Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 98, Decatur, Adams County, 24 April 1930 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
1 \ JS-n \\ econo ,rt,C^^ c \\ \ 0-501 August Walter 254 N. SECOND ST. DECATUR. IND.
E ,,-1”Z 1 ” *_ /WL>M§?i|yJp»riri££\ I <’>L HilOf i . .8 I CASING No. 92624451 (6.50-20 6-ply Silvertown) StS I Taken from stock January, 1929. Placed on Silver Fleet S I •• • L )r * vcn 29 > 76 4 miles without leaving rim. TransI fermd to the 1930 Silver Fleet. This actual photograph ijjfc. : :v.. : ■ show s exact condition of tire when retired from service. :< ’ T Total mileage, 47,892. Blow-outs. none. Carcass breaks, •>■& B none. Reason for removal, two nails embedded in tread. 0l I a ’T’HERE it is. in the picture g lup above. Through! Worn SB HH jff /Sw'Sk’Sl/2I out! Ready for the scrap heap! J £&. Bap* ggg gg That Silvertown we showed you g jkß g g g.f in one of our advertisements a wBESaMffiBW .s&■ while ago. T* JSg It traveled .30,000 miles with H ▼ last year’s Silver Fleet. Made the entire tour through 46 states Complete service for without ever coming off the rim. reived no care ... no attention th e Motorist Transferred to the 19.30 Goodrich .. . you can’t give your tires. Silver Fleet.. .and punished for That’s why we’re sure of our- GREASING done by men 17,892 more miles. selvcs when we say you can get w ho undVrslaiut the |OI>. Now it’s through .. . with a mileage like this from Silver- . j OILS * service record of 47,892 miles towns. They’ve proved they have ” c|. i ird brands. <mMM6W*yyg>. Proud? Naturally we’re proud the stuff Proved they can beat ant < of it!. Because we sell tires like all comers in open competition. (’AR WASHING let US \\v that. Tires capable of giving Come in and see our Silver- wash VOUF car, make it unheard-of mileage. towns. Blood brothers to this spic and span. \\\ There’s nothing special about veteran of the roads. They never „. .-nips complete SKligr - »>. IMHU. \\\ v this Silvertown. Nothing out of were expensive ... and now, mile of new batteries. 111 I »he usual run. ft came straight for mile, they’re the cheapest s.otK ‘ ■ 111 *t from stock for its grueling trip tire you can buy. Yes, we have SERVICE BATTERIES Xfe. 7 ; > IR*|M. ' 111 • with the Silver Fleet. And it re- your size waiting for you. RO AD SERVICE ll u __ asaaßßßaßKas&aflßUu ||L Goodrich SibatMvns ifflM Staley’s Service Station Cor. Second & Marshall—Prompt and Courteous Service—Phone 897
DhCATUK DAILY DEMOCHA'I THI’BSDAY, APBIL 24, 1930.
SOVIET PRESS LIFTS LIO OFF i COLLECTIVES New Sheaf of ‘Atrocities’ Unearthed Daily by Correspondents Uy Eugene Lyhins , (United l*i ess Staff Corn spondent i Moscow, April 24—(UP) — The "lid is off" the collectivisation business. Not only can I: now be told but it is being told by the Sovie’ press itself as fulsoinelv as any Rica correspondent could wish. After twelve and a half years devoted to conducting campaigns of one kind or another, the press here has almost forgotten how to speak in a low voice. It shouts from hnoit. and just now it is shouting at, the top of its voice about the "crippling of the Party line” in the recent argarian drive. Every day the press produces a new sheaf of "atrocities" in eonnoction with the rapid spread of the collective movement. Prom every part of the Soviet Union it brings stories of compulsion used not only against Kulaks, but against poor peasants, Red Army veteran, proSoviet school teachers. Some of .these reports make lurid reading. In a few instances local officials simply went mad with thei.' new power and turned the confiscation of Kulak property into an ordinary game of legalized robbery with immediate division of spoils in even more cases the village authorities. hoping to impress the I highei officials, drove the entire population pell-mell into the collectives under threat of confiscation, disfranchisement and exile. Fro’ntier correspondents in search of sensations will have a veritable feast. Just as for months the Soviet
newspaper* exaggerated the spontaneity of the movement, it now 1 proceeds to exaggerate the other] side. The volunteer journalists In, I the villages read the Party retjolti- | tions carefully and quickly take | their cue. The style now Is to rip ! i the cover of silence from the whole | i affair and these volunteers are do-1 i illg it with u vengeance. I The outside world, however, will j , | make a serious mistake if it allows i it-elf to be convinced that the great ■ rush into collectives was accomplished entirely or even in larger part by compulsion Reports by persons who have heen on the spot in the farming re- < glens while the drive was at its 1 : most rapid point, including foreig-| ' ners. agree that the movement was ; in its main voluntary. Where pres--1 sure was used, it was not in most ' cases of a violent natute. The "at- | rocities" were a dangerous rush on I the surface of jhe collectivization enterprise but they were, after all, hugely on the surface. How many of the 14,000,000 peasant households collectivized b;> . Ma.ch 1 will remain in the collectives now that the pressure hast been lif.ed? 1 It is certain that the great ma-' I jority will remain on the new agri- | cultural basis. They will not return t ! to private tanning. Millions of them j i will regain possession of their milch cows, their pigs, their poultry, the ■ gardens attached to their own homes and other personal belongings. Bnt the fundamentals of their I calling—the land anil the fatmin.t | implements—will remain collectivI ized, o CANADA READY. FOR LARGEST TOURIST YEAR $300,000,000 Reported Spent Last Season in Dominion Montreal. Que., April 24 —(UP) —I Canada is preparing to welcome this | summer the greatest invasion of American vacationists in its history, Five hundred thousand holiday makers alone, not counting the endless stream of casual visitors, are' expected to visit the Dominion’s great chain of national playgrounds | arid resorts, according to a bulletin i of the Department of Immigration , and Colonization of the Canadian | Pacific railway, just made public here. "It is expected," the bulletin states, "that the record made last year of an average of seventeen visitors every hour of the day and night will be exceeded, as well as the all-time record for vacationists. From Six Point lodge, north of Peterboro. in Ontario, to Lake Louise and British Columbian parks, preparations are under way to entertain the visitors from across the line. There will be two new national ' pinks, the Hiding Montain National Park in Manitoba and the new Georgian Bay Islands park, for tourists to add to their lists of places i to see, and literally hundreds of! new resorts.” Last year, it is stated visitors to I the nine piovinces of the Dominion I left $300,000,000 behind them. With ' thousands more vacationists and | visitors crossing the international boundary to be materially increased. The national parks of Canada alone in the 1929 season drew a total of 250.000 motoiists it is pointed out in the bulletin. fish: fish: Fresh cat fish, pickerel.’ boneless and turtle meat. Mutsch-; lers. Phones 106-107. o How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat — Lost Her Double Chin Lost Her Prominent Hips , Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor Gained in Vivaciousness Gained a Shapely Figure If you’re fat —first remove the cause! KRUSCHEN SALTS contains the 6 mineral salts your body organs, glands and nerves must have to function properly. When your vital organs fail to perform their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can’t throw off that waste material — before you realize it —you’re growing hideously fat! Try one half teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot water every morning — in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer — your eyes sparkle with glorious health —you feel younger in body—keener in mind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS from F and M. Pharmacy or any leading druggist anywhere in America, (lasts 4 weeks). If this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest lose fat —if you don’t feel a superb improvement in health—so gloriously energetic—vigorously i alive—your money gladly return- ' ed.
Elf RIA WOMAN IS CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR Socialist Labor Party Nominee Shrinks From Publicity Elytin, ().. April 24—(UP)—Endorsed by the Socialist Labor party as its candidate. Mrs. Anna K. Storck is planning an active campaign in quest of the governorship of Ohio. A few days after her party had named het its standard bearer at Cleveland Mrs. Storck asserted at her home here she is preparing a sp aking itinerary that will convey her docitrins to voters from Lak Erie to'the Ohio river.
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A comparative novice in polities,. Mm. Storck has been a student of soclul science for years. She I* depending upon her knowledge of the subject to win converts. She will stress the problem of employment mid strive to convince her heurers that to Improve conditions they must repudlu e the old line parties and candidates in favor of Iter own. Unemployment, she believes, to be not ony a national but a world wide pro! lent which could be solved by adopting un educational progr im to evolve a peaceful and orderly change in equalizing production ami distribution. Production, she opines, has ceased to be a major problem, having been supplanted by the question of disti ibution. She fixes the final solution at social ownership ami management. Mis. Storck Is the mother of three children and espi’e the obligations fn< tired in accepting a party candidacy, still insists upon performing het household tasks first. One of her first contacts with the public press demontrated her la r k of political experience. Site demmr-
!’' ,l .„ fr " n ' |,,,s| hK for ,71 1 afts, , politely ■ ' I'-tt’tyto re<..| ¥el It*B 1 t *B Education 1 *'■ Ennis. , I P,I ' 1 '''■«'>! of SuiL’S Louis h,st lin ,. ()f tors. For sis v nation May h Ute St Louis p’ubliesfj She ua. appointed in pZ] a ' ,h — num J of art and Kn B lt»h. c 0 V-st, StaL F3PINGCOIH No “cure’-bjt . duce paronysas VJCI OVER V MILLION jars
