Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 146, Decatur, Adams County, 20 June 1930 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT fMblUhed Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. f. H, Holler Pre*. and Gen. Mgr. A. ft. Holthouse.Sec'y A Bus. Mgr. Diet D. Heller Vice-President Entered at the Postoffice at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter Subscription Rates Single copies | .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier 5.00 Ono month, by mall .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mall 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere 13.50 one year. Advertising Rates made Known on Application. National Advertising Representatives SCHEERRE, INC. 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago <ls Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member The Indiana League ot Home Dallies Jehn Alcock has been appointed chief of police in Chicago and from tliff cut of his chin, if nis photogrff)>hs.are to be believed, the criminals of that city will soon know that he is on the job. Lets boom trade in Decatur. This is .the time. Special trade days 1 " flh offers and attractions will be 1 suje to pay the merchants and the ptftroni. Pulling together is after all the greatest thing for all of us. —— - Stocks are on the rise but don’t kid yourself that you have any opPei'tuiiity to get rich by buying them. If you want to make some rcjail money, buy real estate at prices and help your com- ’ njanity by improving it. 1 Jhe electric line between Portland and Muncie will be abandoned if a petition filed with the Publite Service Commission is approves. The line lost more than $12,last year and constantly the I wsiness is being taken over by basses and trucks. David Lawrence says the recent election in New Jersey doesn’t im>ve a thing for that state has always been the wettest one in the world, so perhaps Mr. Morrow who wishes to be a* United States senator has some popular ideas on other subjects as well and we hope sip, for there are many things that 4Jght to be done. w — MU* -Decatur has one good bank and A the community needs another or wen more, you can feel assured lley will have them. This is too apod a community to stand back. Gradually the folks are getting tjjeir feet on the ground and when tjeydo they will act in the most fjtnsible manner. Max Schmeling is the world uliampicn but he won’t be long un-1 less he crawls in his hole and stays ijvie. The eighty thousand who Watched him take four bad rounds from Jack Sharkey know that he is far from a world champion and shout all he has to look forward tn is that he will be well paid one »f these days to sign on the dotted line for a match with some one. —T ~ Keep that chin up and meet conditions as best you can. We have a hunch that next fall will be one Jf the host we have had here for Several years. The farmers have fl good crop in site, the sugar factory expects to have the best run for a long time, plans for providing employment and money are being made and things are sure to be brighter. ■MI * A statement recently issued from ■Washington says the cost of government is sllß per capita and a few weeks ago they announced that the per capHa of money in .circulation is $37, which ought to J>e sufficient proof to the ordinary that we are having quite a difficult time making ends meet ,and why. The vote given Morrow and Freliughuysen, both of whom ran as
wets in the New Jersey senatorial primary as compared to that given to Congressman Fort, a dry, figures out the exact percentage as shown in the Literary Digest poll on the wet and dry question recently. Candidates will begin to conform to the sentiment shown in the various states in the poll we presume. Three cheers for Admiral home after a sixteen months trip to the South, pole. He is a real guy and has done things that will live in history. His reception was typical of America for her heroes and will continue for weeks. And with the admiral came home a bunch of fellows just as brave, though perhaps not so well known, who likewise deserve credit for the expedition. We don't believe any community has ever shown a finer spirit than lias been displayed here the past week for we have heard only the kindest things said and we have heard many remarks that took real courage. Every business man is making an earnest effort to keep smiling and to get through the present condition. Give them your support in every way you can. Don't take advantage of them. . They are your friends in good season and bad and they deserve your cooperation always. Its fine to economize and we would not advise you otherwise, but don’t get so tight that you won't permit yourself to be comfortable. There is no need for that and before you know you will be better off than ever, if you plug right along. In the meantime fill the fuel bin, the larder and can the fruit in the old fashioned way so every one will be happy as the days go by. After all there is some thing wholesome about getting back to normalcy. The city will proceed with the erection ot the new engine house oir Seventh street and thats what they should do most certainly. Os all the times in the world for the folks here to quit doing things none within our memory could be worse. Employ labor, pay them the best wages you can, keep the wheels moving. We congratulate the city officials upon their decision and we are sure the people will approve their course. “Good times - are~coming,” said W. I. Glover, second assistant postmaster general, in a speech to the postmasters in convention at Fort Wayne, Wednesday, and he adds the credit belongs to President Hoover. Now we are not so partisan that we are not more than willing to give him credit for it if it ever arrives but we insist he is running far behind schedule and that if present conditions continue much longer he will be given due I credit the other way. The people are sick of apple sauce and want something besides political propaganda and they want it NOW. “Passage of the bill by the senate has, of course, been discounted in advance by business men as well as political observers. This is what makes so amusing the solemn assurances of Senator Watson that the enactment of the tariff bill will at once start a golden stream of prosperity in this country Everybody hopes that good times will come back even sooner than Senator Watson prophesies. But all sensible people know that if they do come back it will be for reasons almost wholly unconnected with tariff legislation .... Thousands ot men have not been thrown out of employment, and prices cut down, simply because congress had ■ not put the right kind of duty on • ‘wiping rags’ or had not sufficently protected our wheat and cotton i from the danger of mythical for- ' sign imports of those products.”— ’ N. Y. Times (Ind.) o BARGAlNS:—Bargains in Living Room, Dining Room suits, mattresses and rugs. We are open every evening in the week. Stuckey and Co. Monroe. Our phone number 1 is 44. 134-ts
—and the Worst is Yet to Come I ? * i f?' i Th < X I bvw Li 11 «=
Will Carol’s Amours Again Endanger His Crown? owe • • • The Reported Return of Mme. Lupescu Widens Rift Between Playboy King and Princess Helene
V'- . S < ol < - . . ’ ’ JF ■M; I ' ! 1 1 J ■ J V ' .-.r ' V ■' * / MhfE. ■ .Ji w Princes? Helene. Kihq Capoiz it
Bucharest, June 20.—King Carol’s romantic attachment for Mine. Lupescu, which once caused him to renounce his crown, today blocks i reconciliation between the Roumanian monarch and Queen Helen. The royal family and leading diplomats have alike failed to persuade Helen to share Carol’s throne. Infuriated at rumors that her regal husband plans to bring her rival to Bucharest, Helen has fled to Castle Sredischta, seventyfive miles from the capital, and there remains sequestered. For a week Dowager Queen Marie had planned a public reconciliation between Helen and Carol at the Cotroceni Palace only to have the Queen disappear at the last moment. Word that Carol had secret-1 ly purchased a house for his Hungarian light ’o love bad somehow reached his blue-blooded wife’s ears, it is reported. King Carol was so exhausted by this last of a rapid succession of political and domes; ic crisis that has assailed him since he ascended the throne that he retired to Sinaija, a Bucharest suburb, to recuperate. Meanwhile patriots from one end of Roumania to the other are demanding that Helen take her rightful place next to their King. They assert that no matter what Carol’s private life is, he is their King and can do no wrong. For the sake of appearance and the welfare of the nation a large, these thousands of citizens say that Helen should waive her personal feelings and become united, at least officially, with their ruler. Helen, a strong-minded, intelligent woman, holds steadfastly to her determination to be Queen of j Carol’s heart or uo queen at all.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1930
King or no king, Carol must adopt I mod rn standards of conduct, says Helen. Before a reconciliation can take place she insists that he renounce Mme. Lupescu forever. Meanwh'le preparations for the an ival of Carol’s Hungarian charmer are continuing. The hoi&e purchased for her has been elegAntly furnished and a staff of servants have been hired. The continued devotion of Carol to Lupescu has for years puzzled peopl ■ who knew them both. The red-haired Hungarian had absolute control of him, it is said, throughout the many years they spent together in France. Not only did Carol spurn a throne for her sake but he seemed to be her absolute slave. The most amazing part of it all s that to the unprejudiced eye Lupescu is not beautiful, intelligent or gracious and Queen Helen, ! the woman Carol deserted, is said! to be all three. —o ♦ 4 Modern Etiquette I By | ROBERTA LEE 4 (U.R) 4 Q. At the wedding ceremony, when the bride is having the ring placed on finger, what does she do with her flowers A. The maid of honor takes the bridal bouquet from her. Q. Is it obligatory to send gif’s upon receiving the announcement of a birth? A. No. Q. What are three features on which the successful dinner par‘y depends? A. Food, conversation-and atmosphere.
T BIG FEATURES OF RADIO I i « 4 Friday’s Five Best Radio Features WEAF --(NBC network) — 6 pm.— Cities Service Concert orchestra. WEAF—(NBC network) — 8 pm.— Raleigh Revue. WABC (CBS network) —8:30 pm.— Gold Medal Freight. WEAF-(NBC network) —8 pm. — Lopez Orchestra with Erminie Calloway. WOBC—(CBS Network) -10 pm.— Duke Ellington's Band. o Saturday Five Best Radio Features WABC (CBS network) 4:30 pm.l Ted Husing's Sportslauts. WEAF —(NBC network) —6:30 pm. Lelinonte Program. WABC —(CBS network) 6:30 pm.— Dixie Echoes. WJZ (NBC network) —7:15 pm.— Cub leporter with Aline Beery and Petie Dixon. | WEAF —(NBC network) 10:00 pin. Rudy Vallee's Orchestra. Q • 4 ! Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE Mattresses Mattresses, pillows, and blankets will be more sanitary and will last longer if they are placed in the sun one day each week. It gives them a sweet fresh odor that is very pleasant on retiring. Baby's Gums When the baby is teething do not allow it to bite on a rubber ring i or hard substance, as this only hardens the gums. Mix a solution of 1 part listerine to 20 parts of water and apply with cotton. Meat Meat should never be put into the ice box wrapped in paper, as the paper has a tendency to absorbe the juices. o * TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY I From the Daily Democrat File I ♦ ♦ ; June 20 — Miss Frances Rademacher will take nurses training 666 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the , first day, and checks Malaria in : three days. 666 also in Tablets. I IF YOU NEED MONEY I Write or Phone B Franklin Security Co. 1 Phone 237 H Over Schafer Store. g
I A Better Stock Market I More Money for Your Cattle, Calves, | Hogs and Sheep Market Closes at 2 o’clock Y Through the Week and J yfi m ‘ Saturday | A Daily Market*—lncrease Your Profits gg Those that have become our customers since we started shipping stock from Herne several months ago have Si become convinced that it pays to deal with us. To those that have not yet transacted any business with us *e invite them to give us a chance to prove that you will profit by selling us your stock. Mi Why Sell Your Stock on a Market of Just One Day When Ylou Can Sell Your Stock ■fi Any Day in Berne? ic NO WAITING Bring Us Your Hogs Any Day H " s ’ i jip! v Upon Arrnai CALVES AND SHEEP WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY | Berne Stock Yards I PHONE 30 BERNE, I?®
course at Hope hospital in Fort Wayne. Rev. Franklin T. Simpson, former presiding elder of Fort Wayne Methodist district, dies at r.lkhart, aged 74 years. Geneva defeats Shamrocks at baseball 3 to 1
We Have a service --that every woman in Decatur should be interested in. A service that will get rid of all the muss, work and worry of wash day and at the same time be cheaper than you can do it yourself and your clothes will be just as nice. It is our Damp Wash service which means your clothes are washed in pure, soft water, with Rinso soap, and returned to you ready to be put on the line. The handkerchiefs and small pieces are dry enough to be ironed without putting out. Why not give this service a trial? -CALLDecatur Laundry Phone 134 “FARR-WAY MEANS CLEAN CLOTHES’’
The Kaiser of Germany is suffering from'' an abcess due to blood disorders. Hammocks. SI.OO, at ttie Schafer Hart ware store. Miss Celia Glllig leaves for a visit in Pittsburgh. Dorsey Hoagland leaves for Ark-
ansas to spend cll M y t«5« Mi . and Mrs. '■■""‘"'■l - attended in,. 'I ’■ vent lon. 4 Gat H »blt-Ir.„. 'MI
