Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 144, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1931 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
OPEN BATTLES ARE REPORTED IN ONE COUNTY ♦ CdJJTfNTJKD FHnyr PAGE ONE. men and women, marched upon the county jail here to serve their demands. Permission for orderly picketing was then granted by Sheriff Duff after a hurried conference with Maj. John A. Blount, personal representative of Gov. George White. The sheriff, however, warned the delegates, several of whom carried cuts and bruises from skirmishes with mine guards, that “you’ll never get anywhere as long as you have such leaders as Leo Thompson and other communists." Thompson, an admitted communist. is being held without bond on charges of violating the state crim Inal syndicalism laws. A dozen other prisoners, all members of the National Miners Union, are being held with him. most of them on open charges. Today’s outbreaks occurred as Steps were being taken to affiliate the workers with the United Mine Workers of America, a union which operators have intimated they would recognize. — Allentown. Pa.. June 18-(U.R)— I Several striking silk mill workers ; were injured today in a fight with i gunmen, whom police said were . brought to Allentown in an effort to break the current strike. Anthony Reddick, striker, suffer-[ ed a fractured skull and knee, and , several—comitattiotrs who were—with 4 him in an automobile, were injnr-
Our New REDUCED PAYMENT PLAN 25 Months To Pay You may borrow un to S3OO on ' our New Reduced Payment Plan. No endorsers. Just the signa- I ture of husband and wife required. Here’s The Figures SSO monthly pavment $2.00 75 monthly payment 3.00 100 monthly payment 4.00 150 monthly payment 0,00 200 monthly payment 8.00 250 monthly payment 10.00 300 monthly pavment 12.00 (Interest Payable Monthly) 8 All requests receive our prompt and courteous attention. Call, 1 write or phone us. SPECIAL PLAN FOR FARMERS Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hardware Store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind. Sfi ifi tR !fi !fi L
- 7 1 A Jo»|| I /uS&r $*J99 Sport Shoes ■ ill I—. Z% W *Q99 for sport wear. I und $3.99 I S OQQ O=BZ=d c . X * White Shoes ?. —-QQ AN fa your summer wardrobe \ / .1 . J ■ < X includes a white costume ■ VentllcltCO ■ you will want your shoes a I Oxfords ' c _ $099 5299 /A oxfords for a “ yr i vacation at the . C OQQ X / lake or just <2nd •* Q'' S. ‘around home.* / C°°l’ Fashionable Footwear (■^==^==r- 7 Men’s Sport Sea Sand Kid S" \ Shoes SQ99 «™i $ 499 Sat s \ jift --all summer. yr White trimmed with $299 A z black or tan, $3.99 £ Q Elk leather golf ox- 5*5 99 S \ / ford, $2.99. sw Boys’ Shoes Misses Shoes /-l-ij cl y~K g The young miss V-hllvlrCn S OnOCS lltl can *** economiI * |7Z eally shod — f 2r —R I T 0 QQc SS5^^ i 2'"-_ dfe%kk 0 Af\ Play Sandals ” vk- KOOd J?.i e /I VIC Accord*¥7 £ 89< & 99c Little Mens’ ,—■ Boys' and Youths’ ’""<“ TL O xx Duck upp". gray — ■C H Ihe cattery knobbed non-skid _<"< /JJ B St- M Youths’ Boys’ Men’s \ > 79c 89c —.— ■
■ ed. Police said pistol shots were ■ fired by the "imported gunmen.’’ GOOD WILL AIR TOUR NEAR END 1 Fn .°M PAGE OXR ' ' piloted by Lieut. Howard Maxwell overturned in a plowed field. The '[ third disabled ship was the one ' driven by Elvan Tarkington. It ' ;was forced down by motor trouble iat Wingate. I On the journey here the planes [detoured to pass over Attica and I Crawfordsville, at tin- request of I the cities* officials. James Wolcott. ; 1 ( ;S«. was given his first airplane ride i at Wolcott airport. It Doe* Make a Difference were arguing in a Wash ington court. “Hut it was a gen tleman’s agreement. I tell you!” i shouted one lawyer, “(th. how ran ‘| they have a gentlemen’s agree i ment when only one ! s a gentle ‘i man?” softly parried the opposing . legal light Pathfinder XFm.’iziiie Kindling for Fire One housewife has discovered ; that potato peelings make good ! | kindJing. She spreads them out on 1 a newspaper in the warming oven j oxer the range and closes the door. ; ’ They will dry out in 24 hours and * make an excellent substitute for [ shavings when starting a tire. Longfellow’* Anceatry I Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ■ ■ was an American for several gen- ' I erations. Both the Wadsworths. I his mother’s family, ami the Long- ' ; fellows, were originally from York--L-shinet—EnghnkL— — worth was descended from .John I Alden and Priscilla Mullens Interesting Letter* A woman, known for her inter ; esting letters, keeps a dipping fold | i in her desk into which she slips . all kinds of tidbits from newspa I pers and things friends tell her. ' filing them tinder the initial of the | ' friend she thinks they will inter est. When she starts writing let ! ters, she looks under the unitial • and gets out all these tidbits which i i she often has forgotten
Terrible Eczema Goes Quickly Strong. Powerful Yet Safe, Moone’s Emerald Oil Has Astonished Sufferers Here is a wonderful antiseptic oil now dispensed by pharmacists ! at trifling cost, that will do more; towards helping you get lid of unsightly sipots and skin diseases than anything you've ever used, j Its action is litte less than! magical. The itching is instantly stopped: and in a short time you I are rid of that bothersome, fiery l eczema. The same is true of bar-' bier's itch, salt rheum and other irritating and unsightly skin troubles. You can obtain Moone’s Emerald Oil in the original bottles for 85 cents at B. J. Smith Drug Co., Cutshall's Cut Rate Drug Co., or any modern drug store. It is safe to use —guaranteed—and failure in any of the ailments noted above | is next to impossible.
SAPP MAY GET APPOINTMENT ; (CONTINUED FROM PAGF ONE) 11 | Sapp formerly was president of , | Rotary International. Rochester, June IS —-(U.R)— Jess Murden, on a vacation ,at Lake Manitou here, announced today | that his resignation as a member of the Indiana highway commission had been accepted by Governor Harry G. Leslie. A statement made in connection with the resignation confirmed [ beliefs that his withdrawal was due to stress of private business I matters and not because of allegI ed disagreement with other mem ! beru of the commission. Murden. who was accompanied ' here by two sons of Governor Leslie, Robert and Richard, said j that after a few days’ rest he I would resume interest in private I’usin-'.s enterprises which "had ■ been neglected badly due to | attention to public work in the , l ast four years." Deficit Is Reduced Washington. June IS.— (U.RJ—The ’ treasury deficit was reduced con- [ siderably today by second installI ment income tax payments and payI ments by foreign nations of their I World War deljt. the treasury stateI meat revealed. The deficit as of (June 16 was $1,017,241,837, a drop |of $82,000,000 from the previous ' day’s figures. Income tax payments tabulated -o-f-Jum 16; were $39.-368-. 153. wWch_ , compared with receipts of $48,000.000 for the second day of first quari ter payments in March. o_ Depends on What You Lay A professor of economics finds a bricklayer's daily pay equals the value of 3 '.<> eggs. This represents I a hard year's work for a lien, but bricklayers will point out that a [ hen cannot Inv bricks.—Kansas I City Times. Told of Pleasures in Music Thomas Ravenseroft. an Englishman in 1(11 1. wrote and set to music songs “Concerning the Pleasure of live Usual Recrea ations: Hunting. Hawking. Dane [ Ing. Drinking and Enamoring.” Guinea Fowl Meat Popular Guinea fowl ment is increasing In favor as a substitute for game. : such as grouse, partridge, quad j and pheasant. The demand for I guineas begins late in the summer i and extends through the fall and [ winter months. The young birds I are sold-when they welch from onr I and a half to two pounds, at about , three months of age.
Two Evils To repeat an unkind truth is just ns bad as to invent a lie.— Elbert Hubbard. Poor Humanity How like a railway tunnel 1® the poor man's life, with the light of childhood at one emi. the intermediate gloom, and only the glimmer of a future i i life at the other extremity.
UhCATIR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1931.
1 Ne iv } ork s 6 Weed ’ Disp lay Amazes Tahitian Belles * * * * * * „ Reri and Miri, Whom Ziegfeld Imported fpr “Glorification,” From the South Seas, Where r • Orchids are as Our Lowly Dandelions, Stand Aghast Before Our Florists. • jMfck jdWh ! / U/L r I ■ < I 'A*. . . - 4 ft• ’-'hi'W .» £•' 17< ’bi W .f) ri \' x\\ ’ / TSekli, \j , —TTTTfT Bainbridge ' _ Z/ Mlri. Leaving their South Sea island paradise at the behest of Florenz Ziegfeld, who wants them for his Follies, Reri and Miri, the belle* of Tahiti, are rapidly adapting themselves to our Eastern civilization. But they cannot understand why we make such a fuss over Howers that are common weeds in the islands they left behind. Above picture show* the girls in native costume, Reri on the right; William Bambridge, the girls’ guardian (center) ; Miri on the left.
By ALICE ALDEN NEW YORK. June 18. —Reri and Miri of the South Seas are in town. I And w hen they are not standing I I amazed Itefore the plate glass win-: dows that house such ordinary i I blooms as orchids and gardenias. ■ they are making merry in their hotel room, singing the beautiful | and plaintive melodies of native Tahiti, strumming the guitar and ■ dancing. And then for diversion, they try on the bargains that they have discovered in Fifth Avenue shops. And they wear their clothes with an air that is most indicative' lof their French upbringing. All of which creates an atmosphere of charm such as New York has | rarely seen. When the motion picture, “Ta-j i bu” was first shown, critics raved about the beauty and talent of Reri. the belle of Tahiti. Ami when Flo Ziegfeld beean to plan his new ‘ Follies” his first thought' ' was a glamorous Tahitian scen->! with the beautiful Reri as its chief , | ornament and star. The cables' began to buzz and as a result, Reri I : arrived in America with Miri, the i lithest dancer in Tahiti, and Wjlj liatn Bambridge wlfo is known as | I Bill to everyone who has ever' been fortunate to land in the gar(den of the Pacific. Bill Bam-i j bridge, who is juat about the most ; ! important person on the Islands, j apart from administrative officials, | is here to transact business and to J ( spe that the two Island belles have j i good time but not too many goofl times. For both Reri and Miri are exceedingly popular and think j that, of course, they should accept all the invitations that are' pouring in on them: But when j told they cannot go to this club: or that party, the- just giggle and start singing and dancing. A curious blend of simplicity and , sophistication dominates the per- i sonality of Reri. She has been ■ educated in a French school and her knowledge of clothes and | make-up apd other feminine artif-| ices is extraordinary. She wears i evening clothes and native costume I with equal grace. Miri is morel subdued. It is only when singing 1 and performing one its her amazing dances that she becomes gay I and animated. Both girls have I never before been off the islands.' As for Bill Bami ridge, he is i i amazed at New York. He has been I to the Pacific Coast several times,! but this is his first trip East. Like i ■ many other visitors, who do not | even hail front the far islands of; ! the Pacific, he is bewildered by ths i traffic and the aimless rushing of the crowd. He cannot understand J s how people can bathe in an ocean j I that looks so dirty as does the At- i | lantic in the vicinity of New York. I And he cannot understand that | girls should perform or be per-! mitted to perform with the mini-! mum of clothing demanded by the I managers of some of our night l clubs and restaurants. Nudity! must have primitive surroundings,' otherwise it is an affront to civii lization in the opinion of a man; whose life has been spent with the I people of Tahiti, where there js no 1 i nudity, since all women wear covering, no matter hoxv simple it be. The girls and Mr. Bambridge admire the beauty ■of American I women, but think that the makeI up used is so applied that it gives
I a hard and artificial look to the I face. As has been hinted, bbth girls areadept at the gentle art of painting the lily and gilding the rose. And both Reri and Miri have very decided ideas about the merits of French perfumes which they use even when dressed in their i grass skirts and shall necklaces.' Rut whatever the dress, the girls | are never without a single blossom at the back of the ear. For Ta-! hiti goes in strong for the language ■ of the flowers and the “Tiare,” i w hen worn on the left ear. means that the wearer is not free, while at the right ear.' it is the high sign ' tliat the maiden is hoping to me«M , a nice young man—object, matri-1 j mony. For the Polynesian maid : is just as anxious to settle down to domesticity as is her western' sister. If tlje administration of Tahiti! had cast about for a means of stimulating interest in the lovely ' group of islands in the blue Pacific j it could not have hit upon a better scheme than sending three of i its most interesting and delightful inhabitants to America. For. appatently, theirs is a carefree life, city, and sunshine, mixed in with full of music and flowers, simplienough French Atmosphere to make !it intriguing. If Ziegfeld isn't ; can :ul he'll find that all his prize | beauties are setting sail for the I islands where orchids and other 1 rare blossoms are merely weeds, j and French clothes are quite cheap. o ' Superstitions That Live In the Dark ages every custom ! ' 'hits endowed with miraculous powers. and such beliefs die hard. The I people encountered on the way to ! church or the place of baptism are > . supposed to have a superstitious ' significance, for example. Thus a ! beggar encountered means ill luck. . and ilie had luck may be checked ■ by handing the beggar a luckpenny. A black cut encountered is I j the happiest of omens. o— Just Backache Myofascitis is an Iniianimation of j the voluntary nnisdes and fascia . at their insertion into the perloste , uni and the bony strmtnrcs to which they are attached. In real I Ity is is a toxic myalgia —an tnflani 1 matory reaction of the fibrous sup I porting tissue to extraneous polsor. i which may he 'bacterial or toxic." | absorbed from the colon. —Medical | : JourraJ a»<l t’oco-d M. A. Frisinger resumed his dui ties as city carrier on the up town | route today after enjoying his sum- , mer vacation. o Quit (Jetting- Up Nights Get This 25c Test Box of BU-KETS (5 grain) the ! bladder physic, from your drug- ! gist. After four days, if not rei lieved of getting up nights go hack I and get your money. BU-KETS i containing Duchu leaves, juniper ' oil. etc., acts on the bladder as I castor oil on the bowels. Drives | out impurities and excess acids i that cause irritation, burning and frequent desire. If you are bothi ered with backache or leg pains i coming from bladder disorders you are bound to feel better after this cleansing and you get your regu- ■. lar sleep. i i Sold at Hoithouse Drug Co.
MURDER CHARGE IS DISMISSED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEI eutor. Pierson, who body was found in I Muscatatuck river a year ago, was i believed to have been thrown into | the river after being shot while on ! an ahto ride from Louisville to In- [ diana polls. o .Jury Fails To Agree | San Diego, Calif., June 18 (UP) I —Tile jury of nine men and three | women in the trial of Alexander i pautages and three others on mori als charges was ordered to resume [ their balloting at U A M. today as l ter deliberating 10 hours yesterday 1 | without reaching a verdict. o Garrett Man Indicted — I Garrett, June 18—(UP) — .Three grand jury indictments in connection with tiie dosing of the Garrett savings, loan and trust company resulted in the arrest here of Monte L. Green, former president of the bank. One indictment charged perju.y and Hie other two were on charges of receiving deposits alter tiie Institution was declared in> solvent last December. ■ o Contracts Are Awarded Indianapolis, June 18’.- tU.R>—Five I bridge contracts, aggregating $61.345.04, were signed by the state; highway commission here. A brfdge on road .36, near -Holl J ingsburg, Parke county, let to the I Indiana Road Paving Company, i j Rochester, $31,943.27; on road 36. | near Rockville, Parke county, to C. Elmer Garroad, Montezuma, $9,848.77; on road 36. near Morton, Putnam county, to James A. Crosbie, Bluffton, $8,260.48; on read 43, near Michigan. City, Laporte county, to M. J. Clarke. East Chicago, $4,725.80; and on road 67, near Bicknell, Knox county, to Aden G. Steele, $6.-1 566.72. Sues For $50,000 Washington. June 18. — (U.R) —I Some people get $1 so an “embarrassing moment’’ by writing, about it for a newspaper, but Mrs. i ' Rita Nickel wants $50,000 for hers. I Mrs. Nickel was trying on a new ; dress in a store when, she alleges. [ ' a male employe opened the door of j the dressing room, leaving her exi posed -to the gaze of several per- ' sons. She has brought suit tor the $50,I 000.
■ t I 41 CAR CAN TAKE A TIP FROM CAR BUILDERS WHEN BUYING TIRES In 1930 and again for 1931 — the builders of America’s finest automobiles, in practically every price class, selected more U. S. Tires as original equipment than ever before. No other tires showed such remarkable gains ir manufacturers’ sales .... a significant fact! Let it guide you to the greatest tire values your money can buy—more mileage than you’ve ever known —an extra margin of safety, beauty in harmony with the finest, fleetest cars. In short, take a tip from car builders and join the Big Swing to U. S. Tires. We’re ready for you with complete stocks, fresh from the factory—and the lowest prices ever placed on U. S. quality. —> U. S. ROYAL PRICES u - S - PEERLESS IN 21x4 - 40 HISTORY 20x4 ‘ 50 $5,6 ° 19x4.7556.65 XTJk 21x4.50 21x4.50 $5.55 fjjrjfj 19x1.75 $6.65 P. Kirsch & Son f , .
Friedman In Accident Michigan City, June IS.—(U.R;--Benny Friedman, former all-Amer-ican football and basketball player at the University of [escaped serious injuries near here today when his auto sideswiped a ! truck and plunged down an embankment He was brough to a hospital here suffering cuts about i tiie face. Friedman's companion In the auto, Hiram Levin, also was injur-' ed. k They said they were en route from Chicago to South Haven, Mich. Our Faint Hearts Today 18 tier cent of nil our deaths are due to heart disease which kills twice as imiry persons as any other cruise of mortality 1 In the United States—Collier's Weekly. o— Snores and Saxes An eminent psychologist says thnt I snoring is a saxophone type of i noise. And there are times when saxophotiing is n snoring type of noise. —Ku In inn zoo t lazette. . . ■---—o Easily Spotted You can tell n man who Isn’t 1 sure of himself. He acts Important I because he Ilves in dread that pen- : pie will think he Isn’t.—Buffalo I News. o Test of Music | “There Is only one critical jndg j ment I can rely upon in music - ! the verdict of the spine." Fritz ; Kreisler told me. "If I feel a thrill [ . down my spine, from my own work or that of any other man. I know 1 Hint;._Lt Is _goo<L_ Let*the critics say i elint they will. There Is no finer . test. And If an artist never knows I that thrill, or loses it. he is ’ In the wrong business."—Beverly Smith In tiie American Magazine i
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