Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 82, Decatur, Adams County, 6 April 1931 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller . ..Free, and Gen. Mgr.! A. R. Holthouae Sec'y & Rue. Mgr. i Dick D. Heller Vice-President Entered at the Poatoftlce at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter Subscription Rates Single copies $ .02, One week, by carrier 101 One year, by carrier 3.00 One month, by mall 35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail „ 1.76 One year, by mail .. 3.00 Oh* year, at office 3.00 Pr ices quoted are within first and; second zones. Elsewhere 33.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Advertising Representati BCREERER, INC. o 6 Eat* Wacker Drive. Chicago M 3 Lexington Avenue. New York Charter Member The Indiana League of Home Dailies Work breeds work and don't you know that every job started produces two or three more. We need the up-and-doing spirit. Easter is over and spring is here and there is much to do and the more enthusiasm we all put in to it, the better it will be for every one. The rains of the past few days, general over the country, have helped in numerous ways and have made farmers take hope. Indica tiuua at this early season are very good and every one is hoping for ;> tweak all around. If you like excitement you might run up to Chicago tomorrow, sit on the side lines and watch them elect a mayor. If you can get a good seat it ought to be more interesting than a world championship battle. This is the clean-up season and there is plenty to keep every one busy the next several weeks. There is painting and papering, the house and the yard, the store fronts, new awnings, repair of buildings, inside i and out and just a thousand things. 'Letts get at it. Now we hear complaints of high waters and losses therefrom. If it isn't- one thing its another. We go from drouth to flood in a few days, we drop from plenty to a condition of want and depression in a month, we are either up or down it seems. Lets hope we can leap out of all of it. Henry Ford is said to be planning farms for his workmen to opeiate in their time off. That may oe fine for them but we thought the idea was to grow less crops and ' we can’t see how a few pe-.ple I who have fairly good jobs earn a little more that comes from another! class of workers, is going to help very much generally. Wheat and corn actually went up two or three points Saturday. Now that's real steamboating. Don't . know what caused it but if they will keep whatever did it going and get prices up to where the farmer tan make an earning this year, they will be making a real step • forward in bringing back prosperity for its an assured fact that until the farmer begins to prosper, no one will, QUICK REUEF FROM CONSTIPATION That is the joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 20 years, and calomela oldtime enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, just a healing, soothing vegetable laxative safe and pleasant. No griping is the "keynote” of 1 hese little sugar-coated, olive-colored Liblets. They help cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth” —hadtbreath—a dull, tired feelingsick headache--torpid liver—constipation. you should find quick, sure arid pleasant results from ore or ' of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. .Thousands take them every nr.-hi to keep right Try them. 15c, 20c, CJc.

I ‘Thirteen appointments to worry Governor Leslie", reads a. headline, but we expect he has greater worilea. It is more than probable that Ihe will be able to find people to take every one of the state Jobs iwithout offering any bonuses. A state official recently showed us I seventeen hundred applications for 1 twenty-three appointments and said] he had that many verbal requests j | lor places, so we imagine that none j of the state jobs will ht»ve to be ' declared vacant because of any inability to find people to till them. , One of tlie many tributes paid to Knute Rockne by admiring and loving friends quoted the great coach as giving, among important details, of foot ba! 1 success, "to be mental-| ly keyed “P, but physically relax-j ed." There is something there to think about. It applies to successl in other lines than football. It seems to point out one fault of many Americans today—they are keyed up all over. Others — the “dumb” —are relaxed all over. If we understand Rockne's statement, it implies being mentally alert, with i whatever intelligence one possesses on the job and ready to function. but without the tension that makes worried scowls, drumming fingers, restless movement, wasted energy. Alertness and poise—it's an ideal combination. Remember, during the war, when we were urged to “buy a bale of, i cotton" at 10 cents a pound, and! the President set the example? j There have been unofficial suggestions of the same sort lately, to relieve a market overstaffed with cotton. And William Wrigley. Jr., the.big gum and swimming man, has volunteered to take his share. He will buy 100,000.000 pounds, which is 200.000 bales, at market rates up to 12 cents a pound. When j lie made his announcement, cotton stood about half a cent lower than that. The financing procedure 'shows ingenuity and shrewdness. In behalf of his company, Mr. Wrigley has organized a Cotton Invest- • ment Fund which will use for this I purpose money collected in the cotton states from chewing gum sales. Thus the cotton belt will buy its 1 own cotton for Mr. Wrigley in an | easy and pleasant way. The plan, the gum king explains, is "in no sense an advertising stunt or gamble." Very likely it is meant - las a public service to the cotton | ! states. At the same time it looks like good business. Practical philanthrophy often serves both purposes. o * Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE ♦ (U.pj ♦ A Paint Remover Dissolve 20 parts of caustic soda I (98 per cent) in 100 parts of water, (and mix this with 20 parts of min oral oil. and stir /constantly until | thoroughly mixed. Then add while [stirring, 20 parts of sawdust, and lif possible pass this solution through a paint mill to get a uni loini mixture. Apply the paste moist. The Food Chopper i To brighten and sharpen the knives of the food chopper, take a ■ piece of scouring soap, or small (bits left from the cake of scouring soap, and run through the food chopi|per in the same manner as a vegtJtable or piece of bread. Then wash ! thoroughly to remove all of the grit. Eyebrows , 1 The growth of the eyebrows can | be stimulated by applying pure olive oil with, a sr..all brush before rejtiring every night. o 1 ♦- —— — — ♦ Lessons In English Words often misused: Do not say. I “Such actions are nothing else but folly." Say. nothing else than folly. i Often mispronounced: Cayenne I (pepper.) Pronounce ka-en, a as in i "day,” or ks-en, 1 as in “kite;’’ accent last syllable. Often misspelled: Rhetoric; observe the rh. Synonyms: Reconcile, reunite, pacify. Word study: "Use a v.ord three times aid it is yours." Le' us inicrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Dispensation; act of dispensing. especially the distribution oi jgood and evil by God to man. “It | was by Ihe all-powerful dispensaHons of Providence.” — o W. H. M. S. Pancake Supper, M. E. Church. 82-31

t BIG FEATURES * OF RADIO « • Monday's 5 Best Radio Features Copyright 1931 by UP. All CST. WJZ (NBC network) 5:15 p. m. 1 |—-Mormon Choir. W-EAF (NBC network) 6 p. m. — I The Grenadiers. WABC (CBS network) 7:15 p.m. I —Barber Shop Quartet. WEAK’(NBC network) 10 p. m. —Florence Richardson Orchestra. WABC (CBS network) 10.15 p.m. i—Morton Downey. o Tuesday's 5 Best Radio Features Copyright 1931 by VP. All CST. WEAR (NBC network) 5:45 p.m. —Flack and Gold Room Orchestra. WJZ (NBC network) 6:15 p. m. —Gus Van and Trio. WABC (CBS network) 6:30 p.m. | —Feature Program WEAF (NBC network) 7:30 p.m. —Coon Sanders and Orchestra. WABC (CBS network) 7:45 p.m.l — Lee Morse and Orchestra. 1 o f ""TWENTY YEARS _ li' AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File April 6—33.500 mortgage on the Presbyterian church is burned with due and proper ceremony. Mr. Green and Miss Haag deny report of their marriage. Commissioners grant five liquor licenses in Decatur three in other parts of county and three wholesale ■ [ licenses. Prof. Marcus Bell of Boston opens [ M. E. conference at Kokomo. Blshapi Hughes is in charge. Four cars a week are now beirgi ( ibuilt at the Decatur Motor Car com--1 pany. i Acts of 1911 arrive at clerks office I Mr. and Mrs. Will Colchin adopt baby girl at Erie. Pa. Miss Golda Gay begins duties as! deputy in the city treasurer's office. | Miss Fanny Heller is visiting the I Dick Miller family in Indianapolis. | There are nine applicants for jobs | of city mail carriers. The People and Gerke shoe store presents an attractive Easter wiu(dow. o 4 __ q Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE « (U.PJ •! Q. When not using the knife and i fork, where should one place them?! A Across the plate at the right ’ side. Q. Is it more fashionable to have I au after-theater supper in the home | of the hostess than it is in a restaurant? I A. Yes. Q. Hou long does an ordinary formal call last? A. Three-quarters of an hour. —o arrivals Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cable of Wayndale are the parents of an eight and one-half pound girl baby, born Sunday morning, April a. 1931. The baby has been named Audrey Marie. A six-year-old son, Claude Allen, is the only other child in the family. Mrs. Cable was formerly Miss Cleo Beavers of this city. Mr. and Mrs. George Saal. CreigtIton Avenue. Fort Wayne, are the parents of a nine pound boy baby born Friday morning at the Lutleran hospital in Fort Wayne. The 'baby is the first child in the family and has been named Ge.orge Junior Mrs. Saal before her marriage was I Miss Mildred Marchand of this city.' , I o KIDDIES ENJOY ANNUAL FROLIC - I IN« T e '’ROM PAGE ON9. led an aptitude for tag or throwing ' Easter eggs, rather than rolling them. 1 White House historians have ’ been unable to ascertain the origin, of the historical annual game so; | children. • ' The eldest attache there-says I that he remembers as a child in the Giant administration how hie I 1 mother took him to the White J ' House egg rolling. He says it was looked upon as an old custom 'then, and White House officials believe it is as old as the White * House itself. They claim it must hUve been inV augurated as far back as the Adams administration, when the first . lady. Abigail, hung her washing in the east room so the neighbers , could not see it. ' The game consists of rolling an Easter egg down a slope, going 'down after it. climbing the hill again and then rolling it down again. Easter egg hunts, which are staged for children in most other sections of the country, arc tin , known here. There are no prizes, . and each child must bring his own - V'ggs. • 9 Ice cream and cake will W? ftirn- . ished the young guests, and the 1 gates of the private south grounds t are to be open from 10 a. in. until . 5 p. m. in IRmor of the occasion. The President and Mrs. Hoover celebiatwd Easter yesterday, al- . tending two church services and ( going for an automobile ride late

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. APBIL 6, 1931.

in the day. The first service was held at sun rise at Arlington Mem . orial Am pint heat re, tomb of the unknown soldier. It was under the auspices of the Knight Templar. Later Mr. and Mrs. Hoover went to . the new Quaker meeting house. CONVICTED IN ELK HILLS OIL SCANDAL CASE , (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE' was convicted. No telephones connect El Paso and Three Rivers. Washington, April 6. —<U.R) — Punishment came near for Albert B. Full and Henry M. Blackmer today when the appellate court of tlie District of Columbia affirmed decisions and sentences imposed upon them more than a year ago. Fall, now an old man living in semi-seclueion on his New Mexico ranch, his health ifroken. is under sentence to serve a year in prison and pay a fine of SIOO,OOO for allegedly accepting a bribe from Edward L. Doheny sf lais Ange- [ les. He was accused of having Lonveyed to Doheny I nreturn for a . ! 3100,000 bribe the valuable Elk . I Hills oil rights in California. Kt [that time he was secretary of the ; interior in the Harding cabinet ( and high in the councils of his party. o ; LEGION MAKES GAIN IN STATE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I — —. — I [ weeks. i Adams post has been one of the ( [leading posts of the state, according to state and district records. At pre- , pent a local member, Rev. H. H. . Ferntheil holds a state office in the , 'organization and another local LcIgionnaire, Paul H. Graham, past , post commander is being boomed as a likely candidate for state com- ( mander. _o Martha Seliemeyer Has Leading Dramatic Part J Mias Martha Seliemeyer. former- , ly of this city, and student of the University of California in Los , Angeles, appeared as a leading feminine character in Eugene I O Neill's comedy satire. "Marco : ' Millions" which was presented in | Los Angeles, recently by the mem- 11 ' beri of tire University Dramatics ' Society. ! The presentation was a satire lon travels of Marco Polo, and 1 Miss Seliemeyer portrayed the ' | part of' Donate, the mediocre love |of Marco Polo. Miss Seliemeyer [ is quite talented and has taken part in many of the University activities. The play is one of the most spectacular ever given to the American stage, and has been presented but few times even by professional organizations on account of its difficult setting and stage effects. Included in the list of patrons of the play were Upton Sinclair, Mayor and Mrs. John C. Porter, Regent Margaret Sartori. Rabbi Herman Lissauer, Rabbi Edgar Magnin. Director ami Mrs. Ernest Carroll Moore. Regent and Mrs. E. A. Dickson. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Nagel. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Conway, Judge and Mrs. F. Ambrose, Mr. and Mrs. Al Christie, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Mac Lean, Deati and Mrs. Charles Rieber, Dean and Mrs. Marvin L. Darsie. Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Janss, Mr. and Mrs. Harold James. Mr. and Mrs. Alec B. Francis. Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore Brcwn. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Pich- | el. MrM. and Mrs. George L. East- ! man. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Toberi man. Dr. and Mrs. Alfredo G. ‘ I Castiles, and Mr. and Mrs. J. I i Boyce Smith. p HOSPITAL NOTES Julius Q DeVolder, Decatur : Route- 1 was admitted to the Adams , County Memorial .Hospital for medi- j cal treatment, | Jilverta Huerta. Decatur. Route 9, I :is a medical patient at the local hos- ' ! pita). I William Murtaugh. 431 Mercer avenue, was admitted to the Adams (County Memorial Hospital today for medical treatment. ’' Lorrin Troutner, Berne, under-1 ‘ went a major emergency operation this morning at the local hosiptal. 0 Card of Thanks We wish in this manner to ex\press our sincere thanks and appreji lution to the neighbors and friends j '[for their many kind acts, the choir ’ and the minister for his consoling (words, and aTTthose who so kindly ' assisted us during the illness and I'deat.h of our mother, Mrs. Cather--1 ine E. Helm. i Mrs. Lulu Swearingen Mr and Mrs. Charles Partlow William Helm. o Lumber Sent to England i St. Joe', Ark.. April 6. —"U.K —Dos- ■ wood timber is being shipped from ? the mountain forests of Arkansas > to England to be made into shuttles I for clothing weaving factories. Before finding this outlet for dogwood ■(timber. Arkansas timber owners ■ made the wood into golf tees, collar I buttons and other small wooden : products.

Mr. and Mrs. Dan Aughenbaugh ( and Motia returned to their home in Fort Wayne this afternoon after spending Easter with Mrs. Aughen- a baugli's parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Magley. t Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gibson and v daughter Lucile of Saginaw, Mich, igan. visited friends in Decatur and Wren. Ohio. Sunday. Mr. Gibson was formerly a manuel training j teacher in the local schools. Mrs. Julius Erhart and son Gor- c man, of Near Monroe, and. Miss \ Marguerite Lewellen of Monroe, a visited in this city Sunday evening. c Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Houser and [ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Houser and 11 daughter of Detroit. Michigan, were i week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. j Fred King and family. t The Misses Mary Beineke and Margaret Curry of Fort Wayne f spent the week-end visiting with j Miss Beineke's parents, Mr. and t Mrs. William Beineke in this city. John Andrews, aged Decatur resi- i dent who has been ill recently, has , been moved to the home of his < daughter, Mrs. Enoch Eady, corner ] of Seventh and Madison streets. < Mrs. W. S. Smith, Mrs. Sadie Scherer, Mrs. Elfie Steele and Miss ; Marguerite Lewellen of Monroe ( visited in Decatur, Saturday. Miss Helen Shroll returned to j South Bend. Sunday night after ( spending the week-end visiting with ( her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Shroll. Miss Arlene Becker has returned j to school at the Ball State Teachers * College in Muncie after (-pending a several days Easter vacation in this , city. . j Mrs. Mell Wertzberger of Rochester returned to he rhonie Saturday. | after spending the week here the s guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Shroll. j Mr. and Mrs. Herb Lachot and daughter Martha Ellen and son ( Frederick, and Mrs. Mae Doehr- . man of Fort Wayne were guests of , Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Annen in this city Sunday. t Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Williams t of Indianapolis and R. Earl Peters 1 of Fort Wayne visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dick Heller and fa- < mily. Mrs. I. A. Kalver returned to this i city this afternoon from Chicago. . where she attended the funeral of her sister-in-law, ami visited for a few days. Mrs. Bessie Haxby and family enitecained with an Easter dinner for her brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Edward Haag and father. David Haag of Winamac, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Macy, daugh ter Mary, and son C. D. Macy spent (Sunday in Monroe, the‘guests of Mrs. Mary Lewellen and daughtel Marguerite, and Mrs. Sadie Scherer. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Parrish and sons David and Bob of Fort Wayne visited with friends in this city Sunday. Mrs. Avon Burk accompanied her sister Mrs. Don Quinn to her home in Chicago where she will spend a week visiting. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Everhart | visited with relatives in Monroe Sunday afternoon. The Misses Betty Macklin and Charlotte Elzey the Messrs. Dici: Stoneburner and Don Leßrun visited in Fort Wayne Sunday evening Miss Geraldine Joker and Robert Fowler of Fort Wayne visited with relatives in this city Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Clara Anderson and Mrs. L. B. Smith of Berne visited with friends in fort Wayne Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fre<-by and son of Shipshewana visited witn Mr. and Mrs. William Zwick and family over Easter. Rev. C. R. Lanman left today for his home in the southern part of ! the state, where he will visit with * his parents. .Mr. and Mrs. Alva Nichols, Mrs. Verena Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred beavers and son Jimmy were the guests of he Leo J. Miller home in Fort Wayne over Easter. Mr. ami Mrs. Gust Freeze of Fot t Wayne spent Easter Sunday ll' e guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman J. Tettman of :his city. • Miss Ruth Schwartz of Herne and Jay Yost of this city spent the week - ( erd visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Al-j bert McKean at Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hite Miss Helen Gerber and Hugh Holthoaae jof this city Miss Harriet Wallace : land James Beatty of Bloomington I ; visited in Fort Wayne Sunday even- j I ing. Miss Catherine Fritzinger had as I her guests Easter. Miss Gloria Bell i I Keplinger, Charles Keifer of HuntJington. and Mart Porburg of Notre (Dame University, who is spending his spring va'alien in Huntington. | Dr. and Mrs. J-. T. Bean of Fort [Wayne visited with Rev. and Mrs. B. H. Franklin in this city Sunday Mr. Bean is the district superinden'dent of the Methodist Churches in Fort Wayne district. Mis® Margaret Confer of Fort Wayne was the week-end guest of 'he Harry Fritzinger family. Mrs. J. W. Tyndall and son Dan and Mr and Mrs. J. H. Heller returned’ last evening from Bowerston. Ohio, where they attended the '(funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth McKean. ' sister of the late Judge D. D. Heller. Mrs. McKean was 78 years oid am! I had been ill since January. Mrs. ' Tyndall had been with her aunt the ' past week. II C. K. Bell of Fort Wayne was at I tending to business here this morn-

ing. Miss Mildred Akey and Robert ' Acker visited in Kort Wayne Sat-j urday. I Twenty-five from here will attend the Jefferson club banquet at Portland tomorrow evening. R. Earl Peters of Fort Wayne ami Marshall Williams of Indianapolis, chairman and secretary cf the democratic state committee, visited here Sunday afternoon. L. C. Waring visited in Fort Wayne Sunday. George Wertzberger of Hammond is visiting here. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gerber and children John and Dorothy of Fort Wayne were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tillman Gerber and family of this city. Miss Isaliell Hill returned to her home in Fort Wayne, Sunday eve ning after spending a week visiting in this city with relatives and friends. Miss Mina Collier returner! to school at Butler College in Indianapolis after visiting with her parents in this city over the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Noffsinger of rural route 7, had as their guests for dinner on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Minnich and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Andrews and family of near Bluffton. Mr. and Mrs. John Ballard and Mrs. Nettie Lawson had as their guests for Easter dinner, Mr. and: Mrs. Melverd Ladd and daughters, Phyllis Jeqn and Norma Jollne all of this city, and Miss Isabel! Hill of Fort Wayne. Bernard Wemhoff left today for the University of Detroit to resume his studies atter enjoying a week's vacation here. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Melchi and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ashbaucher visited in Fort Wayne Sunday evening. Miss Mildred Akey left today for Bloomington to resume her studies at Indiana University after enjoying her spring vacation in this city. Miss Myrtle Akey of Muncie spent the weekend visiting her mother, Mrs. Dora V. Akey and sister, Miss Mildred Akey. Arthur Voglewede returned Sunday to Georgetown University. Washington, D. C. after spending his spring vacation here. Miss Agues Heimann of Chicago, and Regina Heimann of Fort Wayne spent Easter at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Heimann of south of the city. Mrs. George Foos and Mrs. Harve Baker visited with friends in Van Wert. Ohio, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Sarah Arnold of Bluffton who has visited with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Arnold in this city over the week-end. left this morning to visit with Mrs. O. W. Stewart of near Bluffton, who is ill. She was accompanied to Bluffton by Mrs. Floyd Arnold. Alice Katheryn Baker spent the week-end visiting with Mr. and Mi s. Frank Orndroff of near Berne. Mrs. Archie Foley. Mrs. Janies Strickler. Mrs. Floyd Hunter and Mrs. Floyd Arnold spent the afternoon in Fort Wayne. TARIFF DUTIES OF WORLD ARE GOING UPWARD (CONTINUED FROM PAG?! veloping new foreign markets with the home market reduced by the depression, they have become alarmed at the gradual spread of a tariff-raiing fever in countries which formerly have been good customers. This movement has been accompanied by a considerable drop in United states foreign trade. While the world-wide depression has reduced the foreign trade of all countries, opunents of the Haw-ley-Smoot tariff act attribute the decrease partly to the hostilty which they say was aroused by psissage of that act. The Hawley-Smoot tariff act became effective last June 17. Ex iM>it trade of the United States dropped off more than a billion dollars from last July 1 through Feb-uary as compared with the roi’-esponding eight months a year before, according to official commerce department figures. Exports for the eight months beginning last July 8 totallled $2,241,821,373. I For the corresponding eight months in the previous year they were 33.377,808,078. The value of goods purchased l>y the United States from other i countries also dropped over a bilj lion dollars. In the eight months ! since last July 1, Imports aggreI gated 31.685,426,390, as compared I v ftli $2,705,661,557 in the corresponding eight months a year before. The United Press survey, based on official reports by its trade commissioners throughout the ONE CENT A DAY PAYS UP TO SIOO A MONTH The Postal Life & Casualty In surance Co.. 6473 Dierks Building, Kansas City. Mo., is offering a new a< ’ ident policy that pays up to Kioo a month for disability and $1,000.00 for deaths — costs lean thi>u\lc a day—33.so a year. Over 60,000 already have this protection. Send no money. Simply send name, address, age. beneficiary's mnhe and relationship and they will send this policy on 10 days' FREE Inspection. No examination is' required. This offer is limited, Iso write them today. world to the commerce depart-

I ment since the Hnwiey-Smoot act became effective, last June, shows I tariff increases on products ex- ! ported by the United Slates by 16 ’ European countries. 16 South and Central American countries, and 13 countries and political units in the far east and south Pacific. European countries which have increased tariff duties are Austria, Belgium. Esthonla, Finland. Germany. France, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy. Lithunia. Poland, Spain. Swttsertand, Portugal and Yugo-Slavia. The following South and Central American countries have increased tariff rates ou various articles: Argentina. Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Peru. Bolivia, Ecuador. Cuba, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Uruguay, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala. Venezuela and Paraguay. Oriental ami Pacific countries and political units which have raised are China. Japan, Siam, a—Wl Illi Illi I s MMW———

10 ,T ’ S A WINNE® / S EVERY TIME®' 7 inches LONG E o OVER 2'A OUNCES K oF oelic,ous ■ CHEWY CANDY '• W! EAT ONE /w ! s TO DA pj V I mom U like H' this smart new | POXTBUI particulnrlij nt it» I new tmr price I Ljteo I ’ DELIVERED g EQUIPPft i Check Pontiac’s fine-car features against yoO own experience as a motorist, and you oB a quickly decide the question of value .<■ R Hi I BODIES 11 \ FISHEH— In these bodies Fisher have attained remarkable insulation against heat, cod noise. Style, riding ease and safety also reach newstandanbH Upholstery of genuine whipcord or mohair combines taste with exceptional durability. There is ample rootniotttß ne:w tio-H. r. exgixe Power a L ine never satisfactory performance. Through advanced engine t! Pontiac has attained fine-car smoothness along with ample for all driving needs and emergencies. I ‘ s CHASSIS CCSHIOXED WITH Wf K more than 40 points, including spring shackles, th.echaS® is cushioned with rubber. Riding ease is notably increaaj —also the car’s steadiness on the road. Protection the effect of road shocks prolongs the car's life. B ■ r LAttGE. POWEHFI E —in town or on the highway — the driver has full contwi his car. Surely, evenly and powerfully, the big all wheels. You are safe in all driving conditions. , I A demonstration will be arranged at your convenietic* B 1 entirely free of obligation, of course. I e (It'l ® ' This is the price of the 2-tloor Sedan or ■ u M livered to you in Decatur and equipped read.' | Equipment includes front and rear bumpers, shock a •5 wire wheels, and extra tire, tube and tire lock. v( rtitß '• priced as follows: Sport Coupe $792. 4 door Sedan c I Coupe $822. Custom Sedan $862. I v B UB A GENERAL MOTORS VA I ’ I r k ; Adams County Auto tel u 232 W. Madison St. Decatur. li’ dia f ;-' 1

Dutch |j ls i in,!,,. > *""'■B. lirniHi, Xew JWB kmir. AiiMialia, the Cook Islands. ALTO MISHAP?! ( - ( -.°. i<t . ix ' i:1) f ßom BUccumh. il to cil Saturday. In Indianapolis M rtiod oi injuries auff iodo his bi. yelv into an Ji Mrs. Bernier Clark yB infant Up| .;*B lailway crossing crash Bend. ■ Thomas Chadwick, si I fatal injuries when strM Michigan Central t riir *J i , mond B , Eli Hugh Day, to, coj , ride in Indianapolis | 5