Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1937 — Page 5
coft[RNOR ASKS K|TY IN LABOR H ■ , . 4 ■t u u nx-iul Speaks At ■’’.l,, Federation Os Meeting n a utr Ind • S’P l < J.L*,, .' M Clifford Townsend, 'ffil heforo the state federa ■ , ~invention here, to gr.B - .iml offered the services kTcm IOC’ ll1 ""' <llvlßloll 10 medl ’ V ' I-'*’**" the AnterI’utb'ii of labor and the ,dustrial organlzaKplhaps we could help you set . nuncil for arbl~I ! ;S ,||, tional disputes." ■'■Br? -.nd I frankly don't ■fMM.-h.it the answer is You BKnr» 1 ll " this I do want to impress 1 ieady t 0 '^K all - with you in bringing Top delegates heard .. li Mullen Ey : iitioll president. , the convention ■”M' . . ■ organization's during the past year. - Ti'wnsend pointed out I I;. : kept his promises to I during the last camhe stressed the fact ■E,* Xp had refused to call out | fte ,i ■. militia as a weapon strikers. w’ej'-|-sur i the call for militia in ■ijderson." he said, "only after I ,i . ..iiiest from labor and Labor feared. . one spark in ... might flame •MR fir. would consume all that labor had made governor added that if la- i 4 JHgd-rs showed the same spirit ■ | o f ■opora'ion and fair play with ■jesch [other that they have shown with employers, an could be reached which S bring unity to their moveI o ■tv ln * Good Towr — Decalu *
PUBLIC SALE ■mplete close-out sale of two good farms | 80-ACRE FARM 40-ACRE FARM Personal Property, Feed, Livestock, Farm Machinery, Etc. to ill health. 1. the undersigned, will sell at public auction to bidder, without reserve, tny 2 farms aud all personal proper- I tf®atcd '4 mile south and *4 mile east of Craigville. Ind., or 2 miles ./id 4> 2 miles east of Bluffton. Ind., or 7 miles west of Decatur, Road 224 then 4 miles south and mile west, known as the old , farm, on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1937 Sale Commencing at 10:00 o’clock prompt 80—Acre Farm—Bo Real Estate Will Sell at 1:00 P. M. is a beautiful farm home. One of the best producing farms in county. All under cultivation except 6 acres of woods pasture, al■3 al! level black land, good fence, very well ditched, and nigeiy. loClose to market, church and school. hard and soft water piped in house; large basement. 20x32, porch: electric lights This home is in extra good condition. Good 40x66 hip roof barn, in good condition. ■■AGON SHED—ISx24. with cement roof ■foot SHED AND GARAGE—I3x36 with tin roof. ■oULTRY HOUSE—I4x4O, good condition. ■og HOUSE AND CORN CRIB—36x3O. ■ROODER HOUSE— 9xB. ■'ASH HOUSE AND UP-CELLAR—24xI4. ■'ORK SHOP AND WOODHOUSE — 14x26; electric lights to all ddings and barn: niee orchard and fruit trees; nice lawn and lot ofihade trees; 2 good cisterns; 4-inch drilled well. is a wonderful 80-acre farm, and if you aye in the market for sSrtn don't miss seeing it. We invite you to come, look it over any- , tflß before the sale. 40—Acre Farm—4o ■OCATION— 'i mile east of the 80-acre farm in Adams county, acres of good black land, good producing soil, and all under . Well ditched. HERMS ON REAL ESTATE—One-fourth cash on day of sale. Terms | o^yalance. For further information, see EUenberger Bros., or Mr. , at Farmers & Merchants Bank, gliuffton. Ind Personal Property 10:00 A. M. PROMPT ■3 HEAD OF CATTLE—One Holstein cow. 4 years old. due to fresh--14: I part Jersey cow, 3 years old. due to freshen Dec. 1; 1 Holcow. 7 years old. due to freshen Dee. 20; 1 red heifer. 2 years old. freshen Feb. 13; 1 Holstein cow. 4 years old. due to freshen Feb Holstein heifer, 2 years old. due to freshen March 10; 1 Holstein bred; 3 heifers, 1 year old, pasture bred; 2 spring calves; and 1 bull. Rl HEAD OF HORSES—One grey horse. 10 years old. weight about ■ lbs.. good worker; 1 roan mare, 9 years old. weight about 1500 lbs., worker; 1 dark bay mare. 12 years old, with mare colt by side, 2 old —this mare is in foal again. H 9 HEAD OF HOGS—Eighteen head of shoats, weighing from 125 to '■lbs , 3 sows with 8 pigs by side each; 1 sow with 6 pigs by side; 1 with 4 pigs by. side; 1 pure bred Duroc male hog 18 months old '■Hay AND GRAIN—Ten tons good clover hay; 15 tons good timothy ■ ; 6 tuns alfalfa hay; 2 tons bean hay; 5 tons oats straw; 60 bit. early ■>: 150 hu. late oats; 20 bu. good wheat; 11 acres soy beans In field; ■eres corn in field HEAD POULTRY—One hundred and forty head Big English pul- t 9 60 head Big English hens. All very good hens. ■FARM MACHINERY—One farm wagon, with hay rack and grain bed ■ bined; 1 McCormick mower; 1 double disk; 1 wooden frame, 2-sec harrow; 1 springtooth harrow; 1 John Deere corn ■iter; one 14-inch Case riding plow; 1 New Idea manure spreader; 1 1 Horne binder; 1 Dain hay loader; 1 low wheel wagon with dump) Hrds one 9-disk Columbia grain drill; 1 hay rake; 1 International Hn cultivator; one 1-horse corn cutter; 1 double shovel plow; 1 single I Hvd plow; 1 buggy; 1 land roller; two 14-inch walking plows; 1 cider iron kettle; copper kettle; oil drum; S-inch feed grinder; corn ; ■Her; wheelbarrow; 1,000-lb. platform scales; grindstone; bench vise; grain sucks; sledge; pump jack; six milk cans; 1 DeLaval cream H*rator. No. 12; 1 new grapple hay fork; hay rope; double harpoon; ■•*>' slings; 30-inch buzz saw; 1 good 2-wheel trailer with stock rack; sets harness. ■ BROODER HOUSE -10x12, on skids, good condition; 6x9 sun porch ■ Household GOODS—One large cupboard; book case; large dav■wt't: 2 dressers; 1 rocker; 2 library tables; 4 beds; 1 mattress: good ■ It. 4 in. by 12 ft. Axminster rug; small rugs; 1 Queen Incubator; 100- ■ gvod; 1 Cyphers incubator. 150-egg; 1 O. V B. 350-egg incubator; ■implex oil brooder stove used 2 seasons; 4 large chicken feeders, aijput 50 gal. cider vinegar; many other articles not mentioned. ■ TERM3—CASH—Anyone wanting credit should make arrangements ■ •be Farmers & Merchants Bank before day of sale. Sold by Ellcn■ger Bros,, Auctioneers, Bluffton, Indiana, and Herman Strahni. I JOEL A. SCHWARTZ, Owner takers £ Merchants Bank—Clerk. Lunch Served uu Grounds by Craigville U. B. Ladies Aid.
Guard Governor ijk LL d Gov. Robert Quinn Following receipt of a threatening letter, believed sent by someone connected with the Narragansett race track with which he has been involved in a controversy. Gov. Robert Quinn of Rhode Island was given . racial bodyguard, DECATUR SCHOOL (CONTINUED FROM PAUB ONE) the federal budget and the improv- : ed financial status of so many communities throughout the Unit-1 ed States the "resident believes this to be sound public policy ' As Mr. Roosevelt approved final ' allotments on 1.253 municipal projects. the PWA announced its final i allotment which have presidential approval. They call for grants of ' 1409.764 and loans of 189,000 on i construction work totaling $1,315,- ■ ' 099 on 10 projects in six states. o To Study Japan Berkeley. Cal. — (U.R) — In an es fort to create a better understand-1 Ing with the Far East, the Univer-. sity of California has established a 1 new course in the history and government of Japan.
DECATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,19.17.
STATE SAFETY MEET PLANNED Safety Councils Os State Meet At Lafayette Tomorrow - Lafayette, Ind., Sept. 21. — Offi | dais of the state department of publ|c safety, who have endorsed the aims and general setup of the i recently organised Indianna asso-| elation of safety councils, will attend the first statewide meeting of the association at Lafayette next Wednesday, officials announced today. They will include Don F. Stiver, I director of the department of public safety and head of the state police; Earl Crawford, chairman of the state highway commission and Rex Risher, director of the state department of accident prevention. Earl Dunbar, field representative | of the public safety department. : also will be present. The session will begin at noon Wednesday in the Memorial Union I building at Purdue University, Representatives from safety councils throughout the state will take part in the election of permanent officers and the selection of committee chairmen, as well as a further 1 development of the associtaion's statewide program. All safety councils will be eligible to memi bership. There are 67 in the state i now. "No one activity will reduce acl cidents,” C. C. Simpson, Michigan City, temporary president, declar;ed today. “It takes a comprehens- . ive and co-ordinated program sysI tematically applied and sustained over a long period of time. And such a program is badly needed in i Indiana now, as witness the growi ing list of traffic deaths and the mounting number of automobile accidents on our streets and highways. "During the first seven months of this year 731 persons were kill■ed on Indiana’s highways, an in- , crease of 14.9 per cent over 1936." - o (JEN. DENHARDT (CONTINUED JFHOX4, FAO* ON») , j thy and distinguished Denhardt last summer, and they were en- I gaged despite the objections of her family, particularly one of two ' grown daughters. The evening of Nov. 7, 1936, while Mrs. Taylor and her fiance I were motoring along a country i road, she was shot fatally Denhardt said she had been despondI ent because of the opposition to ' their marriage and had shot heri self. The state said he shot her. | He was tried early this year at 1 New Castle and the jury disagreed. , In the same courtroom, in an intensified atmosphere unsoftened by time he would have gone on trial a second time at 9 a. m. today. Denhardt's home is in Bowling I Green. The seat of the Garr fam- ; ily at LaGrange, in Oldham county, | 12 miles from New Castle, seat : ■ of Henry county, where Denhardt . was to have l>een tried. Claiming , that New Castle might not be a ; safe, place for him. Denhardt had planned to stay In this town—l 6 miles away—during his trial. He came here yesterday to confer’ i with his three attorneys — Rodes Myers. Clark Otte, and John M. Berry. They talked in Denhardt’s room I in the Armstrong hotel until 10 | o'clock last night. Otte and Ber-1 ry left together, and Myers said: ; "General, let s go down for a I ’ bottle of beer.” ■ They had their beer and were ! ■ returning to the hotel along main • street. They were almost at the ! hotel’s door when Myers exclaimed : “Look out. general! There’s the Garr brothers." Myers had seen three men whom, he told Sheriff Forest rupture EXPERT COMING TO FORT WAYNE AGAIN R. K. SHALLENBERGER i will personally demonstrate his i method without charge at the ; Anthony Hotel, Fort Wayne. Friday, Sept 24th from 10 a m to 8:30 p. tn. and Saturday, Sept. 25th from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. Mr. Sbalienberger says the Shallenberger method contracts the opening in remarkable short time on the average case regardless of the size or location of the rupture, and no matter how much you lift or strain, and put you hack to work the same day, as efficient as I before you were ruptured. The Shallenbcrger Rupture Shield has no leg strap; waterproof, sanitary. practically Indestructible and can be worn while bathing. Each Shield Is skillfully molded and fitted to the parts under heat which gives a perfect fit and satisfaction. Remember this: any rupture is dangerous; that all large ruptures were once small; that neglect may I result in invalidism and loss of I earning power Large and difficult ruptures foli lowing operations specially solicited. j Do not overlook this opportunity it you want gratifying results. Indianapolis fitting by appoint--1 meut only. 173,t N. Meridian St. 1
Nazi Congress Hits Bolshevism y/l Wife. . • ■ 11 wi I ’ 11 ■ [ I I I I JHi I WW i I Jb b i I ntP I , ’A : I I Congress at Nuremberg Speaking beneath a huge effigy of a fearsome-looking Bolshevist soldier, pictured striding across the world, reaping death and destruction. Chancellor Adolf Hitler blasted Communists as ”an international Bolshevik gang of criminals" when he addressed the annual Nazi congress at Nuremberg, above.
Barnes, Jr., he identified positive-; ly as the Garr brothers, climb out l of an automobile, and advance toward them. One glance at their j i set faces and Myers had no doubt 1 of their intentions. Neither, apI parently, did Denhardt. Not a word was spoken and the I rattle of the general’s boots on : the street was sharp and clear ! The general was running, head- > long, desperately, for the hotel. I i He reached the door and fumbled l at the catch. Either he was so' I frightened that his hands were I I clumsy, or the door catch jammed. W’hile he struggled two of the i ' three men produced pistols and fired. Denhardt fell, dead. The three men turned on Myers. . One pistol was leveled at him. , One of the men said: “You are the — l — who defended the w ho shot my sisI ter." This man, Myers told the sheriff. was Dr. Garr. “Don’t shoot me. Doc." Myers cried. “I didn't do anything but defend him.” The three men walked off. ! through the gathering crowd Then they turned and walked back |to the hotel. Patrolman Tracy had 1 arrived by that time. He said that - Dr. Garr handed him a .45 caliber ' ' pistol and that Roy Garr handed i him a .38 caliber one. Five shots . had been fired from the .38, two ! from the .45. The remaining carti ridges in the 45 were steel-jacket | ed. Tracy said that Jack Garr was i ; not armed. Tracy said that Roy Garr said: “I did the shooting." | Tracy asked about the second pistol —Dr. Garr's pistol Before i I Dr. Garr could say anything. Roy J said he had fired all the shots. that his brothers had not fired | any. At Roy’s command, the I brothers had nothing further to ■ say
Defends Regulation of Marker Oa J ¥i iJIIUXA ™ £ .M - y Jr- ' .'Z ' \ ' '-<*> ;z "‘yj® fey Oil ' PSf . v ....','..xJ.V at l>rpss contcrenrr Answering "complaints” that federal regulation of trading had slowed down stock market activity. James M. Landis, retiring chair- ! man of the securities and exchange commission, denied that exteni sive stock market speculations make for cither stability or liquidity. Directing his remarks a rebuttal against charges of Charles Gay. New-York Stock Exchange head. Landis told his final press conference that the real cushion for the market was provided by the | mass of investors throughout the country and not by short-term speculators Successor to Landis, who becomes dean of Hanaro j law school, has not been named.
— TAX LEVIES IN , c-nc’-T-ivr-ri v-pn-vr "lap; nKFi l signing the certified copy of rates adjourned their annual session. ; to the state for each of the units. Jim A. Hendricks, of Monroe, chairman; Mayor A. R. Holthouse, | ' Trustee Howard Mauller, of Union j - township; L. L. Yager, of Berne; | 10. L. Vance, Cal Peterson, and Carl I Pumphrey of Dectaur were the j I members of the board. Purdue Plans To Broadcast Show i Lafayette. Ind.. Sept 21—Plans i have -been comp'eted for the broad asting of the Pontiac "Varsity Show’’ from the campus of Purdue i University the evening of October . 3, which id the day preceding the i Purdue-Carnegie Tech football game here. The program will be .given twice that evening, from 7 to 7:30 i-r the eastern part of the United States, and from 9:30 to 10;tm for far western states, and will be carried on approximately seventy five stations of the National Broadcasting Company. The Purdue military band of 130 I pieces, direct ’d by Professor Paul S. Emrick, the Pursue choir of 24 voices, directed by Albert P. Stewart, and .-.ther campus musical organizations will take ipart in this program. In addition, several dramatic skits emphasizing distinctive facts about Purdue will be presented by Purdue Playshop and othier campus dramatic organizations. o Wants Drama Subsidy j San Francisco. —(U.R) —Subsidization is the only hope of the Atner- ‘ lean theater, according to Dr. Glen Hughes, professor of drama at the University of Washington. Otherwise, he insists, the movies will 1 kill it.
LEGION HOLDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ty wore Overton H Menuett of Los Angeles, commander In chief of I , the G. A. R , and Alfred J Ken-1 nedy, commander In chief of the] Spanish War veterans Mayor F. H. La Guardia and | Gov. Herbert H. Lehman, both , legionnaires, led the U. S. army, navy and marine contingents. The marines, with their turquoise blue trousers and navy blue coats, supplied a dash of color lacking in the earlier units. The retiring national champion drum and bugle corps of the' American legion, named in Cleve : lajid last year, from the Common-1 wealth Edison Post of Chicago, [ led division two of the parade. Their cream colored Sam Brown ' outfits shone vividly in the sunlight. Following the Commonwealth Edison Corps came the legion colors escorted by the Wollaston. ■ Mass., national championship rifle ! squad. The colors were presented I at the reviewing stand. » The corner of 3.th and sth Ave. ’ was boarded up tight by the time : the parade started. Only a few of j the stores in the district left their plate glass windows unprotected By mid-morning the crowd was three deep up and down the avenue and increasing Many watchers brought chairs and food and drink. Police said that early estimates indicated the largest parade crowd in the city’s history Ambulances were stationed at several side streets with uniformed internes ready to take care of the injured. In one ten-block area —from 56th street to 66th street—there were 1,300 police on duty. Issue Warnings The high spot of the convention I —the parade—came after a night ■ of gayety—marked by a wild de- ’ monstration in Times Square that i had 1,000 policemen "snowed under” —and of solemnity—marked by the warnings of prominent i speakers that only by steering a | diplomatic course between isola- | tion and complete entanglement : could the United States hope to I avoid a repetition of the tragedy of 1917. One who sounded such a wkrn- 1
WWWißjjjp, i ■ La Wk ■ * - a I WtiKL r Wj W* £ ' AW W| 1 rMSI® I MDAMI BlllH^ O T Sv S 1938 MO CROWHWi I BEST MILEAGE, BEST PENORMRHCE in 3 I BES STANDARD OIL ... ; i * LmbmMHHL .'-jtMHHiW Burke’s Standard Service gas— OlL— LUBRlCATlON—TlltES— batteries M INCHESTER and MERCER PHONE I I
ing was Secretary of State Cordell Hull, who spoke last night at u dinner In honor of retiring National Commander Colmery. A surprise guest was former President ’ Herbert Hoover, who declared I that "a nation to be safe must ! not only be friendly and just, but I it must be respected " Hull said the hopes of 20 years | ago hud “turned almost to ashes,", but that the situation must not be ' viewed with despair. It was, he | said, a challenge to constructive j statesmanship. The middle course between ut-i ter isolation and complete entanglement he termed “enlightened ; nationalism.” and said that it was ■ the only course this nation could I follow safely. Flew the Coop Hattiesburg, Miss.— (U.R)—Jailer Edmund O. Marlowe of the Forrest
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PAGE FIVE
county jail has learned that "jail birds” can fly. His two pet canaries deserted through an open window. o,, - Gat Caxton Book Toledo.— (U.R) —Toledo’s famous Museum of Art has acquired a book produced by the first English printer, William Caxton, entitled "Mir-, i ror of the World."
Free Sample of GID ULES—the vegetable mucin. whose protective demulcence and detoxification brought relief and correction to thou- ■ lands —at your Druggist: ■■ Holthouse Drug Co. ZITN rnwrx k v t 1 rnwllU
