficient water to cover beans. Bake very slowly for 6 hours. Prune and Pineapple Salad Pit four large cooked prunes for each individual salad required. ■ Place on slice of pineapple and dot with cream cheese. Serve an lettuce nests with French dres- i sing. X Tomatc Juice Add the juice of >•> lemon and teaspoon of salt to the tomato juice cocktail. , —■ *** Fiuffy Mocha Frosting Cream 1-3 cup butter. Sift -1 cups confectioners sugar, 3’y tablespoons cocoa and V* teaspoon I salt together. Add gradually ,o ' butter reserving some of sugarj

mixture to add ijileniutoly with 1-3 cup strong coffee mixed with 1 teaspoon vanilla. Spread on cake and sprinkle nuts on sides. i Salmon Ring Boil fresh salmon in very little I water till done. Flake and ad.l . I liquid in which the fish wax boiled , mixed with the contents of 1 patk- , I age of gelatine and 1 tablespoon of | onion Juice. Pour in ring mold in , which slices of lemon have been placed. When set unmold and serve with mayonnaise mixed with whipped cream. Macaroni with Cheese , Boil macaroni till tender, place in casserole in alternate layers with cheese, sliced or grated, top with cheese and sprinkle with bread crumbs rolled in butter. Pour milk over all to cover. Bake I till golden brown. Creain Puffs Heat 1 cup water and ’g cup shortening to boiling; add 1 cup i flour sifted with % teaspoon salt, stir well. Mix in 3 unbeaten eggs one at a time, as soon as mixture has cooled. Add 2 teaspoons baking powder. Mix and drop by spoonfuls 1 inch apart in greased tin. Elake 25 minutes and when i done elit with a sharp knife to admit filling. Mrs. Bernice Noble of Pierceton, I Indiana, visited with friends in Dej catur today.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1935

OPEN DRIVE ON SLOT MACHINES I — Led By State Police, Fort Wayne Officials Make Raids Fort Wayne, Jan. 4.—City, county and state officials joined with Indiana state police yesterday and launched a concentrated drive , against slot machines. Following I the seizure of slot machines and I punch boards warrants for the arrest of IS defendants will be issu- • ed today. The drive in this vicinity was arranged at a conference held yesterday in the office of Judge Clarence R. McNabb and is part of a state wide drive ordered by Al G. Feeney, state director of public safety. State police from Ligonier barracks. co-operating with sheriffs, opened drives in nearby counties. Five arrests were reported in Noble county last night. Chief of Police George F. Eisenhut. Sheriff George W. Gillie, Sergt. Walter V. Mentzer of the Indiana state police, Prosecuting Attorney Otto W. Koenig and Judge McNabb attended the conference. Local law enforcement agencies pledged their support to the state police program. Chief Eisenhut agreed to co-operate with and assist state police in the city drive while Sheriff Gillie promised his aid in the county drive. Not only were slot machines included in the seizure but a large number of punch boards, pin machines and gum machines were seized. The city raid was made by Detective Sergt. Alfred Figel and Sergt. Mentzer while the county raid was made by deputies of Sheriff Gillie and State Patrolman Paul, Beverforden. Not only were machines and oth- ’ er gambling devices seized that! were ‘openly displayed but machines in rear rooms of restaur- ; ants and beer taverns also were taken. PRODUCERS TO CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE will receive benefit payments of: not less than $1.25 per ton of beets produced. Details of the work will be administered by committeemen of growers elected by the farmers. TiNDS BRANDS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE rect examination left the courtroom rustling with excitement. Before the audience had recovered, the colonel had been turned to the vigorous chief defense counsel, Edward J. Reilly of Brooklyn, who immediately began to attack his story from every angle. By the noon recess the prosecution had revealed some of the most vital parts of its case, and the defense had begun a counter movement designed to show that other persons than Bruno Hauptmann could have —and did —kidnap and murder the 20-monthh old infant. Insistently and at times with a tone that brought angry responses from the colonel, Reilly bored into the details of Lindbergh's recital. Point by point he went over with him the heart breaking days at Hopewell after the crime, and every movement, every action, every memory of those days. Reilly revealed a strange count-er-theory to the state's charge against his client. By inference, through his questions, he sought to show that members of the Lindbergh establishment were not UNIVERSAL Farmlight Batteries and 32 Volt Radios. Phone or Write. PUBLIC SERVICE STATION Distributors Ossian, Indiana JUST RECEIVED shipment of Beautiful DRESSES MRS. M. MOYER 128 N. 4 st.

W/ in HoLEyWOOv

By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright, 1931, King Features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD. . . . —The whole • town Is talking of the success of l "Babes in Toyland". Now that I Oliver Hardy and Stan Laurel have proved hat human actors can compete with the ' —, an I m ated car1 I , . toons in the field WT 'w-f JtC Os fantasy, others wiU bo embold4L-. ’ cned lo try - , V Jean Parker Is so enthusiastic . H. that she'll turn i I wßfc producer of fairy • -< jfifl stories. sP ** They will be short reel e r s | ——photographed on Jean Parker 16-mllllmeter 61m • and released, Jean hopes, through the regular I channels for this home type of motion pictures. The M. O. M. star Is setting part of her salary by every week to finance her experiment. She'll start 1 the first picture In about three ’ months, with professional actors, > mainly children, playing the roles. Being ambitious as an author, Jean will attempt to write her own stories ’ —at least she'll try this on the first ' picture. I j How Is one to account for the • optimism of these fans who make , large financial demands upon the I stars? The practice reached a new , high level just before Christmas when. In a single day. Mae West ' received requests for more than SIOO,OOO. A resident of Texas was - sanguine enough to waste paper, ink I and a stamp on an appeal for the ! star to give him $60,000 to open an oil field. Another chap, tn Illinois, thought nothing of asking $20,000 to finance a baseball team. Two men in I Davenport. la, were more modest. , They wanted only $5,000 to start a | dairy. An enterprising youth In | Lancaster, Pa, wrote Mae he could I use $3,000 to put him through medical school. A man who failed once In a machine shop In Pueblo. Colo, ; doesn't see why the star won't be glad to risk $13,000 on his chances of clicking the second time. And a widow In Ottawa. Kansas, is all set to go Into the restaurant "business if Mae will only write her a check for $1,500. All of these letters will be meticulously answered. But what possii ble hope could the writers have had of any other reply but “no"? Thelma Todd, for instance, can tell; you that running a restaurant re- , quires capital and a keen lookout | for new Ideas. The blonde star has a sidewalk case which Is one of the unique eating places on the coast highway. She’ll make it more unique above suspicion, and that the police had not investigated their actions sufficiently to absolve them. The two were Betty Gow, the baby’s nursemaid, and Oliver Whately, now dead, the Lindbergh's butler. And by every response he made, Col. Lindbergh showed his faith in

HITE’S GROCERY Plenty of parking space PHONES 31 and 201 Free Delivery Four times daily. SUGAR r ” 47c 25 pounds sl.lß 100 pound bag $4.69 Grape Fruit 1 A New Dates IDz. 3 for LUC pound LUC Fancy Jersey Sweet r 3 cans Corn OP Potatoes, lb DC a£DC Prunes 4)r New Figs lA Z , 3 tbs ZDC package l UC PEAS Dried p ’« 5 Soi? 25c Little Elf Early AQ English Wai- Ar June Peas 2 cansaw«7V nuts, tb I Raisins Hominy p' 3 pounds AuL can DC I Nan Camps Baked r Dessert Powder r Beans, can DC package DC FLOUR $1.15 Large cans QQz* Van Camps Vegetable Pineapple 4iOC Soup. ip Tomato Juice r 2 cans lDC can DC Peaches, large cans in Perfection Gin- -1 A heavy syrup orp ger Snaps, lb. ..LUC 2 cans DDC ORANGES 29c 5 tb. sack Buckwheat Van Camps Red 1 r or Pancake Or Beans, 2 cans.. . IDC Flour Large cans Apricots in Large Naval heavy syrup Oranges, dozen. .ZUC ........... .ZvC

by building an aquarium and stocking It with fish, crabs and other live sea food that she can serve fresh to her customers, or sell to them to . carry home. Thelma made a special | trip to San Francisco to study the aquarium there. She'll use It as a model for her new project. The lanky cowboy who stands In for Gary Cooper Is a flyer and he has just about i sold Gary on I'Dins alr ‘ plane. Talbot will teach SK 9 Gary to fly If he I wants to. or -OTI him t 0 s ,.p <-t the IML U proper plane I I'wir The .star visions | : it as outfitted, I Iflkk with a hunk' Ct?) house and carrying full 4UipGarv Cooper "lent for a hunting trip. The | big-horn sheep or the Alaskan bear will then be within easy reach of the star’s veritable arsenal of fine weapons. What film executive thinks no one knows about the secret entrance to his office —or who uses it? KNICK-KNACKS— On his opening night at the new Club Continental here. Bill Robinson. Harlem's famous colored dancer, drew a Hollyw-ood audience that would put to shame some of the big picture premieres. There were Marlene Dietrich, she has grown so thin, with the Egyptian prince. Rolo Feltxe; Paulette Goddard with Mrs. Rob Wagner and Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr.; a table full of big Warner names—Harry Warner, the Mervyn the Joe E. Browns; Lyle Talbot and Peggy Waters; Molly O'Day and .Tack Durant (very much the honeymooners); Bert Wheeler and Sally Haines; Jeanette Loss and Bert Friedlob; Colleen Moore and Al Scott and many others. And loud applause for Robinson’s tapping, the music of Frankie Masters and the smart new club. . . . Did you hear that Dixie Lee bars Bing Crosby from the set where she is working? He makes her self-conscious. . .The red-heads are now showering Jesse Lasky with letter* and offers to have their hair analyzed to prove It is the real thing. . . . Frank Morgan, a zealous yachtsman by inclination, is selling his boat because motion pictures keep him too busy to use it. ... And Amelia Earhart gave Cary Grant and Mvma Loy a real thrill by taking them up in her plane. DID YOU KNOW—- | That Tullio Carminati has starred on the stages of eight countries — the United States. Argentina. Brazil. Uruguay. England. Spain, Portugal and his native Italy? his servants and his utter belief than any connection between them and the crime was unthinkable. The face and posture of Bruno Hauptmann were studies in stolidity throughout the morning of sensations. When Lindbergh charged him

with iK-ing the Bronx extortioner, he watched the Lionel's fa< •' intently hut did not move a muscle. COMMITTEE TO | CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONI? I to city firemen and that liond-* Issued by municipalities and other taxing units be made subject to the intangibles' tax. 1 The committee was divided in opinion on replacement of the. I gross income tax with a sales tax. land the matter was complicated | further when Indiana retailers ofI sered the proposal of retaining the i gross income law in ad<litn>n to I

f'SCHMITT’SI Specials for SaMil Young Tender Boiling Beef 3 1b5.218 . . Fresh Ground Bamberger 3 lbs. 2.il All Pork Sausage ,Bulk) Lkfl Eckrich’s Bologna or ■ Frankfurts 2 lb. for Tender Chuck Steak locfl Boneless Swiss Steak (Pounded ’.. Boneless Waffle Steak (Spec,al) . 20c Longhorn Cream Cheese ,Kra,ts) 20c■ Small Fresh Picnic Hams .... 15cH Lean Pork Roast or Steak... IScH 10 bars Quick Naptha Soap 2ifl Large can Peaches or Plums in I ‘ heavy syrup. 18c, 2 cans for I— FARMERS - I We buy your Beef Hides and Rendered Tall« Special prices for Custom Butchering. I.idl over our line of quarters of Beef before you k’l from 6c to 9' 2 c lb. Also. Boneless Lean (1.jr.l Beef for Summer Sausage. I 11 - —— — -w Free, Prompt and Sanitary Deliver). I Phones 95 and 96. I ’ r J JjL I

Appelman’s Groce® — —K. f FREE DELIVERY I’HO.X L Grape Fruit i A Lal rance 3 for LUC Powder, 3 SunKist Oranges QQ Calumet Bakina i Large, dozen Dc/C 1 pound can Celery-Cabbage la a-iw [ large stalk . lUC Prunes Salt Lake ip. 2 lb. box. . -*■ Herring, tb. .. LUC Burco Wheat I’s ’ Navy Beans Q Cereal, pkg. b,s Graham CrackRolled Oats 1A ers « 2 Tb - Package LUC Miller’s 1 £M McKenzie's BuckA FT CakesluW 1 wheat, sack Z/ C Cocoanut Star lAM Post Toasties Q Cookies, 2 doz. large pkg. ... LOC Big jj en Chocolate I Little Elf Corn A r Cookies Ofl 2 cans ZDC '/: Pound • ■ lU W Tomato Soup np P- W. Crackers 3 cans ZDC 2 pounds ... I Chili Con np Ginger Snaps j i Came. 2 cans ZDC pound IvW I Mustard. -g rx Iced Cookies 1 AiS Pint lUC do zen > UV B Q uart 15c Apple Butter ‘HhB Macaroni, -| q gallon can .. Dv'O 2 so- box LUC try OUR CO! I ■ Cocoa, q « — ■ 2 lb. box Z L C Ground as you buy ih fl ® >.~29c TXZ'27I i f 5 m ....13c . 25c| I .211 cX — V refund your money. ■

the Rales tax gB Retailers < ..i,t. A were unable tu |i: lx< Home tax on I but that they . ~;||| . | tax as it ,w i,.' . Iby the l oii-'Ti T| I posed legislates ■ ~< i( W 'dainty for >.• I|| . gross in< oto. sumera. The com tn it' e proved a pro|i.e,i| t,, | dlers. solicitoi < ,| Market', "Hard jJ Strength tn a 6 <fl market aa a reaait ./.-fl buying l» calle'! ■.