Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 254, Decatur, Adams County, 27 October 1931 — Page 5

an is to A | FARMERS I'AGE ONE. k jMallaslwr. is KM any - tlie ...... night was k l> Ashliauihor, presiDrcatv.f Chamber of ■ Amlr.-w Fuelling. In-j -of the Beet Grow-, „,.,ti.Mi. was introduced |K r ;1 short talk he introdueFa rni , .1 oh on a number K,,.. i,..fore calling on Col. J, ,i Briggs, assistant manager of the Indiana . u end an hour's bis organization. ■K . . willingness to co-op-tanners in this com.a effoit to re-open the I e ;,,-lie. Adolph Schainer |K \ 1> S’ltiles. members of vlii.h visited the j w< ek gave reports. SB hat he could .. Ii am-e that the /am .Id but : . ; 1 . xt should ■81..,-. mers and that B, .■ of pledges i et< - o'l 'hat he then! |K up to them. He had told his a. pledge the IleBi.it the men ans ns the pledges.” to < w M ' i' age -,-ii ■ — - - Kroe seeks £ NEW PAVEMENT \- HIM ONI'l imlianapolis d Sim Burk. ■ 1..s- diver J .1,1 \\ i liews. E. Bah-

Mat 40? Kidney Acidity HB' tl • : rd ) i;u-d >v. nf i <>m 1 r V-ri*. B h kuclip. Leer ' . ■-- ,\. r\oi.is'i’ ss. Circles r *■'•'■ s - !i ’ 11 h' •• J . Buri.in;; and j^B 4 * -s, c.iUfr’ed bv KitiBB A ’ :(l «y. I " hi you t<. <i’iit sufi.iiht now. Come in and g>t ' H^fl 1 I th:nk is the greatest mod- i [. hfiV ” ev<- found It often I N , e improvement it. 24 hours. Cystex • Siss-t rx l. 1 y ' an, i I guarantee it to eonib.it i!, t 3<- conditions and and your money bu»X

j\J° more JBL. autumn chill I I |g7=-=;=^ B F s Tp K " ■ls you light a Peerless Radiant I GAS HEATER jfl Save money with a gas heater; keep comfortable on ■ chilly mornings and evenings during fall or spring, K or "between seasons”, when a furnace fire is unfl necessary, troublesome and costly. ■ Always ready to flood the entire room with clean, ■ odorless, healthful heat, Peerless is an exceptional I bargain value as well as a warm friend. Many q B designs, some as low as_LO ■ . Paymenu I Northern Indiana I Public Service I Company |

ner, Russel Haines, Ervin Lockingar. W. S. Smith W. M. Stucky Harry Ehrsam, Harry Essex, Roy I lice, O. O. Hocker, Forest Andrews, R. E. Crist. Floyd Baxter Earl Bauders. Vilas Bollinger Man uel Arstutz, J. F. Crtet, Ira Wagner, Adolph Hauni, Ervin Stucky, and Virgil Wagner. JAPAN ISSUES NEW WARNING FORM PAGE ONE) activities northward from ClianZ chun. The rumors followed a pre- | vious report from Mukden, Capital ( of Manchuria, that loyal Chinese troops were being armed by Soviet agents. Mukden, Manchuria. Oct. 27 Japanese military forces are prepared to occupy the Chinese controlled TaonantAnganchi Railway if necessary to enforce an ultimatum issued at Jsitsihar, it was indicated today. The Japanese south Manchurian railway holds a mortgage of 15.00,000 yen (about $7,500,000) on the railway. o — GANGSTER WINS SUPERSEDEASBAIL REFUSED ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I he forwarded him money through ! Mrs. Wrinkler and aided in other | ways in the bank robber's defens >. | Chicago, Oct. 27 —<U.R>— This I red letter day in the calendar of Al Capone will see him en route to Leavenworth penitentiary before night to begin serving his long term, or ordered held in the county jail pending disposition of appeal, or treed on bond. Decision is due at 2 p.m. when Circuit Court of Appeals Judges Samuel Alschule. Will M. Sparks and Evan A. Evans expect to rule on applications for supersedeas and bail. They halted removal of the convicted income tax dodging gangster yesterday by deferring i decision. Before Capone learns his lo’, | his faithful bpdytAiard, Phil !>'- | Andrea, likely will have learned whether he must remain in jail for contempt of court. D'Andrea who carried a gun into Capone's ' income tax fraud trial Oct. 10. has ! been in county jail since. His i hearing was set for 10 a.m. today, i Capone while away the time in a county jail cell adjoining tha‘ j-erf his bodyguard. The gang chief I has been there since he was sent ; enced Saturday by United States I District Judge Janies H. Wilkeri son to 11 years imprisonment and I fined $50,000. The penalty, stiffest ever given I an income tax law violator, % was | imposed after conviction of evading $215,000 tax. If the circuit court of appeals i denies superaetlans, Capone likely will leave at 6 p.m. for the peni- ' tentiary on a Burlington train. I ! Guards have been detailed to see! 1 that the gangster does not escape I laMaHRaaaBMnaiWMaiMMMwnMMaMMMMi

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1931.

Dairying In Adams County (Indiana Farmer's Guide) Dairying seems to be the hub about which the wheel of Adams county's work is built. The county herd improvement association is now in. its seventh year and herds in this association are mak-

ing some very 1 creditable records of production. A strong dairy calf club program is being .carried on in connection with other 4-H club work .and it is having a desirable effect kon dairy im- ■ provement. Re■cently the first

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county 4-H club lair and extension exhibit conducted by 4-H club members was held at Berne. • I’his year 142 girls will complete I club projects in canning, sewing. ; I iking and food preparation. County Agent L. E. Archbold is a strong advocate for 4-H club work, believing if present com- ■ petition is to continue among individuals, that everything possible should be done to prepare farm boys and girls to face this situation. Lime and legumes are also being stressed in Adams county as is the better care of poultry.* County Agent Archbold is serving his home county. He was graduated from the school of agriculture at Purdue University in 1915. From then until January 1930, when he entered county agent work, he was associated with industrial concerns closely associated with agriculture. fvTownTalk ■ » n ■■ i i ,11 Mr. and Mrs. George Appelman, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wolpert. Mrs. Joseph Wolpert, Miss Lena Appelman. Joseph Appelman. Mrs. G. Nesswald and daughters Agnes and Christinh attended the funeral of George Brickner at Bascom. Ohio. Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Arsen Wenning of Celina. Ohio, Mrs. Mary Kulm. Fred Kuhn of Coldwater, Ohio, were guests of Mrs. Julia Colchin and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Tanvas, Sunday. Miss Mary Bopp of Willshire, Ohio spent Monday iii this city visiting at the A. W. Tanvas homo. Miss Edna Belie Baer spent the w ok-end with Miss Lena Reppert in this city. She returned to hethome in Fort Wayne today. G. V Porter made a business trip o Indianapolis today. Miss Helen Deitp.il of Geneva visited with friends i~ this c.ty today. Tlie condition of Arthur Wi mhoff who underwent a major operation it the Adams County Memorial lospital Sunday afternoon remains | vo.y serious. Ent rod App entice degree will I be conferred at Mttsonic hall tool, ht at 7:30 o'clock 111 members are asked to attend. Dan Tyndall, W. M. TEXANS FIGHT ! TO KEEP FORT Brownsville, Tex.. - (UP) —The gray eaibattlements o Fort Brown, bathed in blood in the year of its Ini ill. 1846. and once th? headquarters of Robert E. Lee and U. S. | Grant, may soon become the perch of owls and the home ot' tarantulas. The historic fort has been included in the War partment’s econany p ogram. callin? for the aliond•neat of "unn ices iary” military outposts. Citizens of Brownville and South Texas are crusading to prevent its loss. Shots fired in the War with Movico plugged its earthen embankment in IM»>- General Lee stayed there during his investigations of raids along the border. General U. S. Grant while a lieutenant in the army of General Zachary Taylor, received his first training theto.. Agitation in the north caused Federal gunboats to anchor off the bar of Brazos Santiago nearby in 1863. With a force ot 7,000 men. Gen- Nathanial P. Banks marched on the fort and drove the smaller Confederate army out. During the p sent century blood was shed at the fort when negro mldiers stationed there mutinied in 19i 6. One Ame.ican was killed. President Roosevelt’s inquiry resulted in the entire command being mustered out. In 1916, border bandit troubles became so accute a largo force was placed within Hie liariiiade. Adobe structures built in 1860 'are still standing beside newer can- ' t inments erected during the World | War. Prizes for Best Masked. P. M. H. S., Friday night.

NEWSPAPERS FIGHT OVER JUDD STORIES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) porters in disguise, accompanied by four lesser lights, were met at tiie hospital door by five men from the rival papers. The bidding delegation had ord I lers to offer Mrs. Judd the biggest! price ever paid to an accused crim-' J inal in Los Angeles for her ‘‘own 1 story,” regardless of who wrote it. | Those who held the jail by prior right were sarcastic. “And you’re the smart guys that got out that warrant for Doc Judd for practicing medicine without a license, eh?” was the tenor of their remarks. Whereupon Dr. Judd' quietly withdrew, in the company; of a reporter. Notes were passed to Mrs. Judd as fist-fights impended. She would I sell her "own story” a second time |if Dr. Judd would consent. But i Dr. Judd had disappeared. He was i "hiddenT in the office of the defenders, dictating the second installment of his “own story." Mrs. Judd's contemplated moth-1 erliood was learned from other in i 1 mates of tlie jail hospital. "They might hang a woman in Arizona,” she was quoted as saying, "but I doubt if a mother, do you?” Authorities said when she was a young girl in Illinois, Mrs. Judd claimed she was about to become a mother when she xeally was not. Lloyd Andrews, county attorney at Phoenix, indicated he would have Mrs. Judd examined as soon las he returned her to Phoenix. i Andrews will have charge of the prosecution of Judd.

"If® a ' Truly Modem Cigarette" / 1 "I'm certainly grateful for Lucky Strike. It's a truly modern cigarette for f Wfe it gives me modern throat protection. I ■ And your improved Cellophane | wrapper is wonderfully modern, too. It opens without any coaxing W —a flip of the little tab and there I are my Luckies/' J / / / i/ 'S *!s Miss Young's ' / Statement Paid v For? Ar . You i" 0 ? be interested in A famous and beloved picture star while .< know.ng that notone cent W| still in her teens—blessed with breath taking I was pa.d to Mss tourg > 3 9* r *' beauty—could fate have been kinder J ■ ' g Nr x <fl to *• oretta Young? She's the very incar- smoker of lucky strike nation Os yOUfig loveliness. If yOU have not e.garettes for 4 years. We I seen h er in First National's "Ruling ° s 'ven wui be a. bX Ks sssW’Ba Voice," do SO. fl Cl aI to her and to First ■ National, her producers, I I 05 er oncl( >rsement of 'v V / \W* lUCKlESisloyouondtous. That LUCKY tab! Moisture-Proof 1 ||? Cellophane. Sealed tight—Ever right. B TheUniqueHumidorPackage.zip— I And it’s open! See the new notched IB 1 tab on the top of the package. Hold I / / K \ down one half with your thumb. | W Tear off the other half. Simple. Quick. Zip! That’s I W |oi ! I all. Unique! Wrapped in dust-proof, moisture- | S OZ® \ , f' proof, germ-proof Cellophane. Clean, protected, 1 S / Iffl neat, FRESH!—what could be more modem than | V LUCKlES’improved Humidor package—so easy B to open! Ladies — the LUCKY TAB is — your 1 finger nail protection. > - _ Iff ft?Kf&l Coor . l»ai. ■ Aft Aft kjw Th.Am.rlna Tf-’c IL 5 tAJcLsuCU igp—jKr Made of the finest tobaccos - the Cream of many Crops exclusive "TOASTING" Process which includes the use of And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps modern Ultra Violet Rays-.the process that expels certhat Flavor Ever Fresh ,a * n harsh, biting irritants naturally present In every % ™ tobacco leaf. These expelled irritants are not prese.is in ( TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Tuesday, yourLUCKY STRIKE. 'They’reout— SO they can’t heijt!_” No Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B. C. networks. I wonder LUCKIES are always kind to your throat.

He said he will ask the death penalty for Mrs. Judd. It was indicated that the accused “trunk murderess" will have plenty of financial support in fighting her case. In addition to the large sum she was reported to have received for selling her “own story” to local newspapers, it was reported that “certain Phoenix parties” had subscribed $20,000 sot | her defense. Meantime it seemed highly problable that Mrs. Judd would be on her way to Phoenix by tomorrow night despite a writ of habeas corpus originally intended by defense attorneys to keep her here until November 3. Los Angeles. Cal.. Oct. 27.—(U.R) | —Dr. William C. Judd, husband of Winnie Ruth Judd, charged with I the Phoenix trunk murders, surrendered today on a complaint accusing him of practising medicine without a license. 0 Chicago Stock Show To Be Biggest In History Chicago Oct. 2? — Early entries j pouring into the headquarters of i tlie International Live Stock Exposition. to lie held at the Chicago Stock Yards this year November 28 to December 5. give assurance of one of the largest displays of livestock and educational agricultural exhibits in its history. So reports B. H. Heide. Secretary-Man-ager of the exposition. The coming 32nd anniversary of this woild's largest exposition of the meat making breeds of livestock will open its doors upon the mammoth International amphitheatre and 22 adjoining buildings on ' the first Saturday following Thanks

giving. Each day and evening will be crowded with events of education, inspiration, and entertainment to the visitors from town and country who combine to make the International Live took Exposition the most cosmopolitan agricultural show in the laud. Officials of the International Grain and Hay Show, a department of the Live Stock Exposition but in itself the world's largest competitive display of small seeds, hay, and grain, state that in spite of the drouth in many sections of the country this year, they look for the largest entry in the history of the event. It will be due, they say, to the lifting of the ban or exhibits from corn borer infested regions of the country. Exhibits from infested territory may be sent to the exposition this year after careful treatment under Government supervision at regional assembly points before they are sent to Chicago. Australian Wheat They also assert that samples of wheat from as far remote points of the globe as three of the important wheat p.oducting states of Australia are en route to the 1931 show. According to the management, tlie dead line on assepting entries for the individual livestock classes ot the exiposition will be November 1; for the Giain and Hay Show, Novemlier 10; and for that spectacular and highly practical side ot the exposition, the carload lot classes of commercial cattle, sheep and swine, November 21. o World Rainfall Heavy Every day sufficient rain falls upon the earth to nil « reservoir 4(K) miles square to a depth of about 10 feet

DROUGHT DRYING UP LAKE TAHOE Carson City, Nev. —(UP)—Lake Hahoe, one of the deepest lakes in the world, is drying up. Lake Tahoe has stood as the mystery of the California-Nevada region for eras. Now it has bowed its head to drought and a sandbar has appeared. In the event of another dry win ter evaporation would carry the level of the lake to a new low stage and the present shallow water would recede further, leaving the long wars on dry ground. Generations of western people have come to this lake to vacation swimming in the cool water and i diving from the old pier. At some places the bottom of the lake has never been reached, although lines have been dropped 5,090 feet. Where the sandbar appears at Bijou, Calif., water was of sufficient depth once to allow small steamers to anchor there. Indiana Forty and Eight End Strange Identity Tale Vincennes, Ind., — (UP). — The final chapter of a strange case of mistaken identity was revealed with the announcement that arrangements were completed to return Harlen Pritchard, a former resident here, to this country from Europe. Robert Gephart, state commander of the Forty and Eight was in charge of the arrangements. Gephart said he was informed j that Pritchard had been released I

PAGE FIVE.

from the French Foreign Legion. He e> leeted to have him sepj, to a hospital for insane at Norman, Oklahoma. Several years ago the body‘of a man, believed to have been Pritchard, was buried here. Even his mothei did not question the identity. About two years ago it was learned that Pritchard, his mind shattered by war service, was being held in northern Africa. Gephart and others took up the matter of obtaining his release. Russian Engineers Flee Hard Soviet Assignments Tashkent, U. S. S. R. — (UP)— Engineers and other • specialists, who come from European Russia to work on new construction jobs here frequently find the assignment too trying and leave their posts without much ceremony. The local newspapers continually carry notices asking tor information about "escaped” engineers. The following from a recent issue of the Tashkent Pravda VostOka is typical: "Shameful flight from the new site of construction at Vakhshsky: Engineer Ilya Michaelovitch Fistul. All organizations and individuals who know the whereabouts of Fistul are asked to notify—- — o — <Set the Habli—Trade at He ma Coming REXALL’S Greatest of all 1c sales B. J. Smith Drug Co.