Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 29 July 1930 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

DECATUR -JAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evenlug Except Bunday by THKI DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO J. H. Heller ... Pres. and Gen. Mar. A. R. Holthouae. Sec’y & Bub Mkt. Dick D. Heller „...Vlce-Preuldent Entered at the Pontofflce at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter Bubacrlptfon Rate* Single copies _ - —I .02 One week, by carrier. 10 One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mall .36 Three months, by mall 1.00 Stat months, by mail 1.76 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second sones. Elsewhere 13.60 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 of Home Dallies The cooling off periods are fine but we pay tor ft a few hours at- , terward when the sun conies out and we fairly boil. Well any way when your boy is up in a tree for a week on one of foolish sitting expeditions, you at least know where he is. What's the use to become famous? We haven’t h ard a word about Ed Jackson for months and most folks can't even give you his address. .The rural schools of Adams county will op n September Ist and in Decatur and Berne on the second. That’s only a month away and the boys and girls will soon begin to get ready. We feel certain that you can buy property, farm or city, cheaper now than you will be able to do In a year from now. The wise ones will invest at the present low market and sell at a profit one of these days. A rooster at Geneva went mad, presumably from the heat, and attacked Billy Hale, aged two, like a mad beast, keeping up the attack until he was killed, which shmtld give some scientist new grounds to work on. Suicides and drownings caused the most vionlent deaths over the week end, the total for Indiana reaching twenty-five. Seems to tea part of the summer season, especially when we have such terrific weather as that of the past month. Let's all get ready to pep up and put things ov r. The worst thing you can do is just to sit still and take it as it comes. Go out, hustle, and you will be well paid for your efforts and the fact your competitor doesn’t just makes it that much

HAP P Y FE E T i f tgr _ All Burning, Aching and Foot Agony Gone A new discovery— ho please do not. get it mixed up in your mind with the failures you have tried before. They call It Radox and your feet can be so tired and weary—so sore and inflamed that every step you take is torture — your poor feet burn and ache all day long. Just take a footbath to-n'ght with Rad ox -a joyous invigorating foot bath — directions come with each package—and when you walk without misery or distress to-mor-row if you don’t say it is the most wonderful discovery to make ailing feet strong and vigorous—money back. If you have corns take a Radox footbath 3 or 4 nights in succession and then pick out the 'corn roots and all. Get Radox at The Cut Rate Drug store, The Holthou ~e Drug Co., or any live drugstore anywhere.

If 1 TODAY’S CHUCKLE | ♦ (U.R) • Woolwich, England (U.R) — I Thomas Q. t'rlgeen has made | his own coffin. He keeps the I coffin in the dining room and | often sleeps in It to make sure I that it fits. ♦ ♦ easier for you. The thermometers at Vincennes, Indiana, set up a new record Sunday and Monday, registering 109. That's going some in this section of the country. Hope it didn't burn up all the watermelons which has made that city famous the past score of years. The Hooverites in the south seem to be getting scarcer and scarcer as his administration proceeds and one disappointment follows another. It is predicted there will be little if any signs of the great Hoover victory in the solid

south after the returns come in next November. A scientist has found footprints near Thermal Springs in France which he figures are two billion years old. Most of us were too young then to remember the details but even ip those days folks were seeking health at the water resorts where you could put a few "rocks’’ on the red or black. There seems to be a decided turn for the better in business. At least the leading business men and bankers of the country are predicting it and seem quite in earnest. We hope so for after a fellow has battled through one of these 102 degree days to take a loss, he feels about as chipper as a fellow did who was playing the market cn margins last December when the roof fell in. The township trustees have decided not to take up the county library system at this time because of economic conditions. .Taxes are high and the trustees seems to have taken the position that they will not add a dollar they can avoid. We hope that times will enable them to adopt the library system by another year for we are sure the people of the county would appreciate access to the 1 wonderful library now maintaued here. Looks like It's no use to try to understand peole and their voting. Down in Texas ’’Ma” Ferguson is one of the two leading candidates lor governor and will engage in the run off in the next primary in August. Mrs. Ferguson served two years with a record of nothing but pardoning prisoners, is a wet in a dry state but just the same was first in a field of nine. If you can guess the outcome of elections these days you are wise beyond belief. The business-building value of advertising is an established fact, but its pulling power is governed by the way it is used. Continuous advertising has won the confidence of the public. They have become accustomed to buying from dealers who tell about their wares or service through the printed page. Continuous advertising Indicates superior quality and gives uninterrupted service to both buyer and seller. Experience has taught modern dealers that in order to as-| sure their own success they must offer, through the printed page. 1 goods or service that will meet the . users every requirement. The use > of the service of advertising is in--1 creasing because it has grown constantly more dept ndable and t mo;e capable of meeting all def mands made upon it. Every busi- ( noss concern, no matter what their - problems may be, will find that *• continuous advertising is the safer ’ est, surest and best way to assure increasing business. Modern deal4 ors must use the kind of advertisa g ing that serves them best. Advert Using through the printed page e leads the field, standing out with e ever increasing prominence. I

—and the Worst is Yet to Com*e ■W. ■ ■ - ■ * ■ I o J House -RfiUf®] „ OF rue SRinEM POKER clujj —uwbbfa - ? nZ3 "awn Ki ■

BIG FEATURES ' OF RADIO Tuesday's Five Best Radio Features Copyright 1930 by United Press. Central standard time throughout. WABC (CBS network) 4:00 p.m.— New World Symphony. WABC (CBS network) 7:00 p.m. —Henry and George. WJZ (NBC network) 8:00 p.m.— Westinghouse Salute. WEAF (NBC network) 8;30 p.m. —Dixiana WEAF (NBC network) 9:30 p.m. —Vincent Lopez Music. Q Wednesday’s Five Radio Features WEAF —(NBC network ( 7 p. m.— Chicago Little Symphony. WJZ —(NBC network) 7:30 p. m. Camel Pleasure Hour. WOBC (CBS network( —B p. m. — Toscha Seidel. WEAF —(NBC network) 8:30 p. in. Coca Cola Program. WABC —(CBS network ( 8 p. m. — California Melodies. o ♦ 4 TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File ♦ ♦ July 29 —Col Fred Reppert receives cuts on head and a sprained wrist when the handle bars ol his bicycle breaks and gives him a bad "ii< .i'lit" on Fonrtn street. Earl Steal and Ralph Johnson are visiting Carl Moses and Tony Hack man in Saskatchawan, Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Tettman will leave tomorrow on a trip to Niagara Falls. Daughter born yesterday to Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Zerkel. Miss Matilda Berling gives party at Maple Grove park for Miss Loretta Volpert of Peru, Ind. John T. Gillig, architect, Wash-; ington, D. C. is a visitor here. Jacob Eady who is working as an electrician in Detroit is here for a visit. 0 • e Modern Etiquette I By | ROBERTA LEE • (U.PJ ♦ Q. When should dinner invitations be issued? A. One or two weeks in advance. (f What usually determines the most becoming color of a woman’s dress? A. The color of her hair and eyes. Q. When traveling on a train, what things should one be careful to avoid? A. Claiming more service and attention than entitled to, and spread ing luggage all over the aisle for a passerby to trip over. 0 ; 4 ■ —— ■ ■ 4 I Household Scrapbook I By | I ROBERTA LEE 4 4 To Whiten Clothes To whiten clothes, soak them over night in a solution of one quart water to one teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Creole Potatoes Add minced green pepper, a little corn, and a few* lima beans, with strips of pimento, to boiled potato cubes, and cream in the double boiler. Burns Apply a paste of common baking soda and water to burns, or scrape a raw potato and apply as a poul- • tice. —— _. o ,_ __ j BARGAINS:— Bargains in Living Room, Dining Room suits, mati' trasses and rugs. Stuckey and Co., . .Monroe. Our phone number Is 44 168-ts ... — rtr*

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, .11'1 A’ 29. 1930.

EVANSVILLE IN POLITICAL WAR Evansville, Ind., July 29 —(UP) — City Judge Charles Eichel, the “Bossy Gillis" of Evansville, continued his warfare on the city administration today, seeking vengeance for the arrest last Saturday of five of his nine specially appointed bailiffs The bailiffs, who were ordered to make raids on liquor and gambling house by Eichel. were preparing to file damage suits for their arrests. Meanwhile, Judge Eichel consid ered his raids a partial success, as William Scales, one of the two men ; arrested during the raids, was fined SSO and costs in circuit court on a gambling charge. Mayor Frank Greise has announced that lie wants a public airing of the affair and revealed that he ordered the five bailiffs released from jail just before Eichel arrived with writs of habaes corpus. Griese said he did not blame the bailiffs for their actions and that he did not want them prosecuted. I One was charged with carrying concealed weapons and four were charged with impel sonating officers. The present outbreak was one of a series between Judge Eichel and Mayor Griese which started two years ago when Griese defeated Eichel for the county chairmanship. o , OKLAHOMA AT POLLS TODAY (CONTINUED PAGE ONE) vigorous campaigns as candidates for the U. 3. Senate, reviving to some extent the lagging interest in the election. Henry S. Johnston, impeached in 1928; J. C. Jaek Walton, also removed and J. B. A. Robertson, j who successfully withstood imI peachment proceedings — all are staging “vindication comebacks.” The other former governor candidate is Lee Cruce. Other senatorial candidates were Kathryn Van Leuven; former Senator T. P. Gore; Charles J. Wrigtson, wealthy Tulsan; Woodson E. Norvell; Charles W. Harris; E. G. Barnard and William L. McCann. The Republican nomination for senator was conceded to Sen. W. P. Pine, incumbent. He was opposed by J. J. Bebout and Charles J. Benson. Dallas, Tex., July 29—(U.R)—A new campaign wad under way in Texas today, with two gubernatorial candidates in the field for the Democratic nomination in the August 23 primary. Latest figures in the elimination , primary did not change the standings of any of the leading candidates. Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson’s total i crept slowly toward the 250,000 mark and Ross Sterling continued , to lead Clint C. Small by 40,000 k I votep. Latest returns from; 246 t out of 253 counties, with 113 counties complete, gave Mrs. Ferguson 214,385, Sterling 154,003, Small • 116,482. i Morris Sheppard gained a defl- > nite majority in the senatorial • race when late returns gave him 441,G44 votes against 150,301 for Robert L. Henry and 33,291 for C. ’ A. Mitchner. 6 6 6 s i Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia '■ In 30 minutes, checks a Cold the .. first day, and checks Malaria in 4! three days. 666 also in Tablets.

TWO FEATURES AT WINONA LAKE — Byrd Polar Movies and Rev. Billy Sunday to Feature This Week Winona Lake, Ind.. July 29— One of the outstanding features of the Winona Labe Movie program, will be presented next Tuesday night in the Tabernacle. The film, which consists of eight reels, will be the actual photographs of Rear Admiral Byrd and his company of explorers, filmed at the bottom of the earth on his polar expedition. It is a story picture of a daring feat. The picture shows Byrd leaving New York, scenes on shipboard, a storm at sea. and a battle with the Antarctic ice pack. Winona Lake presents pictures every Tuesday night, and this picture is the most outstanding of all pictures coming for the entertainment of the Winona guests. Byrd just recently returned from the south pole, with his company, where he has been exploring for two years. Another outstanding feature of this week's program will be the annual appearance, in ‘he "Billy" Sunday Tabernacle, on Friday evening, August 1, of Rev. “Billy" Sunday. Rev. Sunday gives at least one address here each summer, and on every previous occasion, has attracted the banner crowd of the Chautauqua season. His home is at Winona Lake.

o d I Paul Wooten, Former i Decatur Resident, to Visit 13 Home Towns , f (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) r at Greentown. Howard county, Indiana. today, for a visit with his , mother. j Each of the following towns have ‘ memories for Paul Wooton: Forest, where he was born; Tipton, Pierceton, Peru, Newcastle, Auburn, Ken- . dallville, Mishawaka, Nappanee, . North Manchester, Decatur, Greentown and South Whitley. Mr. Wooton's professional duties! have long associated him with the national capital and the State of Louisiana, but his thoughts of happy boyhood days constantly turn to Indiana. News that he was about due to make his annual Indiana pilgrimage spread to his various home towns with the result he has accepted invitations to speak in three or four of them. On next Sunday morning he will address the Sunday school of the Greentown Methodist church, where his father was once pastor, and on the evening of the same day he will speak in Forest, his birthplace. He will be in North Manchester, where he was graduated from high school, on August 6, to address the Kiwanis Club and also speak at a citizens' meeting in the new high school building. He also has accepted an invitation to' speak before the Lions’ Club at Auburn, August "8. Time will preclude his making a visit to each of his home, towns, but he is likely to motor through i most of them because of the memories each holds for him. Besides writing page one, “bylined” articles each day for the New Orleans Titnes-I’ickayune, Mr. Wooton is Washington represents-; tive of the 16 technical and scientific magazines known as the Mc-| Craw-Hill publications. He directs a staff of seven. But busy as he is, Paul Wooton pauses now and then to remember that his first introduction to newspaper work was

CHiCHESTERS PILIS W THE DIAMOND BRAND. A Ladle®! A®k your Draggrlst / l( TjVA for C'hl-rhea-t.er® Diamond/A\ AuUjQra Brarnd PHI® in Red and Gold(Q) it jßinetallic boxes, sealed with Blue vV tH Su. Take no other. Boy V i J /Gfof your Pru*arUt> Ask for lA W C«l.< HF.«*-TI.RH DIAMOND I M £a BRAND ITLL&f->r 40 years knowr fr as Best, Safe- t, Reliable. Buy Now I | ~—r som BY DKUGGISTS kvekywueH CIDER We will run our eider mill, I located 1 miles west and onehalf mile north of Berne, every Wednesday, until further notice. All apples should tie at the mill not later than 5 p.m. (CST). SCHINDLER & 1 MOESCHBERGER i ■—i mi n-inei—rnw , — PEONIES i Four Popular Varieties [ 3 to 5 eye divisions Edulis Superba rose pink 60 1 Felix Crousse , red, late 95 r Festiva Maxima white, early (10 • Monk. Jules Elie pink, midseason 1.35 List price $3.50 Special price until August 25 j for this collection is : $3,00 „ Delivery will be made in Sept. DECATUR FLORAL CO. [Nuttman Ave. Rhone 100 R

when he gathered personal Hems (1B he carried a P«Per 11,1 what was then the Auburn Courier; that he learned to be a telegraph operator while attending the North I Manchester High School, and hat j llß t after completing high school he bought and operated a bicycle repair shop al South Whitley later selling the shop at a profit of sllßAfter working In several cities in several states as a railroad telegraph operator, Mr. Wooton went to Mexico City, where he became hotel reporter for the American I newspaper, the Mexico O(ty Her|„ld He mastered the Spanish lan Iguage, and lived in Mexico for eight years, spending a portion ot his time as editor of a newspaper published in a mining camp. Then he went to New Orleans to work on the New Orleans Times-Picka-yune. which later was to send him to Washington as Its • representative. Mr. Wooton is a member of the Overseas Writers and has been active in the affairs of the National Press Club. He served two years as chairman of the board of governors of the Press Club, during which period Louis Ludlow, now a

Representative in Congress, was president of the club. COOL WEATHER REIGNS HERE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ideal for road construction work and contractors report the state road 27 and 16 improvements nearing completion. The long drought did considerable damage to gardens and truck patches, but local groceries today had a good supply of fresh vegetables and melons. More rain was predicted for parts of Indiana today and cooler weather was in store for the entire state in the next 24 hours. Chicago, July 29 (U.R)—The midwest, with more than 20 death? reported from its latest July heat wave, felt cool Canadian breezes today, which weather forecasters said would bring "uncomfortably

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low temperatures” by nightfall. Some portions of the central t states endured temperatures of I Bom 10" to 110 degrees during the 1 past three days. The weather bn- I ,-eau said these more normal ternt erut ures -would be ilriven down- i ward to the lower 60’s by northiy winds during the day. The hottest places in the United States yesterday were Conway, i Ark., anil Mexico, Mo., where the mercury In official thermometers rose to 113 degrees. Numerous leadings of above 100 were reported in Illinois. Nebraska, Kentucky, lowa, Indiana, Missouri, Texas, Louisiana and the District of Columbia. Severe crop damage was reported from Kansas, Missouri, Texas and Oklahoma. Lower temperatures today were expected to allow farmers to resume field work, which was interrupted’ because ot the intense heat. O — CONSERVATIVES WIN IN CANADA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Five members of Prime Minister King's cabinet were defeated. The moss prominent of these was Charles A. Dunning, minister of 1 finance. Other cabinet ministers who lost in their ridings were Lucien Cannon. solicitor general, T. A. Creator. minister of railways, Cyrus MacMillan, minister of fisheries, and W. F. Kaye, minister without portfolio. Prime Minister King, whose patty lias been in power for nine years except for a brief interval, was elected from the riding of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, but by a smaller majority than last time. Conservatives made gains throughout the eastern provinces. • Conservative gains in Quebec were attributeri chiefly to resentment of farmers in the eastern sections to the governments policy in allowing importation of New Zealand! ■ butter.

Seats held by minor n artl tHe returns still the United Farmers? Liberal Frogreßßlveg 21 ives 1. and Iml The contestw as\ e 0| spirited in Canada’s hiß ' 0 As a result of tl)e ( . victory it is expected a hi will be drafted in th „ ' chiefly as rt taliation ‘ago duties In the new ln tariff act. One of tlie catnpaltn of the opposition w UB J came into power. paflj ' lie convened amt m , be adopt-d which. partv claimed, would remedy 'th ployment situation fm me( The Liberal government in power since Vl2l, M five-month interval ’ wbe , Meiglian was prime minist A total of 12:; s e at 8 i s t to assure control of parli, the last parliament the had 123, the Conservatl United Farmers 11, gressive 9, Progressives 3, and Independent 2. —— __ Murderer Is Sou Newland, Ind., July <> 9 . The victim of a feud was t day but police still were clue to the whereabouts o ler. Fi ank Patrick. 42, oniot was shot to death outside eral store at Newland Sat •ernoon, and police began Archie Patrie k. 21, no to the dead man. Both members of Kentucky moi milies who moved here w ony several years ago. o Get the Habit—Trade a LOANS TO FARM B Up tc $300.00 ■ Special Time Ply b Franklin Security ■ Phone 23" ■ Over Schafer Stor