Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 186, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1931 — Page 5
ftfimsNiiN • I PLICA 88V th , '"‘l ■ ..„, -p,,. jh Mount ;. ‘ . \\ .i-hillg-vnjf |H obey till' ?• ftHJpn ' I' * — ' u J ■ , hl .re U,,li ' 1 ' i ■' „■ the Viu.mm-s lor. sV.J «•*> u-ispik.il Hint | jert i< just l " t ot Ani j ' 7W«ilan-l <»'■ a ;* Uiing®,,„ , .r-'itufum up I SlondM ■ ■■"(■ h as it dm-sj
/hoes Your Car <Heat-Up” Overheated radiators in warm weather hinder K the performance of your car. This can easily H be remedied bv having your radiator Power H flushed at our garage, cleaning the radiator of S corrosion and settlings which comes after so K long a time. Power flushing your radiator is ■ Xot expensive and the results are astonishing. I. S. L Batteries us check over your battery. We carry the famous ■.S. L. lottery, noted for pep and long lively and them for all makes of cars. ■ Riverside Super Service R This Coupon Worth $4.02 I To You ■ FACTORY ADVERTISING this coupon to our store with only 98c and we will give Filling Fountain Pen and Pencil is propel and repel to pen. There is an ircn-clad factory guarantee with eacn Because cf factory advertising we are able to give you this R,’"' 3n ' 1 i l '" 01 set for on, y 98 ”' DON'T MISS THIS OPPOR if you can’t come at the hour, send someone to the Ml Wlth Sl f! nc<) coupon before sale, leave your money and we ■*'“ leave >"i r -et with owner of store. Don’t forget the date .? rosit ' ve| y n o sets sold after this sale. Limit two with each coupon. | FIVE 'Uj FIVE ■ YI ' A " year Guarantee ■ 98c Sets Now On Display 98c H Coupons can be obtained at store. sign here ■A d d r e s s I Saturday, August Bth Only IHolthouse Drug Co.
glass Decatur Auto Paint & Top Co ™“ Repainting installed while • ■ Auto Rebuilding =" s Shatterproof Glass AXLE STRAIGHTENING AND WHEEL ALIGNING UPHOLSTERING Eor All Cars Phones 494 and 612 Wrecker Service RUNNING BOARDS
in the states at home; our parlies will certainly not be wet and our punches will be above reproach,” Slemp said. • Embassy oiticiais were not asked for a ruling, but pointed out today that the Embassy, which is also considered as American soil, is "wet” and that cocktails and wines are served at Embassy functions. .’dost of the buildings at the Exposition and al! of the restaurants are “wet’ and at all the official functions champaign** corks pop and native liquors provide enthus ia..tic atmosphere. For visitors to the exposition there are 27 cocktail bars and two beer gardens, one of which is adjoining the American building. o Don't overlook these bargains. We are closing out Porch Swings and Refrigerators al sacrifice price. Buy now. Yager Brothers Furniture Store. 186-31
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1931.
ENGLAND PLOTS TO REGAIN HER TEXTILE TITLE Gigantic Lancashire Plan Draws Near To Completion i London, Aug. 7. (U.R)—England’s hopes of regaining h r pre war su-' ptemacy in the world textile market I I beat quicker as the long-awaited | scheme for reorganizing the Lan! jcashlre industry draws near comI pletion. Steady declines of British cotton! goods exports to India and the Far East have served to hasten the preparation for the gigantic task which means more to England than any other industrial undertaking. Lancashire’s prosperity depends on it. The Joint Committee of Cotton Trade Organizations has been busy since spring collating the replies from 1,600 firms whose combined capital exceeds $500,000,000. These replies will form the basis of the nationalization Plan. 22 Million Capitalization Already the gigantic Lancashire Cotton Corporation lias consolidated itself with a capitalization of approximately $22,000,000. It controls 87 companies, 10,000,000 spindles and several thousand looms. Another huge organization, the jCombined Egyptian Mills, has been ■ formed. The spinners have been organizing voluntarily, but the manufacturers are reluctant ami in some cases ’ hostile. Pressure is being exerted | by the government, and rationalizai lion on a big scale is about to be I undertaken. Six textile machinery companies, with issued capital of approximateIly $36,918,220, have arranged to amalgamate as soon as their respective stockholders give their ap- ; proval. Several Manchester cotton shippers are preparing to combin° for the purpose of competing more effectively in the Far East against foreign competition. Pooling Resources By pooling their resources they plan to cut down overhead expenses and with better transportation rates expect to he able to lower the prices of their products for delivery in the eastern trading cent ers. Th" reorganization will be based j ! upon the principle that output ! should be more closely related to 1 1 the shrinkage in demand. Many | 1 less efficient mills will have to be scrapped, others merged and link-[ ed directly with the manufacturing and finishing factories. Thousands of cotton workers will be thrown out of work or forced into other trades, hut the Lancashire Indus trial Development Council has been ' formed to provide employment for i 1 them. I' WOMEN CHANGE PRONUNCIATION _ < I Washington. Aug. 7. —(U.R)—Worn- j len are easily influenced to change ( i their pronunciation of words, ac I cording to a statement made here by Dr. Hans Kurath of Ohio State University, who also announces I that the preliminary survey on the ' I Linguistic Atlas for the United 1 ‘States will be started next month. I "Every member of a women’s 1 I club wants to speak like the lead- ’ er,” Dr. Kurath said. In in effort I to improve their speech, women ’ are inclined to pattern their choice < ■of words and inflection on what 1 I they hear. They are the ones who 1 give strict attention to radio an- < iiouncers. Social prejudice in word pronunciation is very strong.” One of the purposes of the Lin-j guistic Atlas. Dr. Kurath said, is to ; establish a more charitable view- i point towards local dialects. There , arfc a million people pronouncing a > j certain word alike in a certain io- i cality, Dr. Kurath says in citing an i : example, while the same w ord is > pronounced in an entirely different t manner in another section of the country. , 1 It is quite common for the same j object to have diff rent names in l ; different localities. Dr. Kurath said. I This occurs most prominently in
J l Brirnid tie z —* fir> ca w r f*
By HARRISON CARROLL. Copyright 1931. Premier Syndicate Int HOLLYWOOD, Cai., Aug 00. —Young payers who make a big hit in one picture are apt to find the next stage of their career a tantalizing letdown. Sweet
L ljl I Dorothy Jordan.
while it lasts, the hue and cry toon shifts to some other discovery. There remains the serious and less » p e c t a c u lar business of fashion ing a solid career. Dorothy Jordan is in this period. Praised without stint for her
fine , performance in "Min and Bill,” she dropped out of the spotlight and, pending a new opportunity, must rest content with adding to her experience. It may be that the longed-for chance will come in "Heart and Hand,” for which Universal has just borrowed her. This film is to have but three principals, Walter Huston, Kent Douglas and Dorothy. Its story is laid in a lighthouse, so there will be few distracting influences. Interest will be focussed sharply on the three characters. The set-up seems right. It’s up to Dorothy. LATEST GOSSIP. A 175-foot yacht, with 20 staterooms, isn’t big enough for Howard Hughes. The young producer is buying a larger one, which will have room for a hydroplane on the after-deck . . . Times must be bad. A certain Hollywood actor’s agent has played three parts recently at Paramount . . . Myron Selznick, another agent but highly successful, is seriously ill in New York with appendicitis . . . The rumba craze has hit Hollywood. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer is importing a Cuban band to play in Lawrence Tibbett’s new picture . . . Douglas Mac Lean is back from a combination honeymoon and business trip to Alaska. While there, he gathered material for a comedy based on the salmon industry. The idea seems weird but the trip must have been swell. He and Mrs. Mac Lean (nee Lorraine Eddy) cruised in their own boat . . . Geoffrey Kerr
kitchen utensils and parts of a 1 house, as for instance, a porch is a stoop, veranda, piazza, portico, or gallery, all depending on what section of the country the words are being used. West Virginia Boxing Commission Starts Work Wheeling, W. Va., Aug. 7. —(U.R) — The new West Virginia state box ing commission has assumed juris-, diction over boxing bouts and, wrestling matches with Co. George' 11. Phillips, Wheeling* acting as chairman. The commission at present does | not cont mplate affiliation with the national boxing association, accprd ’ ing to Phillips. The state will receive five pir cent of gross receipts} of all fights held in the state. Two judges will give the decisions with the referee casting a vote if a tie exists. o Arizona Hotels Prosper Phoenix. Ariz.— (U.R) Arizona, with its population of less than half a million, enjoys an annual hotel business of more than $6,00(1.-j 000, a Chamber of Commere ■ sui vey disclosed. A large portion of, the hotel income is from eastern visitors who spend the winters in southern Arizona, with the sum-1 mer business of the northern highlands swelling th 1 volume consider-i ably. Arizona Cuts Cotton Acreage I’hoeuiz. Ariz. (U.R) — Lack of 1 profit in cotton resulted in aji auto matic curtailment of acreage in Arizona, a survey just completed reveals. Th"> decrease in Acreage I this year was 17 p' r cent, there being 178,000 acres of cotton in the state now as compared with 215,000 for 1930. NOTICE—My cider mill will run i vory Tuesday and Thur be ginning Tuesday, August 11. until further notice. G. Chiuiiister, Hobo. 187 6tx
land Kent Douglas are two actors to forswear Hollywood after their present engagements. I suspect , there may be a change in Doug- [ las’ plans after "Waterloo Bridge” 1 is released. In case he does leave, 1 though, he will go back to his own name, Douglas Montgomery . . . Genevieve Tobin, the sleek and unruffled, received a new five-year contract from Universal. ANNOUNCING MR. QUILLAN. Though short on details, I understand the next Eddie Quillan comedy will offer the star as a young man who buys a rundown auto camp and rejuvenates it with new ideas. Ralph Murphy, formerly a dialogue director, will solo on this one. Os course, Quillan has a goojl deal to say on his vehicles. For instance, he will not allow any suggestive gag of line to be used in his comedies. And he always 1 has his elder brother, John Quillan, work with him in some capacity. GARBO WILL DO IT. It may he looking rather far in the future, but Greta Garbo will do Luigi Pirandello’s "As Y’ou D e sire Me”
■ ■ X- 1 gFwx* a F •**. I * • A / -.dßl Greta Garbo.
' upon the completion of the spy melodrama, “Mata Hari.” Metro • Gold - wyn-M a y e r| bought the I Italian play! 1 some time ago I and from the! first there has | been little! doubt who it I was intended] for. You may! recall Judith* Anderson played the leading role in New
York, and that several of the critics were roundly scored for not understanding the play. Harry Beaumont will direct “As ) ou Desire Me,” and this is interesting, for it means the Swedish * star will have three different directors in as many pictures Robert Leonard in “Susan Lennox," George Fitzmaurice in Mata Hari” and then Beaumont. In the old days Clarence Brown had practically a monopoly. DID YOU KNOW. That the first site of Universal was a brewery at the corner of Sunset and Gower, in Hollywood?
CAMINC SHIFTS SITE AT JUAREZ Juarez, Mex., Aug. 7.—(U.R)—The Americans are doing more of their drinking and gambling now just i where the state of Chihuahua wants them to indulge. I The campaign to tell Americans , where to drink and gamble has ended in victory for Governor Andres i Ortiz, of Chihuahua, although for a time a general strike in Juarez was threatened as a portest. Gambling is said to have increased four fold at the Casino Turista International. Business in the uptown saloons also is said to have pick'd up. The reason the governor was so solicitous about business in the uptown sectioned Juarez is that it is from those sources that the state gains most of its tax revenue. And l right now. politicians say. it is imI iterative that the state's in< ome be increased because the state's coff I ers are low. So to fill the treasury again the ■ governor took drastic steps to increase busin ss uptown here. When j lie was at first unsuccessful in i having the Santa Fe street bridge closed to- pedestrians coming from i El Paso, he decreed that 12 saloons near the bridge must close at 9 o’clock nightly. His object in closing the bridge to pedestrians was to force them to go across the I Stanton street bridge and thus go through town instead of patronizing the saloons near the other , bridge. Then the labor unions threatened a general -trike in Juarez un less the saloons were allowed to remain open until midnight as formerly. A compromise was arranged whereby American pedestrians are i not permitted to cross the .Santa Fe street bridge from El Paso while the saloons were granted permission to stay open until midnight.
PLANETARIUM NEW CHICAGO TOUR MAGNET jFirst 14 Months Show? I Popularity of Planetary Demonstration Chicago, Aug. 7.—(U.R) Under the gray dome of Chicago’s new Adler planetarium the movements of the heavenly bodies may be seen daily. I'lie til st American planetarium has I proved so popular that during its i first 14 months nearly a million i persons have visited it and witness|ed a demonstration. The number ■ of visitors for the first year—73l,iOOO was 231,110(1 in excess of the I number which the directors estimated would call during that time. The planetarium and institutions ' of its kind are held responsible for I the changing trend of interest evinced by visitors to CTiicago. The once popular trip to the stockyards, .slums or to some spot to which a 1 violent crime had given the name jot "death corner," is waning in its (appeal to the stranger. Civic lead- : ers declare that the planetarium is I b coming definitely associated with Chicago and outsiders are not so Dipt to think of Chicago in terms of I a gigantic meat packing town, or la city famed for its crime. i Virtually all distinguished visitI ors to Chicago have wanted to see I the planetarium. Director Philip j Fox stated. And it is not alone the j stranger who is attracted. Chicago- i i ans have hocked by the thousands Ito hear the lectures and to see the planetary movements depicted. Many scientists from all parts of i the country have made use of the planetarium in their researches, i Prof. H. I. Schlesinger, of the Uni-1 'versify of Chicago, said he hoped; j the university would be able to use, .!‘he planetarium and Bimiliar insti l ; tutions as substitute laboratories; for work in physical science under > th<? new plan of- education to be i inaugurated by the university. So many persons visit the plan , etarium on Sunday that it is regu-, larly necessary to give an addi-
Money Saving I jgge V allies! IQmRE ECONOMY RULES jl PINEAPPLE, O No. 2'z ~ lona Brann cans OtJC Nutley PRESERVES lb. 1 r Posts Pilon Anna *’ a R e - Raspberry ... Jar JLt)C Bran T LUXTO,LETSOAP . 4 bare 2sc MILKY WAY Box of /» (A J’eT I *)(* Candy Bars 24 barsUt/C 1 ()/• PEACHES, lona Brand ir V No. 2’/i can LOv m wnrim silverbrook . OU JL JL Finest Creamery UTT ftITH SVNNYFIELD 24 «/ 2 tb » Family or Pastry Bag * 4 GINGERALE GINGERALE qf? CANADA DRY . . 3 Clicquot Club ... 2 bottlesM I C — .. » ■ — LARD—Absolutely Pure $ SCRATCH FEED d* -g 8 O’CLOCK COFFEE q World's Largest Seller <....... tb. 1 •/€* ! MASON JARS Ball Quarts, dozen. . . ,79c; Ball. Pints, dozen OvC BREAD. Grandinother’c Twin or CERTO, Sure Jell bottle 25c Regular 11/ 2 lb. loaf 7c PINK SALMON. 2 tall cans 25c CHEESE, Wisconsin Cream, tb.. 19c MATCHES, Birdseye .... 3 boxes 10c WHITEHOUSE MILK. 3 tall cans 20c PEACHES, bushel $1.49 ORANGES — 21fi’s. dozen 35c POTATOES — Peck 27c BANANAS — pound 5c WATERMELONS — each 45c Co'onel Colonel ,‘xl. A*P F@©o STORES SI
tional lecture to accommodate them. o Money Ashes To Be Exchanged Cisco, Tex.— (U.R) —Ashes of S6O in currency burned when the Alexander hotel was destroyed last month were sent to the treasury department at Washington by W. N. Keeter, proprietor, in an effort | to regain part of his lost funds.
EwCsIIaSBEBBS «—» • _. ‘ Through the co-operative zf? advertising campaign of '' Dulesco Hosiery and / Beldare Toiletries we h \ | W have been allotted a .// I J limited number of pairs Dulesco Chiffon Hose SUPER FINISH, V*’ FRENCH HEELS, V fine gauge, ’ FLAWLESS CHIFFON i NO SECONDS. One pair given FREE with each purchase of full size $2.00 bottle French Narcisse Perfume and a SI.OO box of Beldare Face Powder, both at the special advertising price of SI.OO. French Narcisse Perfume and a SI.OO box of Beldare Face Powder, both at the special advertising price of SI.OO. On account of heavy demand and limited supply of hose, we must limit this offer one to each customer. AH for SI.OO—A $2.00 Bottle of Perfume, SI.OO Box of Face Powder and Pair of Chiffon Hose FREE. Saturday, August Bth Only Holthouse Drug Co.
PAGE FIVE
The charred bits were identified by the treasury, which promptly ordered the First National Bank here to restore to Keeter the full amount. o BARGAINS — Bargains In living room, dining room suite, mattresses and rugs. St’’2key and Co. ; Monroe, our Phone number is 44 •tt
