Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1930 — Page 4

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by TUB DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller... Pre*. and Gen. Mgr. A. IL Holthouue .Sec’y A Rue. Mgr. DlcK. D. Heller .Vice-Preeldent Entered at the Poatoffice at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter Subscription Rates Single copies —I .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mail .35 Three months, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mail .... 1.75 One year, by mall ........ 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 I Prices quoted are within first and second tones. Elsewhere 33.50 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 t The Indiana League of Home Dallies I Water Is plentiful in Lake county 1 while home brew is getting scare- < er ail the time, according to the , investigators who draw regular f salaries for such work up that way. « A Turk who claims to be 154 t years old has come over to this ( country to get a set of false teeth. Evidently he never heard of our mail order houses. I L Russia proposes to have an army ( of 17.000.000 men by 1933 and while s that is the year proposed for the e Chicago world fair we don't sup- ” - s pose they have any thing in comc mon. a Tlie London naval pact will be approved, the foes having admitted 1 that they can t head it off and so we are in line for whatever entanglements that idea of the adi ministration brings us. i The president looks sad today al- ' though he seems to winning in * ills drive for a new naval treaty. a He. was forced to give up his regu- 1 lax week-end fishing trip and that 1 always causes him to be fretful. 1 ——— Our baseball team which took a par Tin the district tournament was 1 d Trailed but this will not detract 1 a bft from the interest manifested 1 in the game here. The city league ' is going tine and hundreds of peo- c pie are enjoying the sport for the 1 first time in years. c " 11 - "" A hundred in the shade over the i week-end in this section while it was ten to fifteen degrees cooler I down in Miami and other points I south. Now figure that out. Even I in Dallas, I’ho nix, and v \marilla , - it was quite comfortable as compared to the middle west. The present summer season is evidently in tune with the other marathons. News of the economic conditions , are bett r, especially from the east and indications are '.hat we will soon find some little improvement. It can't be rapid for the entire financial structure of the United States is suffering and can only be stabilized by time. Keep a stiff upper lip, do your share, have confidence and work and grin. That's the tonic. Adams county is trying to meet tk': request of President Hoover by joining in his program of public work, having already let contracts for more than SIOO,OOO and with contemplated work of fifty thousand or more. The work has largely consisted of roads and bridges but also includes the engine house in Decatur. We are keeping the wheels moving here as best we can, a wise course. The corn borer sleuths are out again, searching for the pests that it wa.; announced several years ago would eventually destroy the corn crop through here. There may be some merit to the work but most farmers believe they can con tihue to raise a fair crop if the weather will permit. Until the rirenth of the past several weeks became severe the outlook in Adw

TODAY’S CHUCKLE ♦ —— (U.PJ ♦ Wixan. Eng.—Britain* oldest cat, Mickle the Manx, has been In the family of Mias Gertrude Green for twenty-seven and , oiie-half years and is still willing to fight any dog that cornea ; along. urns county wus excellent. Road maps show No. 54 out of this city and each duy there are inquiries us to the route. No. 54 Is the Ohio state highway up to Willshire and the route from there here has been tentatively taken over by the Indiana commission. It should be marked by either the state or county force for the convenience of the traveling public and a request for that was forwarded today to Mr. Titus. The Legion boys hope to raise tho necessary funds this week for paying premiums in the coming fair, the drive starting today. The pr< mium lists are now being circulated and the boys have made every preparation to put on a big ger and better show than ever be- I fore. Its a worth while effort and we are hoping the campaign will , be successful beyond their expectations. The campaign has almost been lost sight of and we predict it will be impossible to start any thing so long as the mercury continues to slop over the top of the thermometer. Just now most folks are spending their time trying to keep cool, make an honest dollar and are but little interested in politics. Along about October Ist the campaign will be of interest but probably not much before. I Manufacturers in Ohio are organizing to oppose the enacting of an income tax law and are presenting various arguments, in which of course there is much to consider s riously, but on the other hand the fact remains that real estate has been taxed almost beyond endurance and if we are to go on with improvements and progress some other plan of raising money must be found. If there is a better one than the income tax it will no doubt be welcomed, but those who show earnings are after all the ones who can best afford to pay taxes, whether that be individual or corporation. The equalization of taxes always has been and always will be one for dispute. BIG FEATURES ’ OF RADIO I i * * Tuesday's 5 Best Radio Features Copyright 1930 by UP. Central standard time throwout WABC (CBS network) 5:30 p. m. Crocket Mountaineers. WJZ (NBC network) 8 p. m.— Westinghouse Saluet. WABC (CBS network) 8.30 p. m. Harber of Seville. WEAK (NBC network) 9 p. m. — Golden Gems. WJZ (NBC network) 10 p. m.— Wayne King's Music. o ♦ • Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE ♦— (U.PJ ♦ Q. When introducing a person to a group of six or eight persons, should each one be introduced intlh vidually ? A. Yes; though in this case it may be shortened by mentioning two or three names together. Q. If a bride has received a great many gifts, may she send engraved cards of thanks? A. No; engraved notes of thanks are very rude. Nothing but a personal note on personal stationery will do. Q. Should toothpicks be placed on the dinner table? A. No. o *TWENTYYEARS“ AGO TODAY| | From the Daily Democrat File < t July 21 - Young ma nwho comm- , itted suicide in Steele's park is identified as Leyton Potter ot Tacoma, 1 Washington. ('. ,1. Voglewode offers Decatur a Packing Company plant for sale I but fails to receive a bid. -1 Mr. and Mrs. Martin Jaberg arH rive home from Toreva, Arizona where they have resided the past year while Mart was teaching tho

the Worst is Yet to Come I V R T gO rDr —- * - - ’ Dawes’ Private Barber : yfflr * ■ Er ■ “S — ?; 7 Stil xw [l■ - . X i Wili am F. Piehl, retired Evanston. 111., mail carrier and the only barber in Evanston who cuts Ambassador Dawes' han;. Among his prized possessions are several cablegrams received at various times advising him of contemplated visits to Evanston by the ambassador.

Indians. t Decatur public library begins fiftn . year and is still very popular. King George wijl be crowned in June 1911 and plans are now being made. Jesse Garner barn, four mil's east of Decatur, destroyed by fire. Gillig and Sons open the Oak Roller mills and begin manufacture of Blue Ribbon flour. Lieutenant Richard Hobson, much kissed naval hero lectures to large crowd at Geneva Chautauqua. Mrs. Gaston, head of the American Anti-cigarette League accit >et Mrs. Nicholas Longworth as being a victim of the habit and creates quite a sensation. >— — 4 | Household Scrapbook | | By ROBERTA LEE Bulbs When washing electric light bulbs rare should be taken to wet only the glass part as any water left in the metal section might cause a short circuit. Blond Hair An excellent rinsing water for blond hair is a level teaspoonful of borax added to a gallon of water It brings out all the lights in blond hair. Fruit Put green bananas and tomatoes in a paper bag and lay them away in a dark place for a few days to ripen. Never place bananas in the ice box. I «et the Habit —Traae at Home,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. JULY 21, 1930.

HOSPITAL NOTES — ■ Mrs. Charles Heare, 728 North I Second street, underwent a major operation at the Adams County Memorial Hospital Saturday. She is in a critical condition. Mrs. Desar Brandt, Berne, under went a major emergency operation at the local hospital yesterday. —o akKIVALS Mr. a id Mrs. Fred Schulte, 515 South First street, are the parents of a boy baby born at the Adams County Memorial Hospital this morning. Both mother and babe are! getting along nicely. 0 _ Handicap for Candidate | Iron Mountain, Mich., (UP)— ■Fred Applin is running for nomination as justice of the peace hut, he says, he's badly handicapped, lie is the father of 16. children and opponents say that.if he is elected, an addition to the sheriff’s resi- • deuce will have to be made to house Applin's family which would he "an unwarranted waste of the hardarned dollars of the people." — 0 — — I Too Much Caution Chicago —(UP) — After exorcising great care so that their work i would not sound a burglar alarm, burglars touched the alarm when 5 they dropped $2,000 worth of dres- ? ?os, escaping with but SSOO in merchandise. They had entered the shop by cutting a hole in the floor from the basement..

K. C. HOME TRUST BANDITS TO DIE or ROPE JULT 25 H op e of Reprieve for Slayers of Popular Police Officer Is Gone Kansas City. July 31.—(U.R>—Dejected and afraid, bereft of the bravado of their gangster days, three men paced the floor of their ceils here today and awaited death. In a nearby room — forbidding and gloomy with Its four stories of dimly-lighted height — stood the scaffold upon which the Home Irust bandits will stand in the early morning hours of July 25 and fall to their deaths at the end ot a rope. The Home Trust bandits are Tony 'Lollopop' Mangiaracino, Carl Nasollo and John Messino. As they tied after robbing the Home Trust bank the Republican national convention in 1928, sending a hail of bullets from their speeding automobile, they killed James H. "Happy" Smith, one of the most popular of Kansas City's pat roimen. There was no hope n maining today for these three men. Their conviction on a charge of murder has stood, despite the strenuous efforts of attorneys to change it. The supreme court upheld the decision of the lower tribunal. Gov-1 ernor Henry S. Caulfield will not interfere with the hanging, he lias announced. Only tho friends of their gangster days can save the Home Trust bandits now. and Sheriff Smedley lias taken good care’ that no aid will be forthcoming from tliat source. Over the mysterious grapevine that leads from the north end have come rumors that gangland will not submit meekly to the execution, Authorities have transformd the jaii into a veritable fortress, bristling with armament in preparation for any possible attempt of fri nds of the bandits to rescue them by force. “Lollopop" today had none of the sartorial elegance which characterized his gunman days. In the stilling heat of his death cell he lounged practically unclothed. “I'll go up smiling," he said. But his eyes were afraid.

From ’Choir to Talkies

Margaret Schilling. 19, former choir girl in New York, who won a star role in the films at her first screen test, photographed in Chicago while on her wav to Hollywood. She will be starred in an operetta.

Messino was suriy. lie was a A mechanic, a skilled driver. He n piloted the bandit car as it careen- g ed through the streets after the ( bank holdup. He says he is not afraid to die, Carl Nasello is the youngester of T the trio. He has kept up a non ' chaiant front before reporters and 1 visitors, but his eyes keep wander-, 1 ing down the corridor, at the end 1 of which is the hangman's noose, t and along he will walk but once. Elaborate preparations have been I made for the execution. The scat- I fold has been enlarged so that alii: three can be hanged at one time. <

Stretch your dollar ADVERTISING helps you stretch your dollar. You do not need to shop around all day to find what you want at the price you can afford to pay. The advertisements in the newspapers tell you where you can buy it at the lowest price. Advertisements save you time, save money, save physical effort. They make buying easy and sure. Advertising enables the woman in the home to compare values without moving from her easy chair. She can shop comfortably in her own living-room. When she has decided what and where to buy, it takes but little time and effort to compare the purchases. Women appreciate the advantages of advertising. They trust it. they believe in the goods advertised ... and buy them. 6 Keep within your budget by purchasing merchandise you see advertised in your newspaper. * • Decatur Daily Democrat

An electric button — one of five manned by deputy sheriffs — will spring the three traps simultaneously. The doomed men's tamilies were] permitted to visit them several I times this week. Little was said, but giief wracked the bodies of the little Italian mothers, barbed in the shawls and fineries of their native land. No one could convince these women that their sons were guilty, but the state holds them responsible for the death of a policeman, and the Home Trust bandits must die.

young bm assocm HONOLULU H — ■* m Founding (1 | y.MrI Hawaii 30 Celebrated | )v o e | fl Hy K< U.-I s M ■ ( United Press Staft (’ nrr 2fl Honolulu, T. || j„, y Scores of il''b'iut PH tl) Pacific conference ot >?■ Men's Buddle • P ™' y, which took i| lt . f „ rni( „ 41 ■ celelnating th,, i,,,,,,,,; M. B. A. in Hawaii Representatives (i ; ni counties land. rim. n ■ eluding I-aeifi,. l(iast United States. j nine( | la versary obsenaaces. ■ The opening day wasfullfl tional ceremotii,.,, t,,,^ J ness sessions ... the u , n(e J begin, and last mun s a!ll Jj Leaders heralded the 3 ■as significant. lievause itfl to secure elos. r eoopetiflofl dhist organizations in courage sud Ihist among J and interpret Buddhism toj ’tian races. ■ Methods of cooperatlo, J of common interest f or ing ot ganizations, publication, and methodsot J ary work in English and oj ign language countries arel the subjects scheduled toil sion. I Leaders hope to make thel ence of an international [J of Y. M. B. A. I Most of the delegates J anese and Japanese AmcriJ ter the conclusion of theroj local Japanese will entetj delegates with a week oil i Sio,lS ' 1 Mello-glo PrevenJ Shiny 1 MELLO-GLO Face Powder I ferred by beautiful women I It leaves no trace of pu flakiness or irritation, sit longer—no shiny noses! N a new French process large pores. Spreads morel ' ly—gives a youthful bloom. 1 pure. Use MELLO-GLO Fm der. It's wonderfu.