Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 13 March 1939 — Page 5
■[EXAMINE ■®l FOPILS Ij Xi Sororitj A** K n Holdinw >p*‘‘ rh W Clinic HH . Intf Mur >' - vun reunty 18. .. •n.tu.red ... > I gV’ • ' I '*‘ *'"• Xi ... . r , ’d‘•’’’• ■ " ||B 61| ,1.1 frem the <l'» 'M SB - "■'■■■ ’'■■ , :>r R '■•• •<-• * ■ ,: ’ ' hc HBt - 1”-' 1 * " 1 !or P1 gßr -. ■ ”•■ •'■"■ JK Tir . dM :♦. nw ■Bt> ' ' ||Bg 1 18, S ud 1«■ 1 P Hl Two IB ■ K for examination K = r*'.“’d«y Apr!' It > ,pe> h el hearing IB’ ■■ ■ ■ '■ '■ r "' BB• • «••■•■■■' i IB- ‘ IB *" IB - B |B'' I'riv.ruty IB- • ■ B ' IB ■ 1 K • ' 'ndu< '•“! k B ‘ BB' V ' ' and Mv »,> IB* v« \i B - -’ K Centes fol IB 1 ”" H SB"* : J - ' ' > . |B.es ■•• Mianapolti ■ » K!l . g mi * .. : ;■ « Ml»» R» , I B* Ua ' M*r B * u ' : " ’’rati.r of • • W .....Is IS o ■INDIANA FLOOD B 8 * 17 "' CK ’M PAGE ONE! B *S»"J East B Tw ” "'■■ ■ •Irei and snow In 4 B*' *" B* rW '" d ,h ' Appals, h ■ !h, ... , J( B* 1 S w, «'l>ri bureau a' ' ordered advisory I B w ™ ln «’ !>'■>'. d nlona the B*u f "**' ln,n ' ' ork •<>! raiHlttfras ..fl th. <XMM of I B
[Public Sale Eh',*?J***’**® auction ob the John Eversole farm. located or Bluffton on the river road. State Road No lid. on I WEDNESDAY, March 15, 1939 ■ Sala Starting 10:30 o'clock A. M. ■k th... . HORSES—6 HEAD Wk frtri 11 u> * ,rr *l mare. coining 5 year old, Hound weight 1700 1 *° rrel gelding, coming 6 year old. sound. weight 1700! , 1 mar.-. 5 years e | d . „ mn<l we ig hl jgjo n> H in foal: one K»', -. ’ °’, d •” un<l *’*•«»’' I*<* »« .tn foal; ere aorret geld-' ■_< ’• w °'b- These hones are all good workers. CATTLE—I# HEAD Ki •». r "’*• 8 yws old giving 8 gal milk per day. bred j ■hk i 6 ®ld. giving 5 gal milk per day. ■hem o' °° w . < years old. a 5 gal cow. bred Nov. 17; j ■lh«ndr?.r» 2 o’*- Etving SU gal. milk per day; one ’ ”**■ 7 pears old. giving 5V> gal milk per day. ■*» <)n * Jerlle y cow. 3 yeara'old. a 4 gal cow. bred Nov l*kt .w . *toay now. 3 yeara old, due to freshen by day of sale: ■ 11, ' *"•<• "Id. calf by aide, bred Feb. 10; one Guernsey ■biftr hrJi .i. 1 * t,y •Hf l S , *tug S gal milk pvi day; one Guern■Efcn, k ■ Guernsey heifer, bred Feb 1«» J Guernsey ■ n heifers. 5 .Donfhe old; 3 Guernsey heifers. 3 months old. k . SHEEP-42 HEAD BSi.. “ d of C * M < * years old. due to lamb April 1 to 10; ■ * * yean old. x » HOGS—SI HEAD ■btannw a . weighing SO to 100 lbs ; 3 Hampshire sows. t r>l 10 *° I®! on a spotted tow, duo to farrow April 15; t)Oari , year(| (jM t«tetr . HAV AND GRAIN Ki by 4ndrrd hushela good yellow corn; 6 loua second cii'tlng Its. Ain.o-k . Factor OUTFIT COMPLETE |Hih Ir?., , r ’ tikCfor with cultivator attachment*. i>ower I Also an. , or .l ,low * with 3 seta of shares. This outfit I* 2 years I * trailer with stock rack; one galvanised hog feeder. wi.hr. TERMS—CASH hal Barn. ® r ®dlt. please make arrangements al Old First I iAw.l rrf °!L '’’d • before day of sale JOHN EVERSOLE and L Homer SCHLAGENHAUF. O«n»rr I * r • ro '-'Auetie:;rets Vaugh# Lunch aerved by Six Mile Ladles Aid l ‘ , K . *
' I The Navy Takes to Oars .*■<* .. jr • '■ ' r ~ <T. - .yx • • ‘m- r»: f - ■ Oia• ps*m ««.■» .» < ' .'■*■•- *. £tcw“'y* •*. ... * ’ ' it- ■t ’ ... - A ... Jr* - r k «w A 4 iSM??S4 y . :*r-/ w ■• ■ •••„... f ’* r ” F K of ihe Un ' u,<, sta »“ N » r » i Audany angatad :n thtir flr»t workcut on Um Sama Biva ■< Annap. alia. Md. - —
- ■ ■ | bureau Mid would extend from ' weatarn Pennsylvania to the coast 1 and northeastward Into New England states. Clear skies and rising tempera-; turea followed the storm In most mldwestern states which had experfenced "quickie" floods and sleet-disrupted transportation and communication during the weekend. Originating In a Texas "panhandle" dust storm early Satur--1 day. the disturbance moved north eastward across Oklahoma. Mis souri. Kansas. lowa. Illinois. Indiana. Ohio and Michigan Thuuderaquala .snow, rain aud destructive winds attended Its movement over eastern Kansas and Missouri The northern edge of the storm area touched the Missouri lowa line where the icechoked Boyer river was inundating lowlands and forcing more than SO familb a to higher ground Highways were made Impassably by overflow of other Mlsaouii valley tributaries The Norm struck Illinois and ! Ohio lightly but poured out the brunt of Its attack on tudians and Michigan The sleet struck principally at Michigan, halting airplane traffic, disrupting telephone and telegraph service as poles and wires fell under weight of the ice. and damaging fruit orchards Coldwater. Mich., was virtually * isolated when telephone and telegraph service was paralysed j Shortwave radio was used to aum- ' mon repair crews from Muskegon Four died In the metropolitan New York area aa the storm mov. ed into the east with a mixture of sleet, rain aud snow Central New York state report'ed five Inches of snow Sunday night aud "still falling." Albany 1 reported 10 Inches of snow and , New Lebanon sch<M>ls closed until Tuesday Imcause of drifts. In New England, a heavy mow fell and temperatures were around i freezing Boston reported more i than six inches of snow and u 30i mile easterly wind which may |_reach jyle force.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1939.
RIVAL UNIONS RENEW CONFAB AFL And CIO Leaders Renew Conference To Seek Labor Peace ■■ l,l New York. March 13 — <l'P» — Seven representatives of the American federation of labor and tho i engross of industrial organisation* sat down today around a green, velvet covered table in a new eftort to end their organiMttoM* ihree-year struggle tor supremacy. The AfL and CIO committee began a fourth conference since last Tuesday shortly after 10 A. M. atuld Imreasing pressure from rank and , file union members and high administration officials to forui a peace agreement As they convened, they bad before them an AFL proposal, basically similar to a plan which failed to bring a reconciliation iu Decern-1 bur. 1931 The new aud widespread interest' , of the rank and file unionists In both camps made the outlook for petce now more favorable man It' was IS montbs ago. President Roosevelt's personal Intervention and ilia mobilization of public cptulon , < behind the new drive for nutty also, strengthened the prospects of aa agreement. But the conferees themselves said privately that uo invmodla.e peace . pack was yet in sight The two committees met in tho first floor conference room al the Biltmore hotel. The AFL committee members arrived first, led by chairman Harry |C- Rates and followed by vice-pre-sidents Thomas A. Rickert. Matthew Woll and Deniel J. Tallin. Hutes arrived at k:M A. M. The CIO committee did not ar-
Reprieved to a Better Fate Z / S HA & Am j 'Xj ik w inNrWv •’ dßMzsl IS ■l.s ** X W Nine army mules, 83 rears old. awaiting destruction at Fort Dix, N J I because of aamseesse. were ejeiti F*prie'-ed pending outcome of affort* by two organ ::ation» tn hare tbe<n pensioned to pasture on private leads. I Amy oficiala. who dispose of the ancient animals regularly, were pusiled 1 by tbs fuss raised over this batch oX bard-tsds-
DISMISS SUU AGAINST WAGES Seven Steel Companies' Suit Dittmiased By Court Washington March IS— (U.Pd -I 0. H District Judge Jennings Ils Dry today dlamlssed a suit by 1 seven small companies saaklng toj sat aside minimum wages pre- '• scribed for steel concerns that 1 bld on government cont recta Ball<-y said the steel companies had felled to show that Secretary of Labor Trances Perkins acted "arbitrarily and capriciously" In establishing the minims The wage minima ranged from 45 cents In the south to «3's cents per hour in the eastern area In which the seven companies are located They became effective generally on March 1. but as regards three of the seven plaintiffs in the current suit they were deferred by a temporary Injunction granted by Halley Halley's dismissal of the suit for a permanent injunction also dissolved the temporary order The Walsh-Healey act provides that companies which contract to •apply government orders over ♦IO,OOO must pny wages equal to the "prevailing wage" tn their industry In the steel Industry, a labor department board found that the 43-MH, cent scale was the prevailing wage" and instructed the steel companies to establish the rates The seven companies which , sought the injunction contended the new minima would do them I "Irreparable damage" and create a virtual steel monopoly In the | east for benefit of three or four major companies. They contendI ed that Mtfc cents was not tn tact the prevailing wage in their Immediate districts. Plaintiff tompanies were Luk- | ens Steel of Coatesville, Pa.; Alan Wood Steel of Conshohocken. Pa.; South Chester Tube Corp. Citester. Pa.; Central Iron and Steel. Harrisburg. Pa; Hsrtiaburg Steel, Harrisburg. Pa.; Eastern Rolling Mill, Colgate. Md.. and Atlantic Wire, Brad lord. Cong ■— ■ o INCREASED UNREST tCONTINTTED FlloM PAUH ONS> j practically offered Hitler the op-1 portuulty to turn his expansion' into eastern ard central Eun>|o> I without any opposition. The! ; Natte, with soaring prestige after ' .Munich, began a groat economic drive immediately. It seemed, there could be no question that | they would soon be the unrivalled I over-loards of a huge area in which the smaller states would be drawn into the German orbit. But a few months after Munich ! it became clear that there would be services difficulties. Poland . and Hungary listened respectfully , to Berlin, but they were tiot ready to throw themselves Into the i hands of the relch Poland stuck firmly to her neutrality status* and gave the Natia blow for blow In claiheft over the expulsion of Jews Hungary joined the anticommunist pact but on th, sann day suppressed the Nsxt party. Rumania's King Carol visited! Germany, listened to the Nazis 1 1 live until shortly after IC A. M. CIO president John L. Lewis and vice presidents Sidney Hillman and Philip Murray arrived together. Neither group would comment bo-1 (ore the meeting opened.
J— — Gypsy Motif Brings Gay Stripes, Plenty of Color t 1 — u ® ,d * hl ’* b1,, • iJw ' V Z' * - relwL ' ' ' 11 A Xv ffXft < J - X* o'' F I Ik' Hl ■Hill tolt fli 4 . vWkvlJ?AvC\hll l.n vl3 < MBII NLHd.' inrh ’■ A IwmIK Ifcit VkXMlvvuwwimXV ml
■■ —— -■■ —— JKS.--. Borrowing from the colorful raiment of the roving gypsy, designers preeent evening dresses of lush, new beauty. The shirtwaist drew has gons Bohemian, with the casual dinner frrxk c»y ahh Romany
and went home to wipe out by drastic methods the iron guard organisation which operated along Nazi lines. Even the dismembered Csechonlovak republic provided difficulties and as the prestige of Great Britain and France began to mount again on the wtnga of their re-armament programs the smaller nations have sought more .nd more—possibly tn vain but at leaat with hopes of a break in | their lock—to pursue Independent I courses. Say 22 Wounded Berlin. March 13— <U.R) — Semi- * official Nazi dispatch** from | Vienna tonight reported that fsech soldiers were “terrorising"' ' German inhabitants o( the Jown
- - — - — — ; - — —— . : ... Imaginary Interview WITH WEALTHY J. Wellington Whoosh “To what do you attribute your success?” we asked the great industrialist, J. Wellington Whoosh, as he paused in the process of endowing another college and a couple of art museums. He smiled reminiscently. “I worked h<.rd, banked my money, and ALWAYS read the advertisements!” Far-fetched? Os course. But it’s a good-humored way of calling your attention to a serious fact: Intelligent Reading of the Advertising Pages Will Save You Time and Money. Here the best stores offer you their best values. Here they announce special sales and clearances. Shop Here First Then you’ll know exactly what you want, what it costs, and where it can be found. You can go and get it without wandering wearily through miles of aisles—and with the comforting assurance that every dollar is doing extra duty. • i
of Iglau In Csechoalovakia and that 32 Germans had been wounded I The reports, disseminated by the semi-official DNH agency, said that communications between Iglau and the German frontier had been cut. The dispatch said that 14 Germans had l>een seriously injured and eight others hurt. Communists who fled from the Sudetenlsnd before it was annexed to Germany were involved In the action at Iglau. the dispatch said, adding that clashes were continuing The dispatch charged that the commuutatii had been hiding in Prague recently. One of the bitterest Nasi char- - - -
■ =—=-= —• stripe* More formal but (rand for dancing la the red.-white and blue-itriped combination with flowing akirt. The cheerful flowered >cart with red background t« both aav and practical.
I ges against Csechoslovakla during | the Sudeten crisis was that the Prague government was harboring communtots. I-- - o — District Stallion Show On Tuesday The Fort Wayne distrkt spring; .•tall ion show will be held at tbe Speedway in Fort Wayne, Tuesday. Eleven counttea in thia area are eligible to show at this place and Adams county will be represented with stallions shown i>y B. H. Ml.I ier. Mrs. Ell Heer. Adolph Suite- ! mtier and Ed Neilhauser. Ed Neu-| hauser is also the treasurer of the stallion organization and assisted • n» the broadcast today over Station
PAGE FIVE
| Wo Wo in the lutureala of this rbow. 1 o HEAVY RAINFALL (COXTIXUKU FHOM PAOC ON Ki ‘ id high water*. While federal road !-| between Markle and atate road 1. was report• I ed cloned In M’ells county, no other* ' were reported < loeed in Adami county, although several were un der water. I -o - — FOR SALE — New Form of Affidavit of .MortKage Indebtedneot. 2 for *»c or *1.25 for 100. The Decatur Democrat let. ts " " »
