Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 96, Decatur, Adams County, 22 April 1931 — Page 5
MT VERNON £ FURNISHED WASHINGTON | d B|||> of Lading In fplnce Reveal His I Orders >KJ|| b Mary K " iKht ' ( I U Kflt Wellington, not ■LW. nr i intel tor <h'<"’Mount the KM it should ili<Kgg. , h.ing at the many ■L.I„> nfeat house. on "it h Miss Frim>s Iho i 8 hi charge of tbo in c lating and furnishing of th Mount Vernon erected Jois de Vincennes for the Jolonial Eposition. nd supplied practically all furniture as well as the tsed by George and MarMi Wolfe, while Grand . the Mount Fourteen K (ar companies have do■trii ■ ■' I'lodiictiiuis of the , light nil i idle pieces hav. K e f I', and man' an- £ tan I"'-n picked uii. or do||K|i>HP loaned. ■“Nein'iiol. ims furnished us with ■ thelfai’: (■ s to he used in the hiie." said Miss Wolfe, KnilSi designs and materials Kvpfien l opied as nearly as possEe An I'm originals. We have Ed to ■ for samples of the
[Short Time K 5 —Offer r 4 * an [ y<n ffi W "S ' FTTIf ‘ B Wi Hw Wx X 11' • I ! ■ y\ ? /■ i.i* i ? E <a ’ ' '/ if/ i K pyu Kl '' -xiauZOb NOT a sample can, but a full-sized 30c can— Hit costs you only 10c if ywbring the coupon at the |Moni of this ad. o*°' t cither clear Water"P?> Varnish to give a rich, varnish finish to shahHBoors, furniture or woodor make your choice ?* the wonderful hues, and stunning colors of ■crSpar Quick-Drying ColVarnish or Enamel. W 1 boiling water cannot c.ear Water Spar VarColored Water Spar Varnish comes in seJeral natural colors and renews old without the expense of M DV * n £ them. Colored WaEnamel drips quickly BM * brushes smoothly — the put-it-on-yourself Bh that puts cheering color ■r your home. ■ ‘he coupon now! Come in for ■ iull-ured 304 can—-for a lim- ■ ‘ ,m< o»ly, available at 10$. B't'c Hardware Co. »OOD FOR . .7307 i ! I 7o° W " r<l ," w P“«b«» of » B SI or r‘" ° { , Wa, "St’<" Varni.h B d| timet, dear or colored. £ H \ || ® SR P** _ ' I ■
origiiuqs in museums and private 1 collections, make sketches of them and then have them made up. it has all been terribly Interesting but ' we have had out troubles,’' she add- 1 ed. “Martha may have had a lot to ! say about what wont into the original Mount Vernon, but it was George who did the ordering, and In searching through old records and documents we found that he I did most of the arranging when I fly; furniture arrived from England." .—— o i— Public Cooking School Will Be Held Here The public is Invited to attend a, cooking school which will be held in the Ellis building, South Second street, opposite the court house, on Friday and Saturday, April 24 and 25th. The school is sponsored by the Home Grocery of this city and the demonstrations will be given by Gladys Helen Phillips, home economist of the General Foods corporation, New York city. Women who are interested in the- "Business of three meals a day” are cordially invited to attend the sessions each afternoon, loginning at two o'clock and continuing until four o’clock. The first demonstration Friday afternoon will be on "Latest News on Spring Menus" and a host of suggestions to tempt the winter-; wearY palate will be given bv Miss Phillips. On Saturday afternoon a clever demonstration on how to prepare simple, enticing food, “good and quick." will be given. Many tested receipts and suggestions tor pieparing food Will be given by TWiss Phillips and at the close of each session prizes will be awarded, together with free distribution of recipe books.
BERNE BANK TO OPEN SOON (CONTINUED EROM PAGE ONE) following compose the board of directors: Samuel Nusslbhum, E. C. Bierie, Charles Hawbaker, Vilas Steiner, L. L. Yeager and Chris Rich. The directors met at 2* o’clock this afternoon Jo consider applications for the position of cashier. Tlie bank at present is being redecorated and will be reopened as soon as that work is finished. Reopening of the bank has been made possible by the co-operation of stockholders, who agreed to a ICO per cent assessment to make' it possible. The bank is capitalized at SBO,OOO. It was organized in 1903 and was closed in May. 1930. Since closing it had paid 20 per cent to depositors. Liquidation has been in charge of Sen. T. A. Gottschalk. COUZENS SAYS GREED IS CAUSE OF CONDITIONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) lion is in contrast to the condition of American business. The contrast irked Couzens. "When they are having their night club party in the Pompeian room of the Ambassador hotel," he said, "I hope they will net forget yte economic strain that more than 90 per cent of our people are going through." The United . Prefcs sought—from Couzens the answer to this question : "Who is responsible for that economic strain?” "I doubt if you can say who is responsible," he replied. "But you can say what is responsible. It is
REGAINS HEALTH AFTER 5 YEARS “I just can't help being enthused about this wonderful now Sargon medicine," said Mrs. Frank Campbell, 2019 Adams St., IndianI Ara | MRS. FRANK CAMPBELL apolis. “It has given me complete freedom from indigestion for I*--first time in five years and has also-rid me of poor circulation. I feel so much stronger'and better in every way I’m like a different, person. • “The Sargon Pills that I took for constipation didn't have the least upsetting effect and regulated me perfectly.” Sold by B. J. Smith Drug JJo.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1931.
Freed from Restraint of Spanish Court Victoria May Find Bliss in Homeland $ * * 4c aft 4c * * * ' Always Considered a Foreigner, Much Sorrow Has Marked the Regal Path of the English Princess Who Wore the Crown of Spain and Is" Now in Exile. h jas- —a ML K 5 fi r\ t“i w- > / Km B\U; K in' \ * EC W CHOPPING rn rtMF’Wjrf j nUKS ■ > b -Paris tut th Jr 1J JBml* '•> HFU Tw B j ’ Daughters (iKAffip £ J9nMO| 1B0L". * Wa wm 1 brab Ik I ReZw I. -. •> Robes wW ’ Un the IB t I Links I f b wß'y b : 1 , - fJE ■ -• _■ f.w 11 —WQz—J kfeblEF FROM KOYAV CoURT FORMAUTY- • U2k> y Dancing a? a Fete-.
"Ur.eaey lie, the head that wear, a crown"—This fact ha, again been brought home to Queen Victoria of Spain, as she bade farewell to the land over which •he bad ruled with Alfonso XIII. From the simple life of a British Princess, she had a quarter of a century ago become a part of the court of Spain, puzzled by its restrictions and formality. The road from carefree Kensington Palace to Madrid was not a path of roses. Disliked by the people of her hus-
By ALICE'ALDEN New York, April 22. — For Victoria of Spain, the fruit of freedom has turned into bitter dead sea fiuit. Twenty-five years ago, a lovely, young golden-haired princess arrived in Madrid to prepare for her wedding —an arranged match settled after innumerable obstacles had been surmounted. Fresh from n happy, simple life spent in Kensington Palace —a red brick building of the Queen Anne period—she feared the awesome and fearful restrictions of the Spanish court. But soon court life and strict etiquiette closed in on her. And little by little the happy hiome of her childhood receded before the strange life. Today a grief-stricken woman sits sombrely in an elaborately decorated hotel room in Paris, wishing again for the grandeur and set mode of living that surrounds the Spanish court. Victoria Eugenie lias at last got her wish. She is on her way home to England, the laud of her childhood. But she is returning. an unhappy woman, mother of delicate, ill-fated children, who, as yet, can hardly comprehend the fate that has befallen them. Those who knew Victoria of Spain when she was Ena of Battenberg are fully aware of the burden she has always carried. For she lias
unrestrained greed. And all who are actuated by unrestrained greed share responsibility for these conditions. “One of the best examples of how these things come about and what is likely to be their develop ment is given in the history of prohibition. “I used to be police commissioner in Detroit at the time agitation [for prohibition was increasing on la national scale. I know 1 warned brewers and distillers and 1 know others warned them that unless they put their own house in order the people would do it for them. The manner and method in which I the people did that job is n w history. "Without any more claim to prophetic, vision now than I could have had then, I can say the same | thing is going to happen to capitalistic industry unless it puts its ' house in order. I think I see tenj demies toward realization of that I situation. I think there is beginIning to be same understanding of [it'and of how inevitable it must be l unless the capitalistic house is put in order. » “But, unfortunately, we have adopted the money yard stick as the measure *of success. The men [achieving success by that yard 'stick are able men. They have one-track minds. They drive toward a single objective. That objective is to make their own organization a success by the money yard stick and they think of nothing else." — , 0 _ i Miss Bertha Loser, trained nurse in a hospital at Evanston. 11l . is visiting her sis'.ej. Mrs. Clifford Lee here. (
♦ band’s kingdom, because she was a foreigner, the I mother of an ailing family, her first born, suffering from an obscure blood disease, her second son, a deaf-mute, it would appear that her cup of sorrvw had been filled—without being forced to exile from I the land over which she had ruled. Perhaps fate I will deal more kindly with the dethroned Queen who ' may return again to the land of her youth, far from the strife that was hers as Queen of Spain.
always felt herself an alien among her husband's subjects, despite her desire to be friendly with them. They know what she has suffered each time she has visited a bullfight, and they have resented her attitude, although she never openly displayed it. She has always been an English prhtcess, rather i than a Spanish queen to the people lof Spain. And this alone would have been sufficient to make gentle Victoria of Spain unhappy and despondent. But she has had other causes for grief, too. The illness of her children has been a never ending cause of sorrow 4o the Queen of Spain. She Las sat by while doctors and experts have tried to teach her second son, a deaf-mute, to speak. His guttural utterances give evidence of their success. Her oldest son, suffering from an obscure blood disease, has been the object of her constant and tender solicitude. Her two daughters have been her constant companions, and she has fought every inch of the way to give them something of the wholesome, simple upbringing that she received from her mother, Beatrice of Battenberg. Thanks to this, the Infantas have more freedom than | was ever enjoyed by any other Spanish Princesses. Victoria Eugenie is an expert golfer and at San Sebastian and
COUNCIL HOLDS REGULAR MEET ( (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I ast Monday. The electric light committee ref ported that it had contracted with ihe! Saylors Motor company for a . one and one half ton truck. The ] truck will used by the electric j department. 1! Th.: council ordered the City attoiney to notify the Erie railroad q to' repair its crossings a; Mercer :■ avenue and Thirteenth street and to notify the Pennsylvania railroad i to repair all its crossings in Deca- . tur, from Adams street, north to Nutiman avenue. ) Bills were read by H. M. Gillig, I i hairman of the finance committee : and allowed by the council. . i —o DISTRIBUTING SYSTEM WILL BE IMPROVED fi ■ .CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ( ■ heavy leader lines and poles would be placed in the alley. A part of the system may be 5 placed underground and each year 1 a certain amount of work will be--1 done, O. L. Vance, chairman of ’ the electric light committee of the council stated. Tlie engineers will be required I to make a plat and detailed specifications for the entire system ’ and the council desires to pay for the engineering service as the work is done. The cotmcil desires to start on ’ | the wqrk this summer and hope to have the first unit completed , this year. The work will begin
Biarritz she was frequently seen on the links. A magnificent dresser, she is a constant figure in the ateliers of the leading Paris dressmakers. Her clothes are as regal as her bearing. During her frequent visits to London, she has so often been observed in various i Bond street shops, while Alphonse is also frequently seen in the same narrow shopping thoroughfare, visiting those establishments that hold the Spanish royal warrant. During recent years, Parisians and Londoners have come to be quite familiar with the picture of the still beautiful Queeji of Spain stroll ing with her two daughters in the fashionable sections of both cities. Her democratic attitude during her trips abroad have also not always pleased the more formal of the . Spanish grandees. One wonders now what Victoria ■ of Spain will do. Will she go back . to the old red palace where her i micther still lives when on residence i in London? Or will Alphonse set up a court of bis own in London, . somewhat on the same order as Manoel used to have at Richmond, .:a London suburb? But whatever i happens, Victoria will be found at ■ I the side of her family, womanly, queenly and cpenly sorrowing for a past that did not always give her I happiness.
las soon as the plans and specificalions are prepared. The cost of rebuilding the line will ibe paid from the earnings of the city light and power plant and aside from the Second street unit most of the work will be done by the city electric light department, in charge of M. J. ?>’“left, the superintendent. o 1 THORNTOWN HAS COSTLY FIRE (CGN"INUED FROM PAGE ONEThe plant is lecated one and onehaK miles south of Farmersstown, about eight miles from Lebanon. Directors are located in several portion’s of Indiana, and could not all be reached immediately to determine whether the plant would lie re-buiit. It was expected that they would be assembled in a meeting tills afternoon. o Will Purchase Horses Ed Ahr announced today ' that Carl Hailey, Wellsboro, Pa., would be in Decatur and Adams County next Monday to buy an express car ’ of horses. This will lie Hie third load k of horses snipped from Adams county to tile east this spring by Mr. Bailey and farmers having | horses to sell are asked to get in touch with Mr. Ahr. —() : Spain Is Recognized Washington. April 22. — (U.R)i — The state department today ani 1 nouuced formal recognition by the I United States of the new Republican , government of Spain.
EDITOR SCORES RADIO TACTICS Says Great Inroads Are /Made In Advertising Columns of Papers New York, April 22.-XU.R)—The radio, by "unfair” competition, according to Elzey Roberts, St. Louis Star publisher, is making vast Inroads on the revenue of the Nation's newspapers and American publishers are "as short-sighted in recognazlng radio competition as the railroad men were In recognizing bus and truck competition ten years ago." Roberts, as chairman of the A. N. P. A. Audio committee, told the association convention today in his annual report that competition from radio is sp great that newspapers might well discontinue exploitation of broadcasting programs in their columns. He quoted figures from a survey showing that, for the first three months of 1931, radio advertising has increased to more than half the total sum spent in newspaper advertising during the same period. During 1930, he said, the ratio of radio advertising to newspaper advertising was: Newspapers —100; radio —26. The figures for the first quarter of this year were given as: Newspapers- 100; radio—s 9.2. And this growth, the survey shows, has been accomplished since 1926, when ladio advertising was virtually unknown.
The- competition between radio and newspapers does not end in the I advertising end, however, the committee chairman said. Radio com-1 petes with the press in newts edi-1 torials and features. Flash or bulletin news of exceptional importance is handled by the radio today. Descriptions of important pre-ar-ranged events are broadcast. Running accounts and results of sporting events are carried on the air. Election returns often are broadcast, as are market reports, weather forecasts and temperature readings. “There is a striking similarity," Roberts' report said, “between newspaper features and the different forms of broadcast entertainment. 'Amos ’N’ Andy’ certainly can be likened to a daily comic strip." He cited, also , the rising popularity of the “radio editorial, mentioning in particular the regular broadcasts of H. V. Kaltenborn, former newspaper editorial writer. Radio. Roberts said, has brought a new element into advertising. Advertising is forced on the public through radio, as it used to be on the screen. And the American people. he believes, "resent having something forced on them, whether they like it or not." That is why, Roberts said. American newspapers do not run advertisements on their front pages, and that is why, in the United States, advertising is a greater force than in any other country in the world. “The mistake must have been,” Roberts said, "in not recognizing .he power of the press to popularize radio even to the extent that it would carry direct advertising."
RILEY SCHOOL TO GIVE PLAY CONTINUED PRO’.’ ONE the year. The Harmonica Band, under the direction of Miss Florence Haney, has presented a number of concerts and have enjoyed much praise from their audiences. Admission will be children, 12 and under, 10 cents, and adults, 25 cents. Following is the cast of charactens: Jimmy Carroll, The Lovable Fat Boy James Vance Sara Jane, Just recovering from an accident Ruth Virginia Baker Patty, her chum Marjorie Miller "Prof” John Gentry, musical director Ned Johnson ' Bob, Ben, Tom. Frank, friends of "Tad” Carl Miller, Jack Eady, Bobby Schnitz and Dick Penning. Other hoys Joe Hower, Dale Fuhrman. Dennis Mast, Richard Walters. Flo, Rose. Sue, friends of Sara Jane Helen Jean. Kohls, Ruth Cook, Anna Brandyberry Other girls, friends of Sara Jane Rd la Bartlett, Evelyn Lobsiger. I Welcome song: Ben Hower, | Florabelle Hohls, Betty Huffman, Jean Barkley, Mary Smith, Esther Smith, Patricia Baun, Bernie! Smith, Paul Hodle, Harvey Diehl. I Gromania Hannie, Jimmie Hunter, Dennis Mast. Franklin Smith, Junior Vance, Bobby Foreman, Juanita Bowman. Evelyn Lobsiger. Edward Toney, Ellis Skiles, Kedron Hill,
Buy your shrubs, h e d g e plants, evergreen trees, Rose plants, fruit trees and berry bushes now. Inspect our assortment. Schafer Hdw. Co.
Kathleen Foreman. Harold Johnson, Gerald Light, Joe Hower, Gyneth Hill, Buddy Smitley, Doyle Sheets, Elaine Edge!), Fred Stuckey, Junior Roop. Thomas Roop, Billy Fieher, Helen Krick, Kenneth Friedt. Winifred Skilee, Frederick Suddith, Margaret Smith, Max Bowman, Helen Kelly, Edith Baker, Marguerite Bowman, Donald rfucbte, Mary Maxine Smitley, Eileen Johnston, Dicky Hakey, Harold Howard, Betty Huffman, Ardis Britzetihofe, Helen FVnuing, Dicky Schnltz, Ruth Fugate, Raymond Johnson, Billy Durbin, Rose Marie Stanley. Rainbow Drill: Ted Eady, Gyneth Hill, Dwight Felty, Juanita Bowman, Billy Schnepp, Helen Krick, Fred Stucky, Mary* Johnston, Raymond Sheets, Annabel Ruppert, Dennis Mast, Helen Roop, Kedron Hill, Elizabeth Reed, Charles Chumplin, Mary Reed, Dicky Mills, Betty Krugli, Evelyn Lobhiger, David Smith, Madonna Barncdt. Betty Hullman, Billy Archbold, Ruth Fugate, Charles Cherry, Mary Maxine Smitley, Harold Howard, Marjorie Butler, Kenneth Friedt, Rose Marie Stanley. Billy Durbin. Eileen Johnston, Buddy Smitley, Elaine Eiigell, Dicky King, Katherine Davis. Kenneth Schnepp, Flora Bell Kohls. Harold Johnson, Marci’.e Mast, Thomas Roop, Jacky Hunter, Dicky gchnitz, Patricia Haun, Helen Fenning. Helen Kelly, Richard Schnitz, Anna Brandyberry, Edward Tony, Vivian Hitchcock, Reba Bartlett, Mary Maxine Hilton, Junior Owens, Marjorie Miller, Dick Fennig, Helen Roop. Mary Weber, Marion Friedt, Rosemary Huffman, Richard Walter. Dale Fuhrman. Helen Jeane Kohls, Donald Bohnke, James Vancie, Wane Bodie, Glen Bowman, Elizabeth Reode, Mary Johnston. Rdth Cook. Evelyn Lobsiger, Ardis Brintzenhofe, Bobby Schnitz, Ruth. Bieneke, Karl Miller, Annabellp Rupert, Marcile Christner. Junior Vance, Betty Huffman. Richard Goldner, Howard Gehrig. Richard Garner, Grotnania Hanni, Winifred Skiles, Kathleen Fore-
FORD RELIABILITY \ THF FORD TUDOR SEDAN i * Long 9 hard use shows the value of good materials and simplicity of design EVERYWHERE you go you hear reports of the good performance and reliability of the Ford. One owner writes—“ The Ford Tudor Sedan I am driving has covered 59,300 miles through all kinds of weather. It is still giving perfect satisfaction.” Another owner describes a trip of 3217 miles in 95 hours over bad roads and through heavy rain and sleet in the mountains. “Throughout the entire trip,” he writes, “the Ford performed excellently and no mechanical trouble of any kind was experienced. The shatter-proof glass undoubtedly saved us from serious injury when a prairie chicken struck the windshield while we were traveling at 65 miles an hour.” See the nearest dealer and have him give you a demonstration ride in the Ford. Then, from your own personal experience, you will know that it brings you everything you want or need in a motor car at an unusually low price. LO W F ORD PRI CE S •43® to *O3O (F. o. b. Detroit, plus freight and delivery. Bumpers and spare tire extra at low cost. You can buy a Ford for « small down payment, on economical monthly terms,through the Authorised Ford Finance Flans of the Universal Credit Company.)
PAGE FIVE
man, Irene Light, Betty Loultio Foughty, l»oyle Steele, Jack Eady, Charles Cherry. Ned Johnson —Director. TRIO FREE IN BUCKLEY CASE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 000 bond in Rochester, N. Y. Pizzino is under indictment charging him with the murder of William Cannot) and George Collins, alleged Chicago narcotic peddlers, who were slain last July 3, leks than 50 feet from the spot where Buckley was killed three weeks later. Livecchi has been wanted in Rochester since 1926, police said, tin connection with u payroll robbery. Gerald E. Buckley was political commentator of radio station WM BC. His bitter radio attacln were concentrated for months on the regime of Mayor Charles -Bowles. On July 22, 1930, Bowles was recalled at a special election. o White House Lawn Is Scene of Plane Landing Wallington, April 22 —(UP) —An air- raft landed in the White House grounds for the first time in historv ! today when James G. Ray piloted a Pitcairn-Cierva Autogiro down be- ! side the Executive mansion. o Get the Haoit —Traae at Home.
Uli PA GUARANTEED PILES smut If vou suffer from Itching, blind, protruding or bleeding Piles you are likely to be amaied at the soothing, healing power of the rare. Imported Chinese Herb, which fortifies Dr. Nixon's Chinarold. It's the newest and fastest acting treatment out. Brings ease and comfort in ft few minutes so that you can work and enjoy life while it continues its soothing, healing 'action. Don’t delay. Act in time to avoid a dangerous and eostly operation. Try Dr. Nixon s Chinarold under our guarantee to satisfy completely and be worth too times the small cost or your money back. CALLOW AND KOHNE
