Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 92, Decatur, Adams County, 17 April 1930 — Page 3
today K- * MW Senate , tl > l.iri is iintni- .. SILT ' Hin iii. on .suspension cf I ergers. ■ ,1 , ontrol committee e
YOUR EASTER (OAT? I r Here is A Most Opportune Event 11 at $24-50 an(lat S 14-95 All this season’s most successful mo<lels. se'ccted specially for this week’s I j> Easter offering. .< y New Collection of I FROCKS fl 1 at sl6-50 and at $9 .95 Wp. /Vi Everything that is new—Prints, Geor- ■ B I V\ gettes. Chiffons. Ensembles. Boleras, BB I U Gowns—Smart, expensive looking. OUR EFFORTS BRING YOU A BIG SAVING. I/I NEW EASTER HATS NEW EASTER HOSE i * ■American Home Shop ■’hoile 738 Corner Monroe & Third I Mrs. Louisa Braden
lor Easter fk I I A Timely Showing of Lovely \ '\ts I COATS ffi You’ll find beauty and a world of I \ ■ B, - style in the many new Coats we are \ ready to show you. New Spring fabrics \ and P°P u l ar shades. \ |m $16.50 $25 $35 O I BWI / J ■o / y - ■ « Dresses ■ ■/!? b’BI ; ' P I The beauty portrayed in these Frocks make your ' selection easy. .All the wanted fabrics in a wide array -JyXKjsflp » of colors and sizes. I EASTER ACCESSORIES m Hand Bags ja Gloves gs ne " z *PP er k Beautiful Kid f-' y T® style, all colors f Gloves, all sizes 1 j g qi 05 to 395 v % y 9L.V<> O.VO / Olher Baes. $6.9.'> ■ Hose jcwc,ry Bon. full rash. ydh! fio„d variety C new shades i > . o Hr Jewdry - at Ffg B .sl.o° WIA si.()o t<> 1.95 !l|p r Chiffon 1.50 L Niblick & Co.
|.slder< Blaine resolution for hivesi ligation of post office leases. House Resumes debate on Johnson vet I er ins' bill. Banking committee continues hearing on Brunch banking. Rivers un<! hm-hors opmmlttee considers generul appropriation bill. Vr erans sub-committee considers i Pennsylvania hosiptal application. ! Military affairs committee re- ' mimes consideration of Muscle
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. APRIL 17, 1930.
I Shoals. | o PRESBYTERY TO HOLD SESSION "IN THIS CITY (CONTINUEdT’HOM PAGE ONE) lli port of committee on arrange-' incuts. Adjournment. Morning Session —Tuesday 8:00 OFlock Opening prayer. I Devotions- Rev. H. J. .Jord.in. Mlsctdlaneoti.s Business. Reports of pei manent committees 1. Program and field activities Ki v. E. S. Hudson. 2. National Missions Dr Samuel Callen. 3. Christian Education Rev. T. Pliny Potts. Speakers of oratorical contest,' Loyalty and Law Enforcement.l Rev. J. W. Findley, Purdue student pastor. "Our Resources’’ —Rev. Earl Ziegler. I 4. P.oaid of pension i Rev. B. F. Richer. Report of bu-iness committee. I Elect ;.n ;:f stated clerk. Necrology roll of elders. Brief statement is di sired. Fifteen minutes' intermission to examine sessional records. Nomination of commissioners to the General Assembly, at 11:3:1 a. m. Noon recess. Tuesday Afternoon 1:30 O’clock I Prayer. New Way To Improve Skin A wonderful discovery is the new] French process which gives MEL-LO-GLO Face Powder its unparal- ■ eled smoothness and makes it stay on longer. The purest powder made--its color is tested. Never ] gives a pasty or flaky look! Will ' not smart the ekin or enlarge the : pores. Gives a youthful bloom. Remember the name — MEI.LOGLO. The Holthouse Drug Co.
I Report of committee on sessional records. Election of commissioners to (I noral Assembly, 2 o’clock. ' Reading of the minutes. | Adjournment. 0 _ ALLEN COUNTY DEATH PROBED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! i Tuesday, Dr Hoffman said. Doehrman notified county officii ils and relatives of the dead man ] immediately. Members of the family demanded an Investigation. I akey, adjudged of unsound mind, was admitted to the infirmary twsi weeks ago to await commitment to the Easthaven Asylum for the Insane at Richmond. An order removing Young as I superfntednent of the infirmary I was entered by tin- Allen countyboard of comm'ssioneis on March 5. Young employed attorneys and took an appeal to the Allen*)'ircuit court. Decision still is pending. Young has refused to r linquish possession of the superint indent's quarters at the institution and is remaining In office until the appeal is decided. Judge Jesse ('. Sutton. Decatur, special Judge In the case, has heard th? evidence and will announce his finding tomorrow. Among charges made by the commissioner?, it was alleged the infirmary had become infested w.th rats, mice, bed bugs and othr verm n under Young's administration Young, in testimony, denied that there were rats in any great number at the institution. ) _____ TO ATTEMPT TO GET SENTIMENT ■ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and any others who may desire them as refer, nee at no cost, he said. The policy of the organization will be "right down the middle of the road," said Kennedy. “A New York financial house has been awarded a contract to raise the $7,000,000 on a commission of I 4% per cent." Kennedy said. "More than $50,000 already has I been underwritten for preliminary , organization work, and under a dei tailed budget plan, on a strictly | non profit, non-political, non-sectar-lian, neutral basis, the re t will be I raised. Advisory committee members whose signed acceptances Kennedy asserted he had on tile included the following governors: I Hardman. Georgia; Bilbo. Mississippi; Hammill. Iowa; Sampson. Kentucky; Parnell, Kansas. Other advisory committee m tubers announced by Kennedy included: Mrs. Anna Wilds Strum- ' quist, New Mexico for Gov. Dillon; T. Hirst, Arizona, for Gov. Phil- ] lips. District offices. Kennedy said, will be established in Boston, New York. Philadelphia. Detroit. Buffalo, Pittsburgh. Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, Denver, Kansas C ty. Minneapolis, San Franci-co, Portland. El Paso. Butte, Dallas, Lob Angeles and Jacksonville. No member of congress will be invited to participate on the advisory board, Kennedy said. Invitations. however, will he sr nt to the W. ('. T. I’., Anti-Saloon League, American Medical Association, the American Bar Association, Nationil Manufacturer-’ Association, Xssociation against the Prohibition Amendment, American Federation o. Womens’ clubs, and k ndred civilian organizations. — oNEGRO CHURCH AUDITOR SHOT (CONTINUED FROM i AGE ONE) murder of E. D. Pierson, 54, negro. Chicago, whos • bullet-riddled bodywas pulled from the Musoatatuck river at Scottsburg yesterday. The wife of the slain man. in messages from Chicago, said h r husband was about to report to national office:s of the National Baptist convention that a $62,004 loan fund to the church at Nashville. Tenn., had been exposed to d screpancies. Mis. Pierson said d scovery of he financial condition was uncovered by P ir on when he-audited the books of lite church at Nashville. She told authorities she believed her husband was shot to prevent him from disclosing the irregularities. o Opening SUNSET Sunday. Mother’s Friend t brings comfort and ease. Used externally. Relieves strain and pain. Aids stretching. Puts you In firm condition for the approaching ordeal. Praised by countless thousands for over <lO years. Try it to- ' night. At all drug j stores. W rite for free book The Bradfield Co. Dept. M Atlanta, Ga. Mother's Friend LESSENS PAIN
GIANT MERGER MAY BE FORMED Newspaper Says Mail Order Firms Plan Largest Merger Chicago, April 17 tl'Pl— The '■'hicago Journal of Commerce said today that principal stockholders of Soars, Roebuck ami company and Montgomery, Ward rind company were seeking a sat isfetory basis lor merger of the two giant mail order i.nd re ail chair systems. Officials of both firms In Chicago denied knowledge of the project and expressed belief it might be another of the many rumors of consolidation linking the names of the companle The Journal of Commerce story declared, however, that it had learned ' from a sour 'e whose reliability Is above reproach” that some of tlie most important stockholders in Montgomery, Ward and company had approached leading Sears. Roebuck and company stockholders with the proposition and “had' found them in a receptive mood."
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NegiUlatious were declared to bo j .| rm ceding in the offices of J. I' MmgHn and compuny in New York | and that company was chructfirfzed I. s n principal factor In Montgomery Ward. Julius Roscnwuld, chaiman of th*' i Imai d of Sears, Roebuck, left so. ] Nf w York Tuesday mid the Journal of Commerce professed Io see a [ios ible connection of his visit with he projected merger. A! the office, of that company here lt.wns declm ■d his trip was for an entirely difcront purpose. The story pointed out that comment 1 nflnaticfal elrrles him been to ihe effect that now would b 1 favorable time for such a merger. At market prlves, two shares f Montgomery. Ward stock would I nlanee with one of Soars. The principal sources of opposition were u<'n us the farmers who have patonized the big houses generally or year and lhe federal government. which mlgh: hold such a consolidation as in restraint of trade. At Montgomery, Ward offices, of llcials professed not to have heard if the latest overtures reported and til cast doiib on authenticity of the . umors. o • curls Mnsseiniaii of Berne r. b .siiiess visi or in this city today.
‘‘Chaplain” War Rages Washington, April 17 -(UP) The controversy between the Rev. Peter Aliihllc of Baltimore mid th" Rev. Jason Noble Pierce of Washington, over the propriety of Chris-i ian Ministers serving as military | ■hnplains raued on today as Dr.
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f 1..,—-—,,, Your feet may bo so swollen and Inflamed that you think you can't go another step. Your shoes may feel as if they are cutting right into the flesh. You feel sick all over with the pain and torture and pray for quick relief. What’s to be done? Two or three applications of Moone's Emerald Oil and in fifteen minutes the pain and soreness dis appears. A few more applications at regular intervals and the swelling reduces. And as for Soft Corns and Pallouses a few applications each ’ flight HL f>f’i liiiir uutl taic/* jU3t ,
Pierce wrote still another letter tu .... Ihe Baltimore Minister. "When you state that there Is no more Jus Ificutio. for being a - lain In the army or navy than in I being a chaplain tn a speakensy, > i you me Ignoring the mmiddate and I laws enacted by congress," Pibrce y said.
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