Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 257, Decatur, Adams County, 30 October 1930 — Page 5
•"WISH STILL Sp«6WN6 OVER CONTROL P Kent Attitude of DmConference Stirs K*Cp Arguments ! - njt Ort. 30 (IP) When 'I l\ ... , of Au/li BjL numiimed the resiHU particularly i’s which ‘ • a ,1.11 passes but. some li/e r S conference, ami on Hi'' same ' luy ' ;0(l(| Useful Service j \ K. iiipthoriie, Bishop |^K tlt . i<: addi'ssing the Dio- ■ Kt. ■ ■ ■ .‘i Stafford, <le- , oiii,' 'h eonfei em e oil servh e by makChristian reli- * ■'t . , o| more prohibit s I UK*' ■ ■"i ,iliu, "l s, ‘ x ST \\, wan; to resell ' * of thought an i / imo which some of J degraded ■ l .a:’l,'iii flint the home .... , .. the lioni" X q and standar A • lifedong and with one woman m other said that the cont 'r- ' ne. ML ami nimelfishness in and unmarried alike. Glory of Home B ..I- I of sex. the whole ' . . th ~ • on convention of the School I nion ■ .. declared S. .. mldressing the con- ■ flippancy. ■ :• a . • ’rubble licit sex in
i 3S dFWI S i ■ < sStS '■ 'i >■ *■ 9 Women ■Prefer This Parlor Furnace (■ While the beauty of the new Glow-Boy makes an instant appeal to housewives, it has exclusive £■ features of convenience and cleanliness that are £■ equally important. For example, Glow-Boy, with its Heat Amplifying Casing Shield has such -‘Upfe: a S r e*t fuel and heat circulating capacity that it I will ordinarily keep the entire house warm with i only two firings each 24-hour day. No coal is spilled when firing and no ashes scattered in removal. No smoke can puff into the room. And —what is vital in a home where there are chil|BE —Glow-Boy does away with cold floors and the resulting danger of illness. See the Glow- (■ Boy in our store. i I I 'I Schafer Hdw. Co. I Schafer Block
struetton be given indiscriminately." T lie Rev. A. D. Belden speaking on the moral and religious ideals of adolescence said that love inukIng illins were bud for the adolescent as destroying their innocence and prematurly arousing their par. sions. , “Calflove," he said “is nothing to be feared. It Is almost always intensely pure and clean, and nonphysical." — _ , DEMOCRATIC t County Ticket 1 ♦ .... Congress—i Claude G. Hal). i Joint State Senator: Thurman A. Gottschalk i Joint Representative: George 1., Saunders ! For Judge—- • Dore B. Erwin For Prosecutor— Nathan Nelson ( For Clerk— Milton Werling For Treasurer—- ! John Wechter For Sheriff— Burl Johnson , County Surveyor: Ralph Roop. For Assessor— John Felty Commissioner, Ist District: Frank O. Martin. Commissioner, 3rd District: 11 Dennis Striker. I County Councilmen: William Baumgartner, August Conrad, M. Kirsch, Henry Dehner, Benj. Biting, James Kenney, Evert Banter. For Trustee (Wash. Twp.)— [ T. R. Noll. Democratic Political Calendar Following is the complete Democratic political calendar: Oct. 30 — West Root township (Monmouth high school) with Herman Gillig, Lewis Armstrong and , Hon. Claude Ball as speakers. , Oct. 31—Meeting at Democratic headquarters, Decatur, with number of short addresses by candidates and others. Smoker following speaking. o Shot Over Watermelon Williamsburg Va„ — (UP) — Ben Robinson. Jr., Negro, is serving a five-year prison sentence for shooting Ernest Taylor, Negro whom Robinson claimed had cheated him out of five cents in a watermelon purchase. o— Get the Habit—Trade at Home
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1930.
REBEL LEADER i IS WELCOMED 1 Brazil “Paulistas** Greet President In Great Ceremony at Capitol * Sao Paulo, Oct. 30 —(U.R)— The traditional stronghold of the "Paulistas,” who have controlled ' Brazilian national politic* for years, gave a rebel leader from the powerful southern states of the country a hero's welcome when Dr. Getullo Varga® arrived here yesterday. The forces against which the revolution was launched are centered in Sao Paulo. It is the home of deposed President Washington Luis, now a prisoner in Copacaliana fortress in Rio De Janeiro, and of President-elect Julio Prestos, who took refuge in the British consulate here. Thousands of Paulistas lined the streets, unmindful of a torrential rain, to greet Dr. Vargas. He was cheered wildly and greeted by numerous military leaders. Dr. Vargas proceeded to Sao Paulo leisurely and it was not definitely known when he would proceed to Rio De Janeiro, where he will become president of the nation. It was considered likely that he would continue on the same special train that brought him , here. The march of revolutionary . troops from the southern battlefront to Sao Paulo was axcomplished slowly but without serious difficulties except for several "false attacks' by counter-revolutionary forces. The Caucho cavalrymen stragg- . led along in groups of from two to n hundred, making their leisurely , way along the mountain roads and camping at the roadside at night Leaving Ribeira Sunday night, the correspondent’s automobile was cought in what was supposed to be an attack by government sympathizers. There was a bur-it ' of fire —some 50 shots—from a pill ’ top which was hidden by darkness. The bullets spattered in the roadway and did no damage. The sergeant commanding the dei tachment believed the attack was i from a retreating Paulista force ■ and he immediately ordered his i young soldiers to open fire with a I machine gun. The sergeant return- • ed to Ribeira for reinforcements. Tile civilians in the party also were forced to turn back until the t troans decided there was no furth- ■ er danger from the hilltop and that the shots probably were fired by celebrating Paulistas evacuated the town on Oct. 11th, after several heavy artillery volleys, and on the 12th a Paulista plane bombed the town, on the erroneous belief that it had been occupied by rebels. On the night of the 12th the Paulistas learned the rebels had not occupied Ribeira—.which is the second most important point on the Sao Paula-Parana border —so they returned and re-occupied it, bolding (possession until hostilities ceased.
PRISON SEEKS APPROPRIATION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) elude addition of second floors on two factory shops. $20,000; a new cellhouse, $216,000. It was explained that there are now 500 cells for 2,300 prisoners. Os the number of cells, 300 are individual, but now quarter two men each Temporary dornrtories, without barred windows, house 374 prisoners. The cellhouse under construction will accommodate 340 men, the trustees reported. An item of SIB,OOO was asked for enlargement of the small dining room. RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT. Class No. 4 Os Salem M. E. Church We, the committee appointed to craft resolutions of respect to our departed sister, Bertha Brookhart v hose death occurred on October 19, 1930, would submit the following. Whereas, it has pleased Him to call our beloved classmate to His home above, it is but fitting that we bear testimony to her willingness and faithfulness and express in this manner our deep sorrow to her stricken husband, children and parents, for them it is an irreparable loss. Resolved: That we extend to her family and friends our heartfelt condolence in this their time of bereavement and commend them to, the love and mercy of God. Resolved: That the resolutions be read before the Sunday School and a copy be sent to the family and be recorded in the minutes and a copy be sent to a daily paper. Hazel Miller Agnes Carver Mary Merriman. .— __—o- — Hays Assures Ex-Actors Saranac Lake N. Y. — (UP) - Patients at the $1,000,000 National Variety Artists’ sanitarium have no need to worry about the future of the building which lay idle for a year before it was opened last summer. Will H. Hays, motion picture magnate told them recently. Hays said the moving picture industry is behind the movement to maintain the institution.
Felice Chief’s Son Is Taken In Raid Fort Wuyue, Ind., Oct. 30.-(U.R) —Fred Brown, son of tiie chief of police of Columbia City, was taken In a raid by federal agents near Blue Lake. Federal men confiscated a quantity of Canadian beer, whisky and giu, Fred Brown, son of Harvey Brown, was in charge of Brown Inn, a roadhouse near the lake resort. MEDICAL SCHOOL ADOPTS STRIP FILM FOR WORK Associate Dean at Philadelphia College Makes Report Philadelphia, Oct. 30. — (U.R) — Strip film photography has been adopted by the Temple University School of Medicine as the best visual means of teaching medicine. Dr. Frank H. Krusen, associate dean of Hie school, urged the universal adoption of this method in a report. Stiip film photography, as distinguished from motion pictures, is the making for projection purposes of single photographic exposures, usually in series, on strips of standard motion picture film, Dr. Krusen explained. He said he selected this method of visual education because it is the most economical; the film requires but little storage space; they are uuabpeakable; duplicates are easily made at small cost; pictures can be made by an amateur. "Motion pictures have a great jirany advantages over other forms of lecture illustration,” Dr. Krusen said. “There are, however, some disadvantages. Skilled technicians are required to manufacture them. They keep moving at a constant speed when tiie lecturer may desire to go slowly to discuss a certain point. ; “The ideal, of course, is the slow motion picture, which will give the, student time to grasp each detail. Slow motion pictures, however, are extremely expensive and difficult to make." The camera used at the Temple School of Medicine is small enough to be carried in one’s pocket, yet. takes perfectly clear pictures and can be used by the rankest amateur, Dr. Krusen said.
TURKS OBSERVE BIRTHDAY OH NEW REPUBLIC Seventh Anniversary of Present Regime Finds Many Changes Istanbul, Oct. 29 —(UP) —Practically the whole population of Turkey stopped work today to celebrate he seventh anniversary of the Turk gh republic. Thousands of school children put rway books and pens and almost forgot their compulsory efforts to learn the western alphabet, one of the principal reforms (introduced by Mustapha Kemal Uasha since he was proclaimed first president. Remarkable changes have been brought about in the country’s customs, habits, traditions and dress in that time. President Kemal has been responsible so rthe majority if them but. unlike King Amanulah of Afghanistan who attempted o emulate him, Kemeal introduced he alterations gradually. The westernization of Turkey is .low almost complete .More and norew omen are bobbing thei rhair md wearing the latest styles in nothing and millinery. The former iharacteristic red fez is an unusual right. The men have replaced it with the derby and the soft hat. Naional costume have been discarded tor European lounging suits and tux idos. In official buildings the writing of Turkish scrip: is forbidden. Letters and documents are written on American and British typewriters ( which minor adjustments have been nade to provide for Turkish accents and punctuation. The law demands that everybody shall learn he alphabet and the majority of the population are willing students Only the natives in outlying country districts still are clinging to old nethods and customs. There veiled vomen and picturesquely garbed , nen can be seen, but they even are" ■■hanging. Women are coming into the lime light of political, economic and so vial affairs more and more. They . won the right to vote at municipal elections early this year and they now are fighting hard assisted bv ' many political leade-s, to gain tho vote for governmental elections. —. o •— Which It Would Be Know thyself, even if it is hard to believe. —Toledo Blade.
BANKS HOLDING MILLIONS THAT I ARE FORGOTTEN Orphaned Dollars Waiting Patiently For Rightful Owners Albany N. Y. Oct. 20 —(UP) — Between one and two million orphaned dollars are lying in banks all over New York State awaiting their rightful owners. ; Some of them have been waiting 1 patiently for many years. Some of them may wait forever. Thousands of them were deposited by mining companies and investment concerns that probably I went out of existence years ago. They are all listed among the dormant batik accounts published periodically in the State Banking Department bulletin.
You Can VOTE for These Men Place an x in the Circle with the Rooster They will serve you honestly, efficiently. They are your friends and you can help maintain the high standard for Adams County public officials by helping to elect them. Tuesday, Nov. 4 —is election day and as a public spirited citizen you’ll go to the polls Id cast your vote. The candidates on the Democrat County ticket solicit your support CLAUDE C. BALL DORE B. ERWIN For Congress For Judge Adams Circuit Court NATHAN NELSON Thurman Gottschalk For Prosecuting Attorney For State Senator GEORGE SAUNDERS MILTON WERLING For State Representative For County Clerk JOHN WECHTER BURL JOHNSON For County Treasurer For County Sheriff JOHN FELTY RALPH ROOP For County Assessor For County Surveyor DR. J. C. GRANDSTAFF FRANK MARTIN For County Coroner For Co. Commissioner 2nd Dist. DENNIS STRIKER For County Commissioner 3rd Dist. For County Council—William Baumgartner, August Conrad, M. Kirsch. Benj. Eiting. Henry Dehner, James Kenney. Evert Ba These men are unopposed. . j>. 1 The Democrat candidates pledge you the best in their power to administer their respective office in an economical and satisfactory manner and each and everyone of them will appreciate your vote next Tuesday. As friends they solicit your vote for the Democrat state and tow nship candidates. Democrat Central Committee Ws In The Air-A DEMOCRATIC VICTORY Political Advertisement
During the World War a public school shirted a war cheat fund. It now lion forgotten lu a bank The bulletin list® iu> unclaimed deposit of "Memorial Hospital Workers," and another by the "Standing Committee on Palestine Charities.” Several athletic societies have been formed, collected money, banked it, and —forgotten about it. One of them was the "Bronx Garden Association." Another New York bank carries the unclaimed deposit of a baroness, while etill anoUter has a J 303 Class Fund. There are hundreds of estates listed, with apparently nobody aware of the money deposited Ln the name of the administrators. The State Banking Department has all of these unclaimed accounts listed alphabetically, and a source of clerks are kept busy checking up on inquiries from al! over the country. With trust companies and state l«.n.ks, an account becomes dormant after it has lain inactive lor five years, and with savings banks, after 20 years.
Dore B. Erwin Democratic Candidate for Judge of the Adams Circuit Court My only platform and promise is my oath —to faithfully and impartially perform the duties of the office to the best of my ability and understanding. I respectfully solicit the support of all voters. Dore B. Erwin Political Advt.
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