Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 151, Decatur, Adams County, 26 June 1930 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Publbshed Every Evening Except Sunday by -"HE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. 7. H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse.Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller.Vice-President Entered at the Pastoffice at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter Subscription Rates Single copies | .02 One week, by carrierlo One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mail.3s Three months, by maill.oo Six months, by mai11.76 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 415 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member The Indiana League of Home Dailies ■ When its cool we wish tor warm weather and when its hot we pray for cooling breezes. Gee but we are a tough lot to please. Showers and just enough cooler to make growing conditions perfect. Thats the kind of dope we iikc to have the weather man hand ’out. Fifty airplanes were destroyed toy fire in Chicago yesterday with a loss of $2,500,000, but that won’t worry the average person much for its imrrying most of us to keep a flivver going these days. No difference what they name baby Lindbergh, he will be known as “Eaglet” when he gets in high school. Decatur merchants are offering you genuine bargains the rest of the week and if you don't take advantage of tlie offerings which have appeared in this paper the past few days, its your loss. Don’t miss the big bargains. And while the senate is considering the London treaty they might discuss the Hawley-Smoot tariff law with a view to putting in the next eighteen months undoing what they have done the past year and a half. President Hoover is right in calling a spesial session of the senate to consider the London naval treaty, that is, he, f t«. right from his -staqjjpoint for the members will gef'so boiling hot down in old Washington that they will agree to any thing to get out under the old apple tree or along the beach. The Southern Cross, a plane wffTHi had already achieved many notable victories of the air has plaitefl another to its credit by crossing the Atlantic from Dublin to Newfoundland, first to accom-plish-that feat. Captain Smith and his three companions had a tough voyage as they neared American shores. It seems to be a rather tough job to fly this direction and Wisconsin Woman Lost 11 Lbs. ‘‘Have been taking Kruschen Salts for fat reduction—am on my second bottle —I lost 11 pounds in sit weeks and feel fine—Kruschen sure gives you a lot of vfm and pep" Kruschen Salts are used daily by millions all over the world not only to take off' fat from overweight people but to rejuvenate the entire system. One bottle of Kruschen Salts (lasts 4 weeks) costs but 85c and « one bottle will prove of vast bene- ■ lit to people who have constipation, "’headaches, indigestion, nervousness, rheumatism, depression, acidity and auto-intoxication. Not only that but one bottle will •tiring about body activity—increase irt energy, vigor and ambition, •— spirkling eyes and freedom from ' pimples and blemishes — millions know' all this —you ought to know it. Tajte one half teaspoon in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast —walk a little each ' day—-cut down on sweets and fat forming foods. Sold by Cut Rate Drug Co.. Holthouse Drug Co. and B. J. Smith Drug Co., and druggists America over.

♦ TODAY’S CHUCKLE ♦ (U.R) Bloomington, Ind. — Robert I Study, Muncie, has made it a practice to live up to the implication in his name. He was graduated from Indiana university this week, finishing 16 years of schooling without hav- | ing missed a class in all of that time. He has only one tardy mark to mar his record. ♦ it will never be exactly a popular ' outdoor sport. With two-thirds of the assess.inents paid in at the Old Adams County Bank within three days and plans for the Peoples Loan & Trust Company being made, there is no reason for any one to look blue or to feel that way. We are going to put it over. It doesn't make any difference what has happened elsewhere. This is Decatur and Adams county, the best spot on earth and we must go forward and not backward. Some people are so imbued with the joke bug that they carry them even beyond the grave. A funeral was largely attended in Chicago the other day because a man was to be buried who had provided in his will that each who attended was to receive from five to twenty dollars. A Michigan man who died a few days ago arranged for cigars for the men and candy for the women who attended his final ceremonies. Speaking of conditions in the antarctic. Rear Admiral Byrd remarked: ‘‘Small objects look large. One of our men mistook a shoe lying not ten feet from him for a seal. There is no visible horizon and everything is distorted.” Not only the antarctic but all life is like that, some times. We grow excited over small things, and depressed over what has no immediate existence, but is just a recreation in memory. Worry, you might say, is a state that lacks any visible .horizon, and in which consequently “everything is distorted.” —Chicago Examiner. This country is not going to the dogs. Everybody is not going bankrupt and all men will not lose their jobs. Times may not be as good as we would have them, and there is no good excuse for the depression now on us. It would not have occurred had it not been for the greed and avarice of a comparatively small group of individuals who already have more of this world’s goods than they need. But even at that the storm of failures will soon pass and business will again be serene. We have been through similar business storms before, probably not so severe, but they all blow over and the casualties are not so numerous as anticipated. A storm is never pleasant and we are always fearful so long as it lasts. We shall continue to live and will again prosper. The difference between prosperity and adversity is only 15 to 20 per cent, of the total volume of business. People will continue to eat, to wear clothes, to go to shows, to ride in automobiles, to read newspapers and to watch advertisements closer than ever and because things are slow there is no use laying down and making them slower. The only thing that makes this depression hard is that it was so unnecessary. But just sit tight and everything will come around ail right. It always has come and always Relief From Curse Os Constipation A Battle Creek physician sayk “Constipation is responsible for more misery than any other cause.” But immediate relief has been found. A tablet called Rexall Orderlies has been discovered. This tablet attracts water from the system into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowel called the colon. The water loosens the dry food waste and causes a gentle, thorough, natural movement without forming a habit or ever increasing the dose. Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderlie at night. Next day bright. Get 24 for 25c today at the nearest Rexall Drug| Store. The B. J. Smith Drug Co.

—and the Worst igYet to Come r— — , 1 . / AFWHUR, / I NIGHT / 'I I If

will, just like the rain.—Newcastle Times. o * TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY | From the Daily Democrat File I « • June 26, 1910 was Sunday. o ♦ • Modern Etiquette I By | | ROBERTA LEE ♦ (U.PJ ♦ Q. When a girl and a boy meet on the street who should show the first sign of recognition? A. The girl. Q. Is it proper for a man to sit with one leg crossed over the other? A. No, He should keep both feet placed on the floor. Q. Should young girls ever go to a tea given in a bachelor's apartment A. Yes; if there is an older woman there acting as hostess; otherwise, no. o 4^—--—4 b, —■ ———— —■ ———--—4b Will Give Musicale ♦ ——■—> ——- —♦ Miss Sue Zimmerman will present several of her piano pupils in a piano recital at the Decatur Public Library. Friday evening at 8:30 o’clock. Eileen and Gerald Zimmerman will assist with a trumpet and violin number, and Evelyn Zimmerman Arnold will participate in the program, singing several vocal selections. The public is invited to attend the recital. The program for the evening is as follows: “Military March” Schubert Sue Zimmerman, Vera Porter “Morning Prayer” Streabbog Dorothy Ardler “In the Month of May”.Behr Edna Beane “Just We Two” Presser Stanley and Eugene Arnold "Maypole Dance” Bugbee Jeanette Winnis "Flower Song” Lange Thomas Adler “Dance on the Green”. Presser Mary Johnson Bright Eyes Sis. St. Joseph Zulu Porter Vocal— (Selected) Evelyn Z. Arnold Fairy Queen Waltz Monte Eugene Arnold Spinning Song Ellmenrich Herbert Buuck Cedar Brook Waltz Perry Virginia Zimmerman Tag Waltz Swift Roger Arnold Old Melody . Presser Miriam Hoffman Dance of Rosebuds Louise Bultemeier Duet * Presser Louise Bultemeier and Miriam Hoffman Friendship Waltz Streabbog Stanley Arnold “Sparklets” Mlles Kathleen Odle “Rosary” (Violin)Nevin Eileen Zimmerman "Morning Hymn”.’ Schubert Ruth Porter “Forget Me Not" Monte Deering Standard Twine--more feet per pound--runs very even and made from long fiber. Per sack cash .. $6.25 Per sack Sept. 1, $6.50 You have used it be-fore-use it again this year.— Schafer Hardware Co. 3ti

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1930.

Zulu Porter and Jeanette Winnes "Polly” Zamecnick Vera Porter "Le Crepesula” Guy Gilbert Bloomberg Vocal (Selected) Evelyn Zimmerman Cornet (Selected) Gerald Zimmerman Prelude in C Minor —Military Rachmanenoff Polonaise Chopin Ruth Preuss ® & To Present Pupils ® —» Miss Kathryn Jackson will present Misses Verea Heller and Lue’lle Smith in a piano recital at the United Brethren church. Sunday evening, J une 29, at 7:39 o’clock (daylight saving time). The public is cordially invited to attend. Others who will assist in presenting the program follows: 1— March Grainger Scherzando Polka Bartlett Lucille Smith 2 — Glissando in F Major Raff Moderate, Lento, Vivo Smith Verea Heller 3 —Polonaise in D Mapor Widor Lucille Smith, Doris Johnson 4 — Minuet Paderewski Variation Mozart Verea Heller 5 — Overture Kela Bela Devona Frauhiger, Ruth Hoffack' r, Hellen Cupp 6 — Parisienffb Woods Allegretto-Presto Leybach Lucile Smith 7— Saxaphone Solo .. . .... Selected Arlen ■ Becker S—Des Alpes Ryder Verea Heller, Lucille Smith 9 —Transcription Blake Devona Frauhiger W —Andante, Adagio, Prestissimo .Smith Verea Heller 11 — Poetic Reverie Gottschalk Lucille Smith 12— Saw Solo (Offertory)....Selected Alice Vance 13 — Overture Suppe Lucille Smith. Verea Heller o ——e BRINGS LARGE DAMAGE SUIT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) recover $30,000,900. Former Senator Reed, whose Missouri friends started a presidential boom in his behalf after he had attacked the “radio trust” recently in a banquet address at Sedalia, was not in Kansas City when the suit was filed. He and Mrs. Reed are in New York and plan to sail tomorrow for Europe. Attorney Reichmann is not new at radio litigation. He presented the case of the Independent Radio industry before the department of justice recently when the federal court in Delaware ruled that the Radio Corpoiation of America had violated the Clayton act. In addition to charging the defendant companies with violating the Sherman anti-trust law, the 27-page petition makes the folio-w---ing allegations: That the defenants illegally j created a vast pool of patents and | thus illegally compelled GrigsbyGrunow to pay royalties of approximately $6,000,009. — o Pardons Dead Prisoner Jackson, Miss., —(UP) The State of Mississippi last week pardoned a negro who has been dead since November, records at the penitentiary offices here reveal. Jim Foote, the negro, until his suspension by i Governor Bilbo last year, had served I 23 years of a lifetime sentence. He I returned to his home and died, his I petition for clemency unanswered I until last week.

w —— ——st | CHILDREN’S DAY PROGRAM The pt. Paul cliureti. four miles south ast of Decatur, will present tlie annual Children’s Day program Sunday evening June 29. at 7:30 o'clock, standard time. The program follows: Fair Rose of Sharon Choir Devotional. Greetings Jay Martin Welcome Virginia Beam They Seem to Know Richard Noll My Resolve Dean Reber What Boys Are Good For Rowena Raudenbush Song -Sew-Saw . Class No. 1 A Garden Jaunita Parrish Her Speech Phyllis Jean Walters Saxaphone solo Brice Martin Shoemakers Drill Class No. 1 Song—Smiles ..Classes 2 and 3 Why Mary Reber A Boy’s Opinion Roger Arnold Vocal Solo-Saucy Sue Faye Martin Great Book Divine Small Children Play—A Slight Mistake Don’t Genevive Strickler Song by Men’s Quartet Smiles Romaine Raudenbush A Sunday School Harbor Robert Reber Song—Summer’s Countless Blessings Choir

I TAKE A HINT! When tempted to over-indul J — "Reach fora * Lucky instead' - £ Be moderate —be moderate in all things, even in smoking. Avoid that ? -YU- ] future shadow* by avoiding over, indulgence, if you would maintain that modem, ever-youthful figure. I \ "Reach for a Lucky instead.” ■ t-' W" ■ Lucky Strike, the finest Ci« rette you ever smoked B. made of the finest tobaco —The Cream of the Crop- ! /|rsTOASTIEP// to ck yStrih I)-, P. has an extra, secret heatira process. Everyone know t heat purifies and si \ 20,679 physicians say thel ire less irritatinj to your throat. . : 4 ; . z''■ ■ "Coming events % s T °ASTEd" / /Ml cast their I j shadows before" TUNE IN —The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every BBIg 3k Saturday and Thursday evening, over N.B.C. networks. “It’s toasted” Your Throat Protection—against irritation—against cough SP f C - 21 • diC ? r l; bu V n ° d " at J ion , i « eatin ,e and drinking and not more than three meals daily,” is Dr- FBell s advice in the N ew Y ork Medical Journal to all men and women who want to keep a proper figure. We do notreP f sent that smoking Lucky Strike Cigarettes will bring modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh. Wc do that when tempted to do yourself too well, if you will “Reach for a Lucky instead,” you will thus avoid ovc indulgence in things that cause excess weight and, by avoiding over-ind maintain a modem, graceful ij) 1930. The

Give Thanks for Whut Anola Walters Piano solo—-Sunset Echoes Violet Smitley Short address by Rev. Jay Smith Rose Message Pauline McKean Flag Drill B«ven Girls Song Summer Days Are Here Again Choir Benediction. —. —o - * Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE # • Broken Cork If a cork breaks and falls inside tlie bottle, pour enough ammonia in the bottle to float the cork and put it away tor a few days. The ammonia will eat sway enough of thj , cork to permit its easy removal. Shears Shears can ife used to better ad 1 vantage than a khife for shredding 1 parsley or lettuce, tor cutting up meat for stews, or bread for bread pudding. It is also better for cutting peppers or celery into small pieces of proper size for salads. Brown Sugar Keep tlie brown sugar in an open ’ jar in tlie Icebox and it will remain soft. This keeps it from becoming I lumpy.

MEXICO HAS SMALL REVOLT State Government Is Overthrown In Political Riot El Paso, Tex., Jun 26.—(U.R> - Governor Francisco R. Almada of tlie state of Cbihuahna, Mexico, planned to leave Juarez today for Chihuahua City, scene yesterday of a political uprising against Ills government. Reports received h re said when ■members of a political party op-1 posing Alamada seized the capital two person.) were killed, five wounded, and 70 state employes taken prisoners. After the clash at the capitol. tlie chamber of deputies proclaimed Manuel Jesus Estrada governor of Chihuahua, according to dis-. patches received here which later ( were verified by passengers on an airplane from the Mexican city. j Tlie outbreak was said to have I occurred when 40 followers of Manuel Prieto, a candidate for the

„ t " g ' Jul the build lg ..... re the st.e, of i,n " 1,11 were vmiiideq, Accused M an .-oiMniJ ""“‘ r nnM '>y agents „r the wa,k 11 the Oft, He was < 1iu!.',.,! wit . /isl violate th,, 111 ,he '"'at ing | lfifor 'inder I Thlrl <”;n other menS i'limrieis in i, l( |i linail()1 lis said to have used 1,1 ‘"K liquor Horn t | bound over to th e jury. -o— - .et the H aB l r , 9t |(