Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1932 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

* - M-nWBN DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. I. H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A R. Holthouse Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D Heller Vice-President Subscription Rate*: Single copies $ .02 One week, by carrier 10 One year, by carrier 5.00 One month, by mall .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere *3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc., 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago 415 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. MAYOR SULLIVAN DISCUSSES TIMES: The Citizen's Reconstruction campaign now on is of vital importance to every one every where. Here is what Mayor Reginald Sullivan of Indianapolis thinks of it: "How much the affairs of our every day life depend on the con- ] fidences we have in our fellow men ' has never before been so plainly . illustrated as in the economic picture confronting us today. There j is an important phase of this pic-1 tore. Where would the community, be if all its inhabitants and interests were yielding to the impulses j o 4 selfishness and distrust? A city. , or any unit of government for that matter, cannot endure as an entity ; if its component parts are in conflict. "With the same faith, hope and I charity that the ' individual lives ] and prospers, the municipality thrives. I choose to believe that ! tlie great majority of my fellow I citizens are dependable, honest and trust worthy. And I believe every ‘ person would choose to think in 1 the same light, if given a moment , to reflect the utter hopelessness i ot any other psychology. I have I every confidence in our financial I

and business institutions and in the | good common sense of the Ameriian people. 1 heartily endorse the , purpose of the Citizens Reconstruc- ' tion movement." Where tariffs are concerned the enlightened and disinterested, observer must indeed believe that tlie world is stepping backwards. Looking over the past two decades he | sees a military war followed not by , any real peace but by a more bit- ; ter economic war whose tariffs de- i stroy industries with the deadly I accuracy of French 75’s. Looking over the past two years he sees nations injured by their own high tariffs yet resolutely refusing to tear them down, obstinately build- ] ing them higher and higher. Here, with but two months of the new years gone, he looks to Europe , again, and what does he see? Holland and Sweden raising their tariffs, France employing a quota sys- j tern 'o strengthen hers, and England — England, the home of free tradepiling up new tariffs* one i on top of another Tlie picture in ] America is equally distressing. The politicians who started world-wide tariff retaliation with their HawleySmoot bill are by no means repentant. President Hoover has been talking of internationalism but his is lip-service and nothing more. He and his Smoot and Watson:; block the way to tariff revls Makes You Lose U/ihealthy Fat — Mrs. Ethel Smith of Norwich. I Conn, writes: I lost 16 lb>. with I my first bottle >f Kruschen. Being on night duty it was hard to sleep days but now since I am taking Kruschen 1 sleep plenty, eat. as usual and lose fat. too." To take off fat —take one half Huspoonfiil of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in tlie morning before breakfast—-one bottle Unit lasts 1 weeks costs but. a few cents get it at Cutsliail's Cut Rat" Drug Store or atty drugstore in America. If this first bottle fails to convince you this is tlie SAFE and harmless way to lose fat —your money gladly returned. Don't accept anything but Knischen because you must reduce safely.

lon. The Democratic tariff bill looking to that object could have sailed to success had It had one word of favor from Mr. Hoover. ■ Characteristically he was silent save for an occasional snort about . buying at home.- Outlook. Governor Roosevelt won the dele- ■ I gate election in New Hampshire. i ! defeating Al Smith two to one and 1 showing that he still has more ' strength than has been given Him ' by the newspaper stories recently ' published. Roosevelt may or may not be nominated but he will undoubtedly enter the convention the favorite. If every dollar In the land were put to work tomorrow, industry and employment would be immediately galvanized Into action and lost confidence would be restored over night. That's what we are all trying to do in the reconstruction organization and it's perhaps the most important job this nation ever undertook. It must win. Now they propose lour per cent beer with a five dollar a barrel tax Ito raise nearly a billion a year for I the government and congress will | vote on it today. It looks like a j 'deliberate plan to put the members j on record, in fact that's what its I j promoters say it is. The average person has two .colds a year, scientists have discovjered. With some the one starts I January Ist and ends June 30th 'while the next one comes on July 1 1st and sniffs along until after j Christmas. A Paris man wooed a, girl for twenty years, then married her. Three weeks later she shot him. 1 Serves him right. He had no busiiness marrying until he was sure |of her disposition. * - — WA « How about tickets for the demo ] cratic banquet Monday night? This: i is the last call for time must be giv-: fen to permit those wtio will serve I the dinners to prepare. Get yours'

lat once it you haven't done so. Attend the democratic meeting tonight at headquarters when plans jfoi the big banquet here Monday i i veiling will be completed. A dozen ot the leading demote rats of the state will address the meeting here Monday evening. You j will enjoy it. Modern Etiquette i I —by— ROBERTA LEE ♦- — ♦ Q. How should one eat baked potatoes? A. The potato is split and should not be taken from the skin and mashed on the -plate. Q. At what age does a girl no I longer need a chaperon? A. When she is in her middle | twenties. Q. Should the sad that dancing | follows a reception be mentioned in | the invitations? I A. Yes. ► « Lessons In English Words often misused: Do not say ! We had been to a lecture.’ Say ;“We had been at a lecture." I Often mispronounced: Habeas | -orpus. Pronounce ha-be-as korpus nir.it syllable as hay, second syllable I as hay, second syllable as be. a unI tr ssed, o as in or. u unstressed, i and accent first syllable of each word. Often misspelled: Mahogany, Obi serve the two a's. Synonyms: Dissolute, profligate, • incurbed, unbridled, wild. Word study:: Use a word three limes and it is your.!." Let us ini ureas ■ our vocabulary by mastering I one word each day. Today’s word: Radiant; emitting rays of light; | beaming. "The sun was radiant." 1 O ■ ■ .. ■■ ■ Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the | Test Questions printed on Page Two. ‘ , 1. Italy. 2. No. 3. One son. • 4. Reptiles. 5. Empire State Building, New ■ York. ■ 6. Mexico. 7. Iceland. 8. North America and Asia, s 9. Department of Justice. 10. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

—and the Worst is Yet to Come t I I J I CO zfSrtSri "*■»-- /X?/ S Totrs re df / \ \ MUSICAL- //IL/ fol \ \ cokedy .<7 Sr X,./ \ i "WW ft® / M| TWA jft

A — > Household Scrapbook —oy- | ROBERTA LEE Cleaning Woodwork I For cleaning polished surfaces, dissolve two tablespoons of borax ' in a cap of boiling water. Then add three pints of cold water. Wash i with a flannel cloth, and dry with a Isoft linen cloth or chamois. Finally. use a little linseed oil or a good furniture polish. Labeling Jars When labeling jars and packages. try using the mucilaged brown paper tape that is used for sealing bundles. A roll of this tape will come in handy tor many purposes. Berries When putting berries in the refrigerator, spread them over a flat surface to prevent crowding one ] I another. * WEUTY YEARS AGO TODAY — From the Daily Democrat File * — — • Carl Stoops left for the Phili-p-i pines where he will teach for the | government. Prof. Jonas Tritch spoke at ChrisI tian (’. E. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Engeler tend I son. Gordon, spent Sunday in Bluff-

By HARRISON CARROLL fl CowlfM. Kio« Vwur.i SjndK.t.. In. , , ' HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March 00. < —Today’s news out of Hollywood ' brings a story that Frances Dee ; and Adrienne

I* F rance* Dee

Ames will play the feminine leads in Paramount’s “Come On, Marines.” Consider that, and you ca i get quite a slant on this business of making movies. Frances Dee was an extra. Sb" worked for a few dollar- a : day until her ] beauty and in-

dividuality attracted attention I I Giyfcn a contract, she made good, : ■ and now is one of the important , younger players on the Paramount iot Adriennr Ati.es wa -a rich girl, the wife of a New York broker. On way back from Honolulu ; she stopped in Hollywood to have her picture taken. The photographer recognized a screen type and got her interested in making a test. She registered well. So the long arm of Hollywood reached 1 out and plucked her from a penthoil sc. • These two girls now work side by side and are judged by the single criterion of glamor and abil- ' ity. Rich and poor, high and low, they’re all jumbled together in Hollywood. HOW TRUE! J It was a .Monday morning, Bill Oliver reports, and the boy< were 1 gathered around the bromo-scltzcr. j “Ah me,” came a sighing voice, fit’* a great life if you don't week I end.” —— I HERE'S GOSSIP. The 50 guests invited to Sonya ( Levien’s latest party can't con-1 ceal their curiosity Joan Bennett] and Gene Markey, who will be mar-1 j ried soon, are two of the four » guests of honor. Th 1 ' other two are Greta Nissen and Weldon Heyburn. Is it to be ananhouncement? . For the last two days, everybody I I have met in Hollywood has asked ■ me, “What's the latest news of the ] Lindbergh baby'.”' All the stars are i deeply concerned They can sympathize better perhaps than some, because nearly all of them have received thrwats at one time or an : other. Ann Harding'* home is still 1 under guard following an attempt

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT 1 111 ILSDAY. MARCH 10. 1032.

Decatur fund for real charity grows to $27.00 Pahy daughter hofn to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Suntan. Miss Bess Parker of London. Ontrio. a former Fort Wayne nurse is the guest of the J. C. Patterson home. Miss Lucile Andrews visited Dr. and Mrs. Burt Mangold. Miss Martite Terveer left for Toledo for a visit with her sister. Mrs. Clem Uhl. Dr. Boyers gave address at M E. Church. “The Young Man and Home". Mr. and Mrs. John Gerard entertained at six o'clock dinner. o Duck's Flying Formation Ducks do not often fly in V-fbrma-tion. Some have supposed th.n this formation makes it easier for a group of ten to twelve ducks tc follow a leader, which is usually an old gander. A small group ot ducks frequently fly in a straight tine or a slanting line. Enormous flocks of flying duck* do cot Uy ir formation. Either Adjective or Noun Baccalaureate I- an adjective or a noun, meaning “of or pertaining to the degree of bachelor.'' In the United States it lias an idiomatic meaning—a farewell sermon delivered to graduates.

►to kidnap her little girl . . . Talked to Carole Lombard today. She’s a frank girl, no airs. Put her down as one of the regulars. Same for husband Bill Powell . . . Saw Marlene Dietrich and Joseph Von Sternberg about to step into a long black motor outside the Paramount studio. Marlene wore a green jacket. She and Joe tell me there is no supporting cast chosen for her new picture . . . Benny Markson has been signed by R. K. O. to write the screen treatment for his play, “I.- My Face Red?” . . - Jimmy Durante wants to take up polo to see if he is important enough for the studio to make him stop . . Wilson Mizncr won 14 hat- at the Brown Derby, betting on the original opening date of "The Florodora Girl.” He oberves he'll have to have more horns than a moose to wear them air. TOUGH SPOT. A young fclloiv came to my house yesterday and, after displaying some embarrassment, asked if he could come in and disci: a personal matter. The role was new for him and lie rather muffed his talk, but it finally cam" out he wants to b" an actor. And he wondered if I might help. This kind of an appeal comes to me again and again, in letters and in personal calls. And I can't do a thing I can only wish these kids good luck. And heaven knows they'll need it. ABOUT A SWITCH. Warners' decision not to star Rill Powell in “The Dark Horse”

doesn't mean this story is to be abandoned. At lea.-’., not from what I hear. The new plan is to put Warren William in the part and to start production, as originally intended, about the middie of this month. Followers of this column will remember “The

* Bill Powell.

Dark Horse” i» a political story about a presidential campaign. Jo-epl: Jackson wrote it and Warners sent another writer to Wazhington to get the lowdown. DID YOU KNOW That Sidney Fox used to be a sls a week clerk in a law office?

NATURE PLAYED QUEER PRANKS IN CALIFORNIA ; Places Highest and Lowest Spots of Nation Close Together Calipatria. Cal., (UP) Nature lias played remarkable pranks on California. In designing this old earth, she placed the highest and lowest spots within these 48 states inly 6u miles apart—Mt. Whitney ind Death Valley. As an afterthought, she added Mt. lessen, only mflive volcano within the same boundaries, and a sprinkle of miniature volcanoes at the southern end of the Imperial Valley, near here. • These spouting geysers of mud from a distance look exactly like their immensely larger counter parts but range In size from one ' to eight fee'. They spout and sputter, emit clouds of steam and pour ntud streams down their slopes. This strange sight Is presented ' on the shore of Salton Sea, 100 feet i below sea level, 11 miles north and I west of Calipatria. For acres innumerable live and extinct craters can he seen. Credit for the discovery of the, volcanos is given an army offi-1 who, stationed at Fort Yuma 1 Ariz.. SO years ago. decided to in- ' I instigate huge clouds of steam he j I saw rising across the desert to the f west. Scientists have accounted for the | volcanic action in this manner: Many years ago the gulf of Cali- ] i fornia reached nearly a hundred I miles into California. Changes in | the earth's structure brought the I valley out of the ocean, and Salton j Sea evaporated until it was not j much more than a good sized lake, j Some 20 years ago, the Colorado : River jnmi>ed its banks and again : flooded I the valley. In these years | the Colorado had piled billions of I tons of silt on the valley floor. The I j The weight caused generation of I heat through pressure and earth I readjustments, and water penetrat- : ing the deep strata, is turned to .steam, to pour out of the ground as mud volcanos. o RADIO PROGRaKT * ♦ « Thursday's 5 Best Radio Features I Copyright 1932 by UP. Central Standard Time WABC, CBS network. 5:15 p. m. Reis and Dtillli. WEAK. NBC network, 8 p. m.— frig Six of the Air. WJZ, NBC network. 8:30 p. m.— Ensemble. WABC, CBS network, 9 p. m.— Trumpeters. WABC, CBS network. 10 p. m.— Columbia Symphony Orchestra. Friday's Five Best Radio Features Copyright 1932 by UP. Central Standard Time i WABC, CBS network. 3 p. m.— Light Opera Gems. WEAK. NBC network, 7 p. m. — Concert Orchestra and Cavaliers. WABC. CBS network, 8 p. m.— Pageant. WJZ. NBC network. 9 p._ m.— Paul Whiteman's Orchestra. T.'EAF, NBC network. 9:30 p.m. | —Theater of the Air. I Saturday’s 5 Best Radio Features WABC, CBS network. 7:15 p. m ! —Leopold Stokowski and PhiladelI phia Orchestra. WEAF, NBC network, 8 p. m. — | Public Affairs Institute. | WEAF. NBC network, 9p. ni. — ; Dauce Hour with Walter Winchell. WJZ, NBC network. 10 p. m. —, Slumber Music. *TbNGRESJn , O DA Y _ * — - (U Jb ———— — ♦ Senate: Continues 1 debate of interior department appropriations bill. Subcommittee continues hearing , on Lafollelte $5,500,000,000 public works bond issue bill. Interstate commerce committee continues hearing on bill to regui late interstate bus and truck trafi he. House: Begins debate on new billion dollar tax bill. < Expenditures committee boars DON'T GET UP NIGHTS Physic the Bladder With Juniper Oil Drive out the impurities and ex-j cess acids that cause irritation.) burning and frequent, desire. Juniper oil. buchu leaves, etc., is continued in Bukits, the hladdi-r physic. It. works on the bladder similar to castor oil on the bowels. Get a 25c test box from any drug store. After four days If not' relieved of “getting up nights" go I back and get your money. If yon are bothered with backache or leg pains caused from bladder disorders you are bound to feel better after tills cleansing and you get your regular sleep. Sold at Holthouse Drug Co.

Secretary of Interior Wilbur otij proposed administration of public works. Coinage committee continue* sit j ver investigation. Agriculture committee hears western stockmen's protest against activities ot farm board. ® CHURCH REVIVALS BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Pre.itfge gave a most graphic sermon last evening at the Baptist church upon the subject, "What shall I wear’" His text was from Rom. 13:14 and he spoke first of three garments to put off: First, grave clothes, John 11 44. showing by Ephesians 2:1 we are: dead in trespasses and sins. Second, was stolen garnien's, people who used stolen prefer j sions with no possession. He spoke of the ten virgins how they all looked alike to a certain point. Third. was moth-eaten garments. James 5:2. people who are members of churches yet living inconsistently. Moth-eaten garments are good for nothing hut to be discarded. He then spoke of three garments to put on First, the garment of Salvation Rom. 13:14. the ■. »>•-, ment of righteousness Rev. 3:5,] and the garment of praise. Isa 61:3. The meetings continue Thursday and Friday nights. Come and hear Rev. Prestige, t:: enjoy the song service of new i< hi songs. Friday night theie w '.I be a children's choir. o Horrible Thought A letter delivered in i.ondon arrived two days before the date as ] shown on tlie postmark It is terrifying "j flunk that hills may arrive ] befm-e the, - nr» <‘-ti' Humorist — o , BARGAINS — Bargains In Living Room. Dining Room Suites, Mat tresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co Monroe, our Phone number is 44 tt

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MURAL PAINTED FOR FOUNDATION Paris. (UP> — Henri Matisse, I considered one of th" greatest liv- ] ing eX|Minents o. modern art, Is now finishing a mural paintinj 14 by 40 I feet, destined for the' prihcipal hall of til l Barnej Foundation at Merlon, Pa. Matisse received the commlssiou two years ago when he was in America as a member of the jury lof tlie Carnegie Foundation. Dr. i Barnes of the Foundation conimis- ; stoned the French artist, and he has been at work one it ever since. ; It is reputed to be one of the finest contributions to the first halt of the 119th century. ] The mural is at present in Ma , lisse s Nice studio, b it Dr. Barnes ] has consented to allow it to be brought here for a ten-drj exhibition in April at the Georges Petit •'Galleries, thus permitting art lovers : .n Euro/e to view the work before ■]it leaves the country. '■ Special lighting arrangements

i A Neglected RUPTURB Is a Source of DANGER! SEE YOUR PHYSICIAN I You may have a small and seemingly insigmficant abdominal rupture which because it does z ZM not cause paui. you have neglected Beware: A neglected small rupture often proves very senous In many instances it is more dangerous than a large rupture. See your physician at once Bv M all means get his advice. This is Important We '—■ correctly fit and adjust Akron Trusses. Ask your ■ physician about our service. See him at once ■ The B. J. Smith Drug Co. | “The Rexall Store" I AUTHORIZED EXCLUSIVE AKRON TRUSS FITTERS J ' i

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