Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 297, Decatur, Adams County, 17 December 1930 — Page 3
IZW NATIONS Jhomage TO lIN BOLIVAR fi. Anniversary of ■ Kherator’s" Death K| Observed y. ii. ziila. Dec. 17. —(U.R) billL place of General, hrmrutor of Ven Ecuador, I’ rn. | Bolivia, today com t ||,. jniHh anniversary lh in officially dedicating i' '! National Panthhis ashes are buried. HfHt Juan B. Perez, high nt offi< i tls and members; |p? |Hipb>ni.ilie corps, attended; w *^HL 0)1 v Several statues to other citi s of i^K.| l ii l . v-re unveiled today. |^K. a y. General Juan Vicente general of the for years president presided at eere- ' t"d with the dedi(Be n W Plaza Bolivar, period of silence starting at 1:03 pm. ■T Born in 1783 Bolivar was born here £■ ;?s:t. of a wealthy family. ■ at 47 near Santa Marta. virtually penniless, havhis fortune in flght- — :n II took part in 200 Amer.can, ranging from ■ ;,o, l plains of Venezuela peaks of the Andes a - resume of the outstandachievements of Genwill show Quickly why leader was ttnavoted the official title of by the South Amt r“d ML !«« je are Prepared anything in the ■ODWORKING LINE. LKne work, guming, saw all kinds, and grind■ak build truck bodies auto tops. ■rs from. . . .$35 to $55 ■ feed mill operates ■ day. We also grind ■meal and whole w heat ■on a special machine ■tli installed. ■Give us a trial. _■ P. Kirsch IL__
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I Arntust 7, lM9,dec!H|vely defeatk d «" overwhelming Spatnsh fore J tnt Boyacn, Colombia, breaking n„ ' I"" 11 ' "I Spurn on Nun va Grana •now Colombia), Canada. Spanish .lonJnnt'uj,,"",', ‘"I Anterieu h tth" 1 ' vat caraboho. Venzeneh. I ter one hours fl KhUn(r T| / 1 I , ln, " r *«’ to become th,., find Kcuadof'. Ip”" r’"'""’. IS2 *’ at Peru, General Bolivar def ~ted H I oree of 10 ,000 Spaniards, the hat ; , J being fought entirely by cavalry I with sahrcH. j December 9. is 2 l. at AyacttchoJ General Antonio Jose Sucre I a follower of General Bolivar, won' decisive victory over the Spat, I ards definitely ending the dominotion of Spain in South America, I Santa Marta, Colombia, Dec 17 —(U.Rk Diplomatic repr-sentatlves of six South American republics, i all of which owe their fre dom from Spanish domination to the military genius of General Simon Bolivar, gathered in th s Am ri canized banana town today to commemorate the 100th anniver-l fsary of the dsath of he ‘ Liberal-' or.” The official program was strikingly simple. Two minutes of silence was • observed throughout I the Republic b ginning at 1:03 pm., the hour General Bilivar died. Immediately afterward Pres: dent Enrique Olaya Herrera, who. i accompanied by bis cabinet, had i flown to this city by airplane front Bogota, placed a crown of gold on 1 a tablet erected in the room whore , the “Liberator” passed his last ■ days. In a brief address President Olaya Herrera urged to coop ra-i t.tic.n of all Colombians for the ad-J 1 vancement of the Republic, quot-1 iiig General Bolivar’s last proclam-; , ation. "If my fellow citizens have | consigned me to my grave. I par-1 don them for their action, but God, i grant that I carry with me the con I solatii n that th y may remain i united.’’ i Official ceremonies including the I unveiling of the monument of the ! Fourteen Columns, represent’ng the 14 provinces of Colombia. General Bolivar's body later was J j removed to Caracas, Venezuela, his j birthplace where it lies in a Nat- ' lional Pantheon. ! Lcndon, Dec. 17.—'U.R) —The Brit-1 ish government will play a prom- i ; inent part today hi the London j I commemoration of the centenary , of the death of Simon Bolivar. | The program in commemoration ; i<f the great liberator will open at, 11:15 a. m.. with a requiem mass, at Westminster Cathedral. Cardinal Bourne will preside, j Lord Hoars of Penrith, former i British ambassador of the United States, will be the official repre-; jsentative of the government. | Arthur Henderson will this after-1 ' noon unveil a commemoration tabI let at Apsley House, where B livar ‘met Marquess Wellesley, secretary
DhCATl'fl DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1930.
H,rUo for foreign affairs. The 1H "fiiclal gift of the , h K° v «rnment in honor of ■ ‘"Hvar. Henderson will deliver n phort address which will be respon- •" by Minister Diogenes Esca •‘•He of Venezuela, Minister Curb s lardos of Peru. Minister Gonzalo i '-o t utnbide of Ecuador, Mtimerto • ii'mlagoltla. charge d’affaires of '•"Hvia, and Alfred Michelson, 1 barge d'affaires of Colombia. ' r)p c. 17.- (U.R) Citizens of "v- South American republics met •"‘lay in impressive ceremonies to commemorate the centenary of the death of Simon Bolivar, groat gen I era I and statesman. Hoquiam mass was celebrated at 'he Chapel of the Invalides. Note•l s listeners Included the mlnist-' 'is and elite of Hi Venezuelan, l‘ ruvlan, Colombian. Bolivian and Ecuadoran republics, as well as •d'lisliais Joffre and Lyautey, ac--1 mpanled by General Mariaux, Governor of the Invalides and GenI oral Goraud, mainr :l and gallant Militaiy Governor of Paris. In the afternoon an equally eloquent cert rnony occurred on Montmarie, where a street has long borne (lie name of Simon Bolivar. O — REHO CITIZENS UNMOVED BY TJNSLED LIVES Queer Matrimonial MixUps Fail to Arouse Them By l ari H. Lett ; United Press Staff Correspondent j Reno, Nev., Dec. 17—(UP)—Al-i most anything in tlie matrimonial. Gue caa happen in this gay little' jcity -and frequently does. Nuptial ■ ntan foments of the most singular | natuie are often found and are J viewed with good-natured tolerance by the townsfolk. There is, for example the case of an insurance agent who has been married 19 times and is on the most friendly terms with practically ail | of his ex-wives. This man is not atI tempting to establish a matrimonial ; record, it just happens. The affairs of one couple were Iso involved they both came here j to straighten ’hem out. The pair ' engaged adjoining apartments and told neighbors they were here to I divorce theirrespective spouses. with the intention to marry each I other. She cooked bis meals an I they chummed around together durithe 90-day residence period here. When the residence was established she set ured a divorce from he. - husband her companion here was granted an annulment of his marriage and the two married each i other again. It was learned she had | married a second time under tne I belief her former husband was dead i and then found he was still alive so to avoid entl arrassmen' and i make everything legal they came :o Reno. Ba perhaps the most curious marital entanglement is that conj cerning two families who still live i in perfect harmony directly across j the street from each other. The husband of the first family I fell in love with the wife in the second and yet each loved their own ; children there being two children in I the first and three in the second. ; So the husband divorced his wife, who was perfectly agreeable to the I arrangement, and the wife of the second family divorced her husband and he was satisfied also. The two •oupies exchanged spouses, the man of the first family taking one child I with him and the mother in the sec ond family taking two children with her. The children al! play together and attend the same school. A Chinese woman is here getting 'a divorce from her Occiden‘al hus- | band and a Japanese is establishing his residence to obtain a divorce from his white wife. — o : Ends 63 Years’ Service i’„unn (HR) When Willard D. Tripp retired as chief inspector of settlement and support claims of he Massachusetts State Welfare department recently, he ended an unbroken span of 63 years in the ; ♦ te service. Tripp, 92 years old, was the oldest state official in point of service. — o Caddies Get Even Racine. Wis. -(U.R)- Two 13- ' year-old boys expressed their disgust with the state law requiring that caddies be at least 14 by setting fire to the caddy house at the Racine Country Club recently. The loss amounted to $1,200 of which SSOO was covered by insurance. Voice Revealed Him London—(U.R)— A blind woman identified her husband, John I Shade, accused of bigamy, in court ' •‘y v °i ce - —-I„ Shopping
KAISER’S WIFE CELEBRATES HER 43RD BIRTHDAY Romantic Story of Princess Hermine Ended In Wedding Berlin!] Dec. 17—(UP) Urincess Hermine, wife of the ex-Kalser, who celebrated her 43rd birthday today looks buck upon a career of strange romance. Her marriage to the Kaiser shortly after the empress' death caused a sensation in Germany. It was the < Umax of one of the strangest love romances of recent times. The princess was the third daughter of the ruler in one of those small lomantic principalities where th. quaint atmosphere of medieval Germany was preserved until the dawn of the 20th century. Os all these small principalities, the dothaln of Heinrich XXII of Reuss was perhaps the smallest. The family manor was and old and not too comfortable , castle in Thuringia. Among the visitors who came to j this house were Franz Liszt, the • musician, and Friedrich Preller, the painter. Idealism and the cult of heroes was the dominant note in education of the young princess. • Their Hero But their principal hero was of I flesh and blood and a relative at 'that. It was the young Kaiser, the i husband of an aunt of the princes- . ses. This aunt visited them from time I to time, and told about life at the ' ourt in Berlin. She always handed the girls pictures of her husband. I They tell in love with the Kaiser, j whom they never had seen in per- ; son They saw him for the firsi time at the wedding of the eldest sister Princess Emma, with Count Eric Kuenigl. Hermine was then 16. The personal attendance of the Kaiser was the greatest event in her life. I Hermine seldom saw the hero of her childhood during her later life, i She married Prince Johann Georg i Schoenaich Carolath a member of the landed aristocracy in Silesia. ; at 19. Son Her Cupid j Her passion for the Kaiser, however, never died. It was aecentnatI cd by sympathy for him in his exile. She talked about him frequently with her children. So it happened H at her youngest son, Ferdinand ’ at nine, secretly wrote a letter ot sympathy and admiration to Doorn
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The Kaiser was touched and sent ' the child a letter and a gift. The, mother replied aim tne Raiser's | | answer was an invitation to come, . to Doorn • Hermine ai lved In Doorn wit!) | , her five < hlldren on July 3, 1922.1 The Kaiser received her. wearing; Ins grey uniform. They were en- J gaged three days later. When the Kaiser asked her to ■ he<mine his wife, the princess first voiced some objections, pointing to the fact that she was the mother of five children, and that she planned to travel. 1 Now she spends ten months each i j year in Doorn. Since the climate is i hi.rmfnl to her, she spends the rest of her time in Germany. In the summer she goes to Silesia. She is also a frequent guest at German water- ’ Ing places. ; Many rumors are circulated about her It has been alleged that she; I pent large sums of money on pro-' pagnnda. A meeting with General' I Hans von Seeckt at Kissingen this! lall aroused much comment as did i her visit to Nuernberg where she 1 Ils'! a talk with the "national social-■ ‘st" leader Adolf Hitler. However. I Princess Hermine’s political activi-' tk-s are not taken seriously. 0 Classes to Probe Relations Burlington, Vt. —(U.R) - Relations i ( between freshmen and sophomores at various colleges and ; uirvet sities in New England, New , York ami Quebec will be invest!- ( gated soon by members of the I junior and senior classes of Uni- | versify of Vennont. r o War on D’: unken Drivers . I Hartford, Conn. — (U.R) —Drunken . 1 drivers would be treated as felons lit Robbins B. Stoeckel, state com-j , ’ missioner of Motcr Vehicles, had j his way. He asserted in a recent I 1 speech that he believed penalizing . of the offense as a felony would go , far towaid solving the problem. o Cops Monopolize Crash t New Britain, Conn. (U.R) —When -| pciice investigated a recent motor 1 vehicle accident here th y found e it almost an exclusive police as-, •* fair. A policeman's brother was. knocked down by a car in which a 1 policeman was a passenger and '' two police sergeants in another ‘J automobile were chief witnesses. | O Dies of Strange Paralysis Rochester, N. Y.— (U.R) —An in-! jury received to his left arm while I [. participating in gymnastics devel , eped into a rare form of paralysis I y | termed “post-operative tetany’’ and it. cans 1 d the death of 13-year-old d Michael Bonano. if i o iJGet the Hahit—Trade at Home.!
LAMONT LOOKS FOR RESUMPTION OF PROSPERITY Commerce Secretary* Annual Report Reflects Confidence For Future . — Wushington. Dec. 17 (UP) Con Mi.lently looking to the future and a otilimiation of the forward murcti of inslness, Secretary of Commerce Lamont predicted tonight that when! Hie present recession is over the up-1 I ward movement in industrial efficiency and production per man will! | be resumed. His report to President Hoover on ! the status and progress of Amort- ‘ I can industry and commerce during 'the fiscal year 1930 revealed dear- ; ly and concisely the effects of Lie ; stock market crash of a year ago. ■ I.nt pointed out that ‘'practically ' no cuis in wages have been made as a rseuit of the recession." j Describing the advance In elfi jciency of production as the fumla 'mental cause of tlie rise in the stan ’ ; dards of living which has characterized every decade of our nation td existence, Lamont said: ( “This progress in the production per man during recent years is conelusive evidence that the advance tn economic activity lias not been wholly or even chiefly a mere upswing in the business cycle to be followed by an equally great down H eard movement. "It has marked a permanent ach ’ ievement and when the present re I cession is over the same upward movement will unquestionably he re : sumed." Employment during the year de • declined 3.7 per cent, the Secretary I said, while wages fell off 5 3 per' I cent, the difference being accounted for by tlie prevalence of part-time I work. I Tlie cost of living declined about I 5 per cent between November 1929. land June 1930, according to the report. o Lack of Funds May Stop Return of Man — Hammond, Ind., Dec. 17. -(U.R) : The barren condition of Lake 'county's treasury may save Albert iGrauman, all ged swindl r, from prosecution on a SIO,OOO swindle cha ge h re, it has been revealed. | Grarman was arrested in St. Lou's. He escaped from the Lake I county jail in Un wn Point April
126. 1927. Zen McNair, G iry realtor, who I puul charged Grauman with a 310,-I 1000 swlmll . has refused to stand Ithe expense of returning him to| I Indiana, authorities said. Mi N'nlrl I said lie had been threatened |».-1 i persons believed to be acenmpllce.i! |O| Granmtin. and feared licit pros ; Ution would endanger his l ie. —— 0...— — Hearst Manager (Riits N w' York, Dec. 17. (U.R) Col. ■ ! Frank Knox, general manager ofi the Hearst chain of newspapers,' has t ndered his resignat'on to W. 11. Hearst, tn take i (Tort Immed i lately. Announcement of the r signatlon' | was contained in the f (lowing Statement Issued by Col. Knox: "I have tendered to Mr. \V. 11. j Heatst my resignation as genaral manag r of his newspapers. Mr. 1 Hearst and 1 had r: ached a difference of opinion as to methods of 1 management and since our difference in vjews could not be reconidled my withdrawal was the api propriate rem-dv fi r the situation." o Cats Are Blamed Pittsburgh (U.R) William H. | Tenser. merehandi e broker tn ' h’s suit for divorce claimed his vite, Gertrude F. Tenser, permitt- | .‘d cats to sleep in bed witli th tn. Mrs. Tenser charged Hint her husband was loud of one of the cats iml culled the feline his “lucky >iece.” She denied she ever threatened him with a butcher’s knife. — o As» in Biblical Limet One writer s:i\s ”Tlie iiinsl noble and honorable the .lews were w ont to be mounted on rraditiotmlly Marx made tin* jour ney from Nazareth Io Bethlehem mo , into<l on an ays ,, Q Negroes in World War There were 42 divi inns of Atm r ican troops during die World war. Os these 4D were white dhid<>ns. and two. the Miiel.v second mid Xinet.v third were nemo divisions Nugget of Wisdom Os nil fruitless errand* semllnji i a tear to look after a da\ that Is I gone is the irni’Jo'- ■■ 1 ■ ri m .* i.* - - I! LOANS TO FARMERS | Up to S3OOOO ;; ' Special Time Tian K Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. store H Dechtur, Ind. ■ jjjuhw. 'AKwtagigcyq vi
PAGE THREE
Stocks Steadier Today New York, Dec. 17. U.R) Stocks j pr Honied a steadier appearance nt ithe opening on the New York .-leek i exchange today. Trading wa.i ' litiily netlv with n few lark’' ' blocks Appearing. The larpesl sab* was 9Ji(W) fairillutd. which dropped to a new luw iat off 1, from the previous j close Radio Corporation equalled I its I w lor th present share* at 12'4, off >, on 2,009 shures. ..... 0-.— *- — Awarded Gibbs Prize Chapel Hill, N. C. (UR) Dr. William Ik Berniere MiuNlder, Ke--Imm research profeswor of pharmacology and a leading authority lon diseases of the kidney, has been awarded the Gibbs Prize for Hi search by the New York AcadI tuny of Medicine. Daughter Substitute Is Not Desired No daughter equals your own and no remedy isas good asyour iwn triecl and genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Toning up liver, starting bile flowing and relieving constipation, there is none better than Carter’s. Resent substitutes. Take Carter’s. Red lx»tt les. All druggists. Take x irter’s.
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