Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1931 — Page 3

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Swing made A baseball If OBEY HERE Hh jliinii! Tournament to Be | JB.'''<l Week At I | Local Diamond I -7- —1 tourney draw 1 Monday. July 13— '■H l Lincoln Life. j Tuesday. July 11 — ‘ ■' vs - - Moost '- tU® .'>'■ dnesday, July 15 tWBi . - Winner Brand. G*®’’ • Thursday, July IS—tt|v ■ came 3 vs. winner j si i Gar s—Saturday, July 18— | IBM v ■ 1 vs - "* ii|ie! ' ■ 0 TJhr Adams county junior basebalt.■■ague tourney, to determine „hiri team will represent Adams ’rSSBS in the district baseball will be played here naflwtek. starting Monday eve- . - . xcept tile final will the liedulcd tor Sat- . o'clock in A small admission will be made to help de-1 fray ii-• -of the district meet | wiA also will be held at Decktut*.. Th' drawing was made this. racßiu at the Daily Democrat office ' • l-'erd O'Brien. Albert .Milfan* Knapp and Dick Heller M » •■ =. .Miss .Mary Macy, society editor of the Daily Demotritprew the names from a hat. two teams drawn will SBltlie first game. These are i Left. and Lincoln Life. The secwill he between Legion Mp and tiie final jj»m* fist round will be between

■ 1 was £ asci na ted ■by this test • • . ■ _ / f/ A VA- la * \v-MIU - torPMEjIHISK. I , i ifSMwn~» k, STjf''' ! ‘Hi'in ■«■ ''l balls show by their speed that used New Iso-Vis has held its body, uUw used oU of any other make has thinned out decidedly. Muke this ball and eM at any Standard Oil service station or dealer. which shows that New Iso-Vis will not thin out from dilution” LiARNEDa lot by watch- the test. It will convince you. *«g this B a |l an( j Bottle udsbtb “• Before, motor oil had V, r . • jiM motor oil. Now 1 * >w there i g a wide difference.” S Iw-Vis Motor Oil did not this p... . out from dilution. 1 ip With New Iso-Vis to- 2 During the entire test of 0.(100 ’• Vhen YOU are re.tdv »„ miles, the engines nnd chassis of ail :.. , ’ red(, y to cars were lubricated effectively. ’ go back to the Standard 3 Oil Added: only « 100 of a quart—- [ Service Station or average for all cars—of Iso1 . , Vis 50 (Heavy) in 1,000 mil« |EV 1111 •* ask that T" test at l> miles pee hour.' Hr oil from your own /I / /) 1 1 IMr he ~.--> . , /Vr;/// WATCH FOB THE V use " t° make »</<</ iso-Vls test cars I ■ WMOTOR | I/f a «s • tzSolarine also i« refined by our new proce»s—4 I eiency which it ttoasded only by New I wo-Vis The prioo is 25c a quart B T AM)ARD OIL COMPANY (Indiana) J "

Rotary and Moose. The winner of the Lions-Winner Brand game drew a bye the second ' round and will go to the finals without a second contest. Officials for the tourney will be ! announced later this week, Albert | .Miller, athletic officer of Adams | post, American Legion, said. | All games scheduled for next | week were cancelled and the tourney games will have no affect on the league standing. Following the 1 county tourney regular scheduled ■ games will be resumed. —o— ROCKEFELLER HAS BIRTHDAY (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) a. m. when his valet enters the room and, after filling his trouser pockets with dimes and nickels.! awakens the master. The oil pioneer dresses, then starts his morning tour of the house and | Japanese garden. To the servants he meets 111 the corridors he hands dimes. After his walk, a secretary reads him a digest of the 1 world's news. Piomptly at 8 o’clock he joins the family and guests at breakfast end asks the blessing. The meal is usually hearty, and at its conclusion a secretary reads passages from the scriptures. Numerica is played after breakfast. The game is a form of solitaire. Rockefeller is expert. Those who heat him get a dime; others get nickels. For an hour or two Rockefeller attends to business affairs, and , then comes the daily rite of golf. He shoots the nine holes in from i 39 to 50. When its partners make ■ good shots he gives them dimes, i The afternoon ride is usually in tin open car. a sixteen-year-old hiitdmollile in which Rockefeller sets beside the chauffeur bundled up » a coat and muffler, even in hot weather. It was unlikely he would venture outside his estate today. But i within the high steel fences that skirt the estate he has many miles 1 of roads over which to travel. o Get the Habit—’Trade Home

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1931.

DECATUR GETS JUNIOR LEAGUE DISTRICT MEET Local Legion Post To Be Hosts At Annual Baseball Tourney Decatur will act as hosts to the 1931 eighth district junior has c ball tournament under the auspices of the American Legion, Fcrd O’Brien. district athletic officer announced today. The exact 'late of the tourney, in which six county champion teams i will take part will be announced later. County tournaments will precede the district meet, and the winner here will represent this district at the state tournament to lae held later this summer. The local committee which will work with district officer O'Brien includes Albert Miller, local athletic officer; Paul Graham, William Linn. I-co Ehinger, Lloyd Baker and Joseph Laurent. All plans for entertaining the teams and fans will be made by the committee. The games will be played at the high school baseball diamond on West Adams street. The games will be seveninning affairs witli the exception of the final «ame which will be a regulation game of nine-innings. Mr. O'Brien said that complete plans including the drawing, the date for the tourney and other details will he announced soon. o —■— COURT INSISTS ON JAIL TERM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE* tempt shortly after he appeared in Judge Green’s court to attend the trial of several Mexican youths charged with vagrancy and disorderly cunduct. Two versions of the dispute between Judge Green and the consul were given. "The consul interceded in my court case in a loud and boisterous manner, using abusive language," Judge Green declared in his contempt citation. “I ordered Dorningue% to be quiet and he dared me to take legal action against him.” Attorney Baker gave this account of the case; "Dominguez and I entered the court rocm together, and* a social worker walked to Judge Green's bench and told him the consul had arrived. The judge immediately jumped to his feet and began an attack on the Mexican race and the consul's office. "The consul tried to make a word of explanation for his presence in the court, and Judge Green shouted: Shut, up or I'll throw you in the can,’ Then he sentenced my client. "Judge Green's commitment papers for Dominguez contain one lie after another. His explanation of the sentence is complete fabrication.’’ Tlie Mexican consul's office here has been ordered to send all details of the incident to the Washington office of the ambassador Horn Mexico, it was learned today. It was reported that Senor Manuel Tellez, Mexican ambassador, intends to use the information in a fc-mal protest to the state department. Dominguez is serving in the consul's office here in the absence of i the regular consul Rafel Aveleyra, who is c.n vacation in Mexico City. Judge Green is a former Marine and served under General Smedley D. Butler. Springfield, 111., July 8. —(U.R) Gov. Louis L. Emmerson of Illinois announced today he will start immediately, "as a matter of courtesy to the state department,' an investigation of the sentencing in Chicago of Adolfo Dominguez, actI mg M, xican consul, on a contempt of court charge. It was expected that Emmerson would, appoint personal representatives to inquire into the incident. He has received a telegram from the state department asking his assistance in clearing up the affair. COUNCIL WILL LET CONTRACT (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) clerk and city treasurer and a display room for electrical supplies will also be included. The specifications call for a concrete floor and a new stairway in the building and (for making the I old sleeping quarters of the city firemen into a council chamber. ' using the present quarters for j mayor’s court only.

ATHLETICS IN !! GREAT VICTORY : _ 1 1 New York, July 8 — (U.R) — The ( I Washington Senators are just about convinced that it wil take j more than seven ball teams to t keep the Philadelphia Athletics , fnom winning their third consecutive American League pennant/, particularly if Connie Mack lets • George Earnshaw pitch as often j as he wants to. Earnshaw, although having pitch- , | ed a full contest against the Sen- , ators Sunday, offered to work again yesterday when Lefty Grove 1 , didn’t feel quite up to snuff ! Mac.k let his big right handed ace '' «*art his second game in the pres-, j ent series against the club which looks as the lone obstacle between ! the world champions and the 1931 title. President and Mi’s. Hoover were among the 12,000 fans who saw : Earnshaw turn back the Senators. 7 to 3. on eight scattered hits. In registering his fourteenth victory against four defeats, Earnshaw was aided by timely hitting by his mates against Crowder and" Fischer, two of the stars of the' Washington e mound staff. The victory increased the Athletics' lead over the Senators to five and ‘ . one-half games. Chicago defeated St. Louis, 10 to 8 in 12 innings, in the other American League contest. Pinch-1 , hitter Kimsey of the Browns sent the game into extra innings when | he hit a home run in the ninth inning. Singles by Watwood, Blue I I and Simons accounted for the' winning White Sox tallies. . The .doubleheader on the pro- . gram for New' York and Boston I was postponed because of rain while Cleveland and Detroit were . not scheduled. The Chicago Cube advanced to ! third place in the National League, , only three and one half games from the leadership. by turning . back the pace-setting St. Louis > Cardinals in a doubleheader. 14 to 2 and 6to 3. The twin victory placed the Chicago nine .002 percentage points ahead of Brooklyn. Charley Root held the Cardinals in check in the first game while [ his mates, led by Hack Wilson, pounded Hallahan and Johnson i hard. The Cubs came from be- ' hind in the aftermath to score 1 four runs off Flint Rhem in the eighth inning and clinch the con--5 test. Brooklyn took advantage of the I St. Louis setbacks to defeat Philadelphia 5 to 1 and remain as a serious menace to the Cardinals 1931 flag winning hopes. Babe , Phelps and old Jack Quinn allowed the Phillies 11 hits between them but both were effective with men on bases. The doubleheader carded be-j tween New’ York and Boston was [ raned out while the game schednl-| ed between Pittsburgh and ('incin-1 , nati will be played on a later date. !i — lesterday's Hero—George Earnshaw. who. pit<hing his second complete game in three days, liurl- ‘ ed the Philadelphia Athletics to a i 7 to 3 victory over Washington. I Earnshaw allowed only eight hits. I I — _ NEW PURIFIER INSTALLED AT CITY SWIMMING POOL ■j (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) f — and advanced. At the deep end of the pool J there are throe outlets where the ' water is removed and taken i through the chlorinator and com- . j pletely purified. The water is then i returned to the shallow end of the II i>ool by use of the pressure circulator. i The pool has been thoroughly . cleaned. Supervisor W. Guy Brown announced today and is now ready . to assume the regular schedule, i Credit for the installation in , record time is due the city employes who have worked to perfect > the system and give Decatur one • of the best outdoor municipal pools in the state. By use of the chlor imltor it was explained, all germs are killed. Local physicians have . been invited to visit the pool and ■ examine the new purifying system. No charge Is made to swimmers at the city pool, Mr. Brown said, i but every swimmer is required to . register when entering. There are dressing rooms for boys and girls and the pool is supervised at i ail times. A rope separates the shallow i and deep ends of the |>ool and life I i preservers are placed at intervals i . around the pool which is 120 by 70 i feet. o LESS HATRED 1 IS EXPECTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ■ lon. ’ Mellon's task Is almost completed. The 76-year-old financier per- • suaded France to accept Mr. Hoovt er's debt holiday program. 1 Details still are to be settled at 1 ' an experts' meeting, in which thr • | United States will take part if ask Hed. But it is considered unlikely; Mellon will be asked to go through '

such a strenuous session. ■Stimson's work lies before him. From Italy he will go to France, then to Germany, and finally to Great Britain. His job is to sound out prospects for a genuine disarmament conference next February. In the view of officials here, the most formidable single obstacle to! disarmament in Europe is the Franco-Italian naval dispute. Failure to solve it last winter was blamed on "technical misunderi standings." But informed officials say the real difficulty was political coolness. It 'is considered likely that while Stimson is in Rome and Paris be will see what can be done to bring France and Italy to terms. Mr. Hoover is eager for success! of the Geneva conference next year, i although, as yet, the administration has done little of a practical Stature ito achieve this except to make flub-l He American armament figures as an example to other nations. One official explained today: "We must raze a lot of debris! I before we can build a solid tounda-l | tion for disarmament. We cleared ; off considerable at the Washington I . and London naval conference. The! | recent Greeco-Turkish naval agree-! ment that neither would build i i more ships without six months no-1 lice t« the other cleared off a . little more. It is hard work that | I must be done slowly and tediously.”! Aside from disarmament, Amer-! , ican officials are hopeful that a ■ ! closer sense of world unity and the! necessity cf international cooperjation will come out of the Hoover | project. One official told the Unit- ; ed Kress today that the world econ- ' omic crisis had demonstrated that no nation can be independent of what develops in another. r 0 Rotary, Legion Play Tie Game Tuesday Darkness ended the Rotary-Le-gion junior baseball game in an 8-8 tie last night after the Legion ■ had gone into the lead by 2 runs 1 in the eighth. The game will be ■ replayed later this season. The local Moose team defeated the Winner Brand nine of Berne at Berne Monday night, 13-12. Next week's games will be cancelled, giving way to the county tourney. ■ o BARGAINS — Bargains in living room, dining room suite, mattresses and rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number is 44 -ts T OO Square Dance Tonight. Thursday and Saturday Round dance. Admission 50c. Ladies dance free at Sunset.

’iT. 1 wben Uw “ the Weningwvent in the I by T nlng. The program win consist off V chamber music festival under tb>l tog-etherJ ffl ■■ -Ritual.- -Figure from Angkor-LI y .ort oXmL aU ’ pICM ° f tbß Kll “ b ® th Sprt < *f M -Qet onward. | * ?<x£ un,ution at w. 3 ‘Xd ram, It conveyed Theprogram copslit, of fJj } M ln ~ -Bronx* S B ai ; d ta D Mlnor ”. OA. - ao «A and Death’’'and wifTt Prodnctioa. which Benjamlp Zemach a T® \ B <jW9t), Mr. Winfield; and ' ipcseri has done e*tablC->dU appear nd f - -t e dance In other 1 * 'jVW. ■ **•? James Infirmary' to view'in rea- ,r 1 K '▼* ~w^^Bl^HMk rou P* " f From ata irm of tb* J iW /’is a stimuli 6f the dhy. * 1 m< ‘ an «aaed ent its five y r £ rltcry three < L “ d j the — T ® oln S hpporj Cons idence. R o two others To Show the Motoring Public of Decatur and the Surrounding ant. One ta t> Territory that we have Confidence in the products we sell Nh ! >L , st time an Air has beeu entr I \ ' ■>< on. and the o' jr ■» ■ * Friday and Saturday July 10 ■ 11 • 1 ta obvlow as the sec - ■■ y- r ’ cd if the we wiil drain a’nd re-lill your crankcase made the 1 -with - ’ aerlcan c] wUJ sef ty more <1 ■Bggjafcl “rtij*' Gild’s clroi ( HAMPLIN’S GEAR A?n I j KI) eiy ,cenlcd M 100% PARAFINE BASE MOTOR OIL S'>M f > n ' <ul ''* ■ F'S;. M being tentj y; •* - who being t pM as he biantarejjßMHHl on .'. v and wc wiH «?fill your crankcase and you agree that if 1. but he this Motor Oil is satisfactory you are to pay us 18c per FMMu’w. »udi< itatarltan. quart on or before ten days. If not satisfactory the Oil is The ‘ IK® paid for - Wc havc confidence in you and all we want you OB’a ictman t<> (Jo is to be f<lir illld report to US. Ew|trt»w being n; t ita attitude ' J ckilld ■will ua’imtion • < '* so ,ve agree io this: We guarantee this Oil to furnish ittern.. At * ■£*vH - vou as S°od lubrication as any Oil you can buy in your Pv’| b * tar fQrme ' iany R . five c. Wg|® ’ By or territory at 25c per quart or more. se^ 1, '’ n l carrying on 1 _ §&,. oma " twe *J •rem. buco’itahfW . . J* e i,rc Be,ii "« you regular Gasoline at 9c plus tax fficiency expert ■■ which we guarantee to be as good as any Regular Gasoline Hr waehtnet.™,' lerocn represent JEB you can buy in your t it) or territory, which amounts to a |KrCleveland. t> 1, iron and »te. MR saving to vou of 2.1 c per gallon. ’. 1 “p oll *- 6<- ix> W MM other 1 riileo.'' iboUun. j n words, we have nothing to cover as to the ■M..* 10 " 1 J; ow ' ar n on g quality of our Gasoline, therefore, we are not coloring it ■Eona™? an™ ■e» of n Hamm fl®B blue or green, but guarantee it to be Regular Gasoline of BBng for it« p ally are crow OißMa good quality. spite,-of/t. political comtr A,bo ’ wt> are paying our ,abor livinß waKes to "Pcrate E been aiming |ggg?t antl S<>ll V ° U th ‘ S Gas ° line - ? f>»3o. Add. tl Hid be deecrit w bfcor. trenchant, ' ther ’ haa ded only In M 1 T1 • A /X • ZN ■ ’X ? V 1 epllor White s Service Station fc ' HR Corner Bth and Monroe

FLIERS START TRANSPACIFIC NON-STOP TRIP (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the airport as the Fort Worth sailed away. All were crowding about the plane and a policeman started pushing them back. He put his hand on Robbins' chest and gave the flier a backward shove. "Get away from here,” he shouted at the Texan. "But, I am going to Japan in that plane. I'm Robbins," the flier ans- ; wered. The policeman apologized. i There was no more ceremony i than if the fliers were taking off lon a ten minute test flight. They climbed into the plane, said | “Well, so long everybody,” and were off. The plane was loaded with 410 | gallons of gasoline, within a few I gallons of its capacity. It was so I heavy that it started slowly and I Robbins had to “bounce" it three j times to get off the ground. Then i it barely cleared some high tension | wires at the far end of the airport where no one ever thought they would interfere w ith airplane travel. Given good weather and granted ! that the motor performs perfectly : the fliers should reach Fairbanks ! in from 15 to 18 hours. 1 Their refueling plane, piloted by Nick Greener and Jim Matter, will transfer approximately 100 or 150 gallons of gasoline. After the Fairbanks refueling the Fort Worth will head due west to Nome, 520 miles distant. The refueling ship also will fly to Nome and fill the Fort Worth to capacity. The fliers will have accomplished about half their trip when they leave Nome. From Seattle to Tokio by the great circle route would be about 4,600 miles, via Fairbanks an d (Nome, however, the distance exIceeds 5,000 miles. The most dangerous part of the journey lies west of Nome. Weather along the Siberian coast and in the Bering Sea is fickle. Post and Gatty, flying around the world, encountered storms, rain and dense fogs in the area. Too, the airways over northeastern Siberia are not well charted. Jones will do all the navigating and although an accomplished pilot, probably will leave Robbins at the controls throughout the trip. ( losing Out Sample Rugs at Sacrifice prices. 27x51, all : grades.—Yager Brothers.

(GERMANY SEEKS BUSINESS LEVY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) offer of leading German firms to guarantee a credit up to 500,000,01)0 marks $119,000,010) for the Reich’s debts. i Dr. Hans Luther, president of the Reichs bank will go to London soon to negotiate a new large loan for the Reichs bank, it was learned today. Rumors connected the projected loan with the Reichs bank's plan to obtain $400,000,000 or $500,000,000 in credit for the Gold discount bank ■ Reichs bank Subsidiary.

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PAGE THREE

The credit to he guaranteed by the private interests may !>»• used ( any time foreign investors fear their credits wil! ebeome “<fr«wefi” • and immobile in Germany. This guarantee was taken 1o_IJ) dieate the public confidence engendered by the accord of Germany's creditor nations on Presidiyt Hoover’s war debts ahd preparations Holiday scheme. — —— o Archie Hudson. Orville Rhodes H. C. McKinley and Bill Landis of Portland visited with friends in 'tiffs city Tuesday evening. New Maylag Electric Washing Machine, .$95.00. Yager Brothers. 15513