Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 227, Decatur, Adams County, 25 September 1931 — Page 5
SKJIIARS BACK ON RADIO ■H TL< Al water 1 -a® ill I"* ■• *■■■ '" 11:15 '"• ■■ ■ -'S k - i> (' bl.il 101 l KA i . iin» - ■ -n e . l|le Erii " ill ! , ' n ' lu ' l ►. j)f and also will htS|n^K r a- ~ 1 I. A ll< ~ I.? „iii ■ 1,1 grand I fl tb . 1 l >nip.u>). irm^Biii'^'' l with j|,.f Opera Com•0 K <i■ h .i- iin —by <’• W 'e n 13 Months . in»i< ■;■■•■• h> a ,] t" n « ‘”^^B|p:des O’ Aen Locust Tree p ■ -U.R) I Ll - -■' ‘ ; l.b- explain pii- !!-:..■
IyK _, -- _ ■■ ~ 3 Watch For ■ Os! WCCHAMOCQAL B * Washed or Dry Cleaned Bi 311 W Sensation of the Century! ■ ,/ Priced Low in Accordance with U the Economy of the Times. Jl A Selected List of Dealers JjW Will Offer It to You. ■ WAIT FOR IT!
I dyrh ore reat ues ’ ■ Jr The highest quality merchandise 1 at the lowest possible price! | I SUGAR PURE Granulated 2 |Jg 2* J&J H CHIPSO, Flakes'or Granules 2 Lg. pkgs. 37c H SOAP, P. & («. or Kirk's EJake 5 bars 15c ■ BABBITTS CLEANSER 3 cans 10c ■ BUTTER f ,S=kv fib, ssc ■ OLD DUTCH CLEANSER I cans 25c B LIFEBUOY SOAP 3 bars 18c ■ SUN NY FIELD BACON—Sliced lb. 25c I BROOMS 49c N .Vx Four Se . w 29c B SALADA TEA—Black. Green. Mixed •, lb. pkg. 33c B QUICK ARROW Soap Chips. 1 can Sunbrite Free—Lg. pkg. 19c B CAMAY SOAP—I Ivory Snow Free with 3 bars 3 bars 19c B PAILS GXLVANI ZED — 10 Quart size each 2£C B HERSHEY KISSES th. 29c B NUTLEY OLEO lb. 10c B NAVY BEANS lb. 5c B RED BEANS 8 u,. T ana 6 cans 25c B PINK SALMON Tall cans 10c B RlCE—Fancy Bulk lb. 5c B < REUSE—Wisconsin Cream lb. 19c • (■ I SPARKLE Gelatine Dessert .'package pkge I B POTATOES, 15 pound peck 2fiv ■ EET POTATOES 10 lbs. for 25c H ”ANA NAS 5 lbs. for 25c Bl IAI LETTUCE ,- 2 tbs. for 15c B Hear Colonel Goodbody—WJß 7:45 A. M.—WWJ, 8:45 A. M. I /W IF©©© The Great Atlantic A Pacific Tea Co. —— l »■ ■■Mir
Auto Tourist Evidently Believed In Signs I Little Rock. Ark., (l l'i Au r eastbound automobile recently was j seen in this state bearin? the Jollowing placard: '' “California for vacation, , Arizona for irrigation. ■ I “Texas for starvation, j “To hell with the Hoover admin- ' ) istration — I “I'm Arkansas bound.' o—— MODERN BABES FINE SPECIMENS Philadelphia, (UP) — Today’s babies are growing into the finest | specimens of humanity the world I ever has seen, in the opinion of Miss Florence Hale. I Miss Hale, president of th ■ National Education Association, credit's the fact that their parents had i “unbridled liberty’’ during the World War days for the healthy i condition of the babies. ’Mentally, morally and physically the next • em ation will surpass preceding generations,” Miss Hale I said. ”1 believe the modern girl,’’ she declared, "brought up without inlii- ’ bitions, will make the ideal mother. 1 And I further believe because of her knowledge her ability to face the tacts of life squarely, there will be a return to a stricter moral code than we have now. The boys and girls of today have seen and know the evils of license. It is but a natural reaction that in training their own children they will remove tile ! dross and give them only the best. ” —. —_. oCop's Foot Halts Tiny Auto HIGH . POINT. N. C.—(U.PJ The • smallest car in the city and the largest cop came in close contact ■ with each other here. K. F. Ellin;'- . ton, massive officer, stopped the little automobile with his foot. The driver stopped to render I assistance, but Ellington waved . him on and continued directing i traffic. o Seven Ears In One Husk • Winston Salem, N. C.—(U.R) —Mrs. W. T. Swink found one husk containing seven perfectly formed ears, in some com that she bought.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1931.
YOUTHFUL CHIEF IN CONFERENCE! London. Sept. 25.—(U.R) — Maha-! rajah Hi.ikar of Indore, only 23, has succeeded the Maharajah of Rewa - as the youngest member of the Princes’ delegation to the Indian ) Round Table Conference. 1 lie Maharajah of Indore was in vitetl by the pritish government to ’ attend the conference after the Maharajah of Kashmir and the i Maharajah of Patiala announced their inability to attend on account of urgent and important business’’ i in their own states. i The Maharajah of Indore is the stepson of tile former Nahcy Miller i ,of Seattle, now the wife of the exMaharajah, who abdicated in 1926 rather than face an official invest! . Ration into the murder of a Bom- . bay merchant in connection with tlie attempted abduction of'Mumtaz . Begum, a dancing girl. I Educated at Oxford, the young i Maharajah is bright and intelligent liberal in his views and lavish it) his entertainments, but of rather ■ frail constitution. When 15, he i married a niece of the Maharajah I of Kolhagour, four years younger i than himself. The wedding cere-1 monies and feasting lasted a month,| after which the young Prince confessed to his English tutor that he preferred beirig a “fag ” in an Eng lish school. ROYAL BRIDE ORDERS LINEN| ■ ' London. — I UP) — The Infanta | . BeA.iz daughter of King Alfonso l took advantage of her recent visit to Ixiril and Lady Xondonerry to I order Irish linen for .use in her future home. Her wedding will pro--11 bably take place in the second week I of October. The Pifncess selected a considerable amount of table linen in pas- j I tel shades .as'well as some fine | white specim as, hand embroider- ) led and trimmed with Irish lace. Lingerie for her trousseau is being made in Frane- and Spain by j I nuns, and the- protits of the work ; . will go to charity. The Infanta Beatrix has chosen I Irish tweeds ami Scottish homspuns I I for the tailor-mades und sports) suits. It is understood that royalists | j from Zaragossa. Spain, are planning ‘ to send a basket of roses from a I I garden in Aragon, so that petals of I tho flowers muy.be strewn in the path of the bride and bridegroom on I | their wedding thiy. Students to Pick Cotton Jonesboro, Ark — (U.R) Craigs | head county farmers intend to list locrJ help tlrfs fall in harvesting ithe bumper cotton crop, and ma- ‘ jority of county schools will b< ■ closed during tho harvest to permit |pup‘ls to work in the Helds.
I Japanese Invasion of Manchuria Is Test for League of Nations * ** * * * *** Non-Resistance Policy and Refusal of China to Be Party to New War Leaves Settlement of Dispute to International Body at Geneva—Kellogg Peace Pact May Bo Invoked Next. \ r u W J ■ ft "2 - « S i ’ EK? — Jw. SHB C_ ZZ^^^EaLpAß j .MEstTßeiops Pit EMbASRiNs s E /■ PEKING ,T Mk 2- K v| ** fri'NTSiN artwrX <1 \ MMb w f "frrs’dGTAo —f) •'Jj—~ I Si '^ l ®^ ; B g—-S rhe inv»<i n „ ,f M k • k ~ ! ' TEKA L HotW• itAWHAV Chamg HsEWH - LIANG and’now’lhe Chfn* « r ’c o a v P ,r ne " »*’’ COn “ nUed ,o o<:c V Py town af,er tow " in lh< ’ Province of the Peace Pact If the C C ° ,BS p,n ' k “ i" th« League of Nation, and the K.ilogg r L al -gu»t body at Geneva decide, that Japan ha. committed an act of war it will be the y n,en,ber f; n ;“° n * of th « L e *’ ue ««' ‘rad« «nd financial connection, with her. ' Thu. the es ticacy of the League as a power for international peace will be tested. T’. I. .. o nr t t rtx mi. t • r. ... - _
Washington, Sept. 25. —(U.R) —The latest attempt by the gods of war to pluck another liimtful of feathers from tile tail of the dove of peace provides an acid test for the oft-re-peated dogma: "It taker two to st:frt a war.” Not only that, but the present Chinese-Japanese fracas is i golden opportunity to test the fficacy of the League of Nations hs an instrument for maintaining world peace. - As is generally the case when nations fall out. each of the belligerents blames the other for the predpitaton of conflict. In this instance, the spark that ignited the rain and set the two yellow countries flying at each other's throats ! s claimed by Japan to have been the execution of a Japanese oftcer as a spy. by the Chinese. Th ■ Chinese reply that it is the Japause greediness for Manchuria that is responsible for the invasion of 'hat province. Japan acquired a strong foothold n Manchuria through the Portsmouth treaty in 1905. which award’d her the Russian lease of Port Arthur and Darien and the southrn extremity of the 1 iaotung Pen usula, including the Southern ManOILMAY A!D 101 RANCH Ponca City, Olla. - (UP I- Col <ack I Miller believes that new oil discoveries on his famous 101 Ranch near here eventually will help him in st aiahleniiig the (anted finnnqys of the ranch. Beset by fintou al d'fi< '9 s, one >f which was the failure of the 101 Ranch wild west show at Washington, creditors have asked a receiver tor th ■ ranch. Colonel Miller, veteran plainsman md lust of the.famous Miller brothers. has asked time to rectip his finances and pay off some $700,000 in depts against the ranch. “If the price of oil is raised to a profitable level, interest in development of the rach land leases wlv how vast stores of oil." Miller said. He explained the famous Watrd: horn field, which has produce I | more than $10,000,000 worth of petroleum. was located mostly on his lands. Tli" first oil well in this lo- '■ ality was drilled by the IHI Ranch Oil Company no thwest of the famous Miler "White House." • o — Famed Stock Yards Flawed Abilene, Kuns. — (U.R) —Another landmark of the old west Ims dis-' tppeart <l. The Union Pacific stockyards which stood here 5p years has been torn down. It. was known t I is the "end of the Overland cuttle I trail front Tex >s." o — Panama to Limit Liquor Sale Panama. (U.R) -Accodht.- to threquest of Governor Harry Hunte: •..< of the Canal Zone, made ihrnitgh United States Minister Roy r. D v is, officials of the Government iff Panama have made It known that: ; the sale of liquor will j? prohibited
' hnria Railway, which connects with the Korean railways and controls all of Maiwhuria south of ■ Mukden. The "Province of the Manchus" has an area of 3G3.610 square miles and a population variously estimated at from 25.00(1,000 to 30,000,000. ' The richness of its black soil makes < it a desirable agricultural prospect, . .-<> it is no wonder that Japan should covet this great natural reservoir for raw material for her iti- - > dustries. but though it has been pointed ■ut that Manchuria is well worth ■ I ghtin for, China, tern for years by civil war, has another idea. When the first overt move was made by 1 Japanese Jroops, under General llonjo, for the occupation of Manchuria, Chang Hseuh Liang. Man--‘churia's youthful governor and war lord, ordered a Chinese policy of : non-resistance, withdrawing his (roots peaceably before the adI vance of the Japanese hordes. Designating the Japanese occupation of Manchuria as an unwarranted act of war, Marshal ('hang Hsenli Liang is pinning his faith in world opinion taking the Chinese' side in the dispute. In this attii within a certain radius around the! Madden Dim site. Work on the .Madden Dam is expected to be i : started soon. o Hawk Drops Autoist Pickerel - Sanford. Me. (U.R) -Frank Libby,' motorinf •rough the countryside, . espied a hawk circling overhead.. Suddenly the big bird dropped! something. Libby stopped and| picked it up. It was a one and one-J quarter pound pickerel ami Libby appropriated it for dinner. — - —o — Caterpillars Liked Her Food Beatrice, Neb.—(U.R) —Caterpillars I chewing tin 1 leaves from the walnut tree behind Dr. C. A. Bradley’s home here smelled his wife's dinner cooking. They attacked the kitchen and swarmed over the screen door. Chemicals an I fire were necessary to turn back the i harge. Mining Engineers to Meet BLUEFIELD. W. Va. - (U.R) Minthg engineers of three states have he m Invited to attend the annual fall meeting of the coal division of the American Institute I of Mining and Metallurgical Engi-I nevi here Oct. !• and 10. West ‘ Virginia. Kentucky and A’irginla will be represented. - Brick Halts Bandit Suspect LINCOLN. Neb. (U.R) Eddie Moore, negro suspect in a filling station rold' ry, hhd outrun his pursuers. Jerome Neill picked up a brick and threw it. Moore was knocked unconscious, and captured. O’ — Err Specialists to Sicily Cd.niia. Sicily. - (U.R)--The second international Congress for the Study of Ear Troubles will be held here Sept 28 and 23. Delegates and ear specialists are coming from France Spain, B Igium, Rumania, Switzerland and Latin America.
tude the war lord is backed by Foreign Minister C. T. Wang, who has submitted Chinas side of the affair to the League of Nations. Meanwhile, although virtually all lof central Manchuria has been oc- ■ ’ eupied by the Japanese, diplomatic relations between the two countries have not been broken off. which puts the one-sided war in the cate- ■ gory of a local disorder. 1 But if the Chinese should invoke Article XI of the League Covenant, rhe august body at Geneva will have to decide whether or not Japan has committed an act of war against all other members of the league. If so. it is likely that the i member nations of the league will be called upon to sever all trade relations and financial relations witli her. It ii s. fine opportunity to test the efficacy of the league and the respect in which the Kellogg Peace Pact is held internationally. It will ) also prove or disprove the truth of i the belief that it takes two to make a war. If the Chinese policy of nonresistance to force climaxes in a moral and material victory for that country, the lives that have been sacrificed in Manchuria will not have been sacrificed in vain. Tired of Sorrow. Aged Justice To Quit Office Houston, Sept. 25.—(U.R>—Because ,he is “tired of listening to other folks troubles" J. M. Ray. at 77, has , decided not to run again after serv- ) ing 42 years a= a justice of the j peace. Holding inquests, and making night calls to view some dreadful find in a shallow grave, are gruesome work. Justice Ray said, but that is not why he is quitting. “It's grief and distress, women folks deserted by their husbands, children without food or clothes — that's what I’m getting away from," l lie explained. Get the Habit—Trad* at Hom.-.
SZtwMilM td c inn /5T\ ,TS wu niraxwsww ‘ O KITTY AXTON 2T WI®N»S L'hk SNSNiSQXK. SVMSKWOH ALL NEW SHOW — STARTS SAT. MIDNITt ZvoUR SFATs THE &REATEST CAST EVER ASSEMBLED J , c »"* i "““s failv, >I T<TIIP.M. TALKING PICTURES .TO” 2S M&&, 25‘-50' |{
PACIFIC COAST TO GET EIGHT NEW VESSELS Construction Underway Totaling $46,000,000 For Western Trips San Franciarm, Sept. 25.—(U.R) — Paaaengers with Pacific coaat points lot destination, or embarkation, will have their choice of eight new vessels, costing 146,000,000, for their , travel by the end of 1932 or early in 1933, local shipping companies have announced. The new ships, which will include some of the fastest and most luxurious of the American merchant marine, are all under construction, or keel laying ceremonies will be held for them in the near future. First of the new liners to make its appearance will be the President Coolidge. $8,000,000 sister ship of the President Hoover, which recently completed its maiden voyage to the coast. The vessels are turbo-electric powered, 653 feet long, of 33.000 tons displacement, and have accommodations for 1,260 passengers. The Mariposa and the Monterey, each costing $7,500,000, will make their maiden voyages to the coast early next year. They will enter ■ the Australian service. A sister ship to this pair, the Lurline, will be started soon, and is expected to make its first voyage late next year. Three vessels, costing $3,500,000 each, are to be built for passenger and fruit cargo service in the United Fruit Co. run. The Segovia and Talamanca will begin their service next spring while the third vessel will be ready some time in the fall, officials of the concern have announced. Two of the four new Panama mail liners being constructed for intercostal service will be put in service in the fall of 1932. These will cost $4,250,000 ecah.
0 . BRAZIL FACING • “GOLDEN AGE" Washington, —(UP) —Brazil will ’ I soon experience another “golden I age" according to a Department of Commerce report in which the opinion was expressed that the production of gold had started there again j 1 on the extensive basis. I The report stated that several ' I abandoned mines were being reworked and large production was ' | promised the individuals who were !, conducting the operations. So ex- ’ cellent were the prospects, the report stated, that it was expected Individual mining would give way to s large scale pioductlon which would bring the importation of machinery. , i At present the mines are being ! i worked almost entirely by pescat) dores, who keep all the gold thy . mine for themselves. Thus, it was said, much gold was unreported as I I these individuals handled it secret t ly and slipped it out of the country ( ) with the help of border smugglers. The average yield per person, it was explained, amounted to about ; $1.25 a day—a sum well above the ■ dally wage rate in the mining rei gions of Brazil. -1 o— First Weddinp in 16 Ye,ars London.—(U.R) —The first wedding Lin 16 years occurred in the Parish Church of Grove w-hen Miss Dor- ■ othy Bateman married A. E. Siret, a lawyer’s clerk of Leighton Buzizard. The church is the second : smallest In England, and Grove’s I population is 21. Girl Circles Globe 7 Times London. — (U.R) — Seven times ! round the world, or 500,000 miles, on a liner in the capacity of a ship's shop assistant Is the distinction en- ■ joyed by Miss Winifred Gordon, I After 10 years at this she secured j a routine job on 3,000-mlle voyages I between Liverpool and New York.
PAGE FIVE
"'.'ci”"" "■■■■' I . "1 lg Chilly this Evening? ar JF - _ Light the fire that never burns low Strike a match, turn a valve and there’s your heat—a glowing warmth that reaches to the far corners of the room . .. a cheerful, open fire that contains many of the j sun’s rays. No smoke rises in the chimney. No ashes drop into the grate. Clean heat—healthful heat— odorlza heat! The colorful beams of a gas radiant heater give an atmosphere of ease and comfort without any effort on your part. tiiiflf PEERLESS Radiant Gas Heater iUuUrattd above ONLY slßop The PEERLESS is ideal for those sudden cool spells that come before the furnace has been started for the winter. From early fall to late in spring, there are innumerable times when a little heat will go a long way toward making everybody comfortable. This Gas Heater is always ready at any instant to flood the room with glowing heat. Come In! Look over the many attractive models on display and select the one best suited to your mantel or fireplace. All moderately priced. NORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY
