Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 28 March 1932 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
■—h— —uui u »’wm DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. I. H. Metier Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse. Sec’y & Hus. Mgr. Dick D Heller... Vice-President Subscription Rates: dingle copies $ .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mail .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail ...... 1.75 One year, by mail ..... 3.00 Tne year, at office— 3.00 Prßes quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere »3.50 one year. Advartising 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. ~ 1 ■— i .... i mi ■ Candidates for various offices are filing each day and it won’t be long until the field will be well tilled with those desirous of serving the citizens of this county and district. This is the week to start your spring advertising campaign. If you want.your share of business go after it through the columns of the Daily Democrat. Psy your subscription to the Dail*- Democrat this week, assuring you Un news of Adams county, the grate, and nation the rest of this year"when news is breaking each fey.— Easter Sunday is past and we look forward to spring with the opening of business and social activities, following the l>enten season. The occasion was duly observed here in homes and churches. ' Weli here we are all set for an- | >jdlier week witli its joys and thrills and troubles and every thing else. Face it with a smile and the determination to take care of any situation which arises It is encouraging that even a score of workmen have been called , back to work at the General Electric I here and we hope that orders continue jo arrive so rapidly that the entire force will soon lx* going and overtime. Indications are not iff* bright but this company will re- • store their force to full time as soon as possible. Speaker Fred Garner lost the j • sales tax fight and probably his I • chances for the democratic nomi- .. nation for the presidency which , up to last week were considered very good. He was supposed to be " the heavy weight against Roosevelt
but hu* hold slipped the past week • and the outlook for ue New York - governor on the first ballot are . better 'today than any time yet. The way that feiiow Murdock . drove a ear down Second street . Saturday, dodging traffic and stopp- • ing for red lights and signals, made • every otic wonder just how be man - ag-d it better than most fdfkx can “ with clear vision. So fur no one has been able to tell us just the ~ Kti 'i of it. but its a thrilling at- . traction and tile big crowd seemed - to enjoy it. ’’L —<3 Many BoxesM“==>' of Face Powder and renders a more durable, lasting bea’ttv. The soft. ev-m. fascinating appearance you secure, retains all of its original attractiveness thruout the day without rubbing off or streaking. Itshighly and astringent action helps correct blemishes and skin troubles. GOURAUDT3 Wbte flwh end RMlwi hSMtw
George Souders, who won the 500mile automobile race in Indianapolis five years ago Is a candidate for the democratic nomination for • treasurer of Tippecanoe county and if he runs with the same courage . and vigor displayed in the days 1 when he was racing on the speed tracks, he will make the boys step i some both In the primary and the I general election. J The fact that the legislative com--1 mlttees can’t agree on a plan is 1 proof enough to Governor Leslie that they would never agree in a special session and he steadfastly refuses to heap that expense on the state. It does look as though the boys ought to know what they are meeting for but agreement seems about the farthest from their minds. Each law maker has an idea of his own. An Indianapolis gang pulled a new lind of torture the other evening. They caught a young man named William Murphy in a park, took him over to the railroad where they poured oil over his clothing and set fire to it. causing fatal injuries. There are a lot of beasts running loose these days who ought to be put to work pounding rocks or doing something else that would tire their bodies and rest their minds. Fred Imndis is going to try for the republican nomination for governor again, it is announced and with some chances of success this year, according to the dope*. It Is said he is favored by no less a personage than Senator James E Watson who feels that his nomination would bring to support of the ticket thousands of independents who would otherwise be Tost and Jim is overlooking nothing that he ’ feels will give him another six years in Washington. Theaters in France have gone on strike because of what they claim was excessive taxes imposed by the government. They notified the officials that unless the tax was i lowered they would close up and when this request was refused, they closed shop. Can you imagine Paris without dance halls, night clubs, boxing, theaters and the movies’.’ Tha’s what they have now and we wonder how long that nation will be willing to drag along these dull days without the fun makers to j cheer them up. .. * , « Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the , Test Questions printed
on Page Two. • • 1. St. Johns. Newfoundland. 2. It in a grass. 3. Cape Agulhas. 4. Exodus. 5. Sarajevo. 6. Marie Bickford Dunn. 7. The Cuyahoga. 8. The Yellow Race. 9. Boi.se. ' 10. Lord Byron in "Don Juan." ~~~°T~ _ Lessons In English Words often mlsued: T»o not say "Each of the boy- are going to bring his lunch." Say “is goinr." Each is the singular swbfaet. Often mispronounced: Cabaret. Preferred .ronuu*.ration is kab-a ret. tirst. a as in cab. second a unstressed, n as in bet, and accent firs’, sylfable. Often misspelled: Nasturtium, [Observe the Liitm. ISynrxtyir.. . Dr,tend. extend, ex- | and enlarge, inflate, swell. at retch. Word indy: "lien a word three I ’lOie and it Is v«ur ." fa-t u- in ! --re-w ■ our vocabulary by ma dering otic word each day. Today's word: Inamorata; a woman with whom I me is in tore; a .sweetheart. “She I was the inamorata of his youth." youth. ’’ _—. p *— — « Modern Etiquette I -jy- .i ROBERTA LEE • —j Q. What is the rop»r way to eat harlottn riissc? A The spoon may be used for I to' filling, or cream, toil the fork should be used for the cake foundation. Q. Should the hostess always offer her hand io' Tilers'’ A. Ye:, to both lunu and women. Q. What is the correct male attire at a formal breakfast .’ A. The morning or frock coat, with gray trousers.
r.- — ~ — !■ J Anglo-Irish Crisis Over Royal Oath r « * * * * * President de Valera’s Defiance of Britain Recalls Easter Rebellion of 1916, When He Hurled a Similar Challenge With a Rifle. [Rfbei/Auscnfrs “ (far wOpjint [ Under Guard * 7W iftF jW. yMMpB ft? j ti r 1 , " 11 1 .Jag* W JR i i /BF'tl • ; J fr•' ‘MMfI iftM I 4 rwkf ILfiM ». Ap-. s&s3Bfi Mlj LF l lt f!«f •r ♦ 4»'m i 1 ■ ErL-— “Wsll -x. ■ Hi A Ji fIL-JEBWJI \\ gegSk MbM kings bridge, bsi’TOM Sheli/ Fire Wh « .. ..' ,-" Jly EamonndbVac-ewa ia 1916 The forma! for abolishment of the oath of allegiance to the King of England by President de Valera of the Irish Free State, is regarded in London with extreme gravity. Net only in the matter of the oath, but also in that of the land annuities, amounting to $15,000,000 which Ireland paid to the British Government, ia there a serious difference of opinion between the Irish President and Great * Britain. De Valera contends that Britain has no right to the annuities, but is willing to submit the question to a high court. Meanwhile, in London, there is talk of economic reprisals. But it io highly improbable that England will consider an armed invasion of Ireland. It was just sixteen years age i when Ireland struck the first blow in the campaign that won her present status. Open rebellion broke out in Dublin on Easter Monday, 1916, when Irish volunteers occupied all the strategic points in the Icily and formally proclaimed an Irish Republic. General Padraic Pearse was in command of the rebel forces and his troops occupied the General Post Office. Eamonn de Valera, then a professor of mathematics at a Dublin university, discarded his cap and gown and donned the Sinn Fein uniform when the call came. He commanded the rebel forces in the Ringsend district for the five days of the revolt. On ‘ the fifth day. General Pearse, to prevent the slaughter of innocent non-combatants, ordered his troops | . to surrender. De Valera, with the other insurgent leaders, was sentenced to death, but owing, it is believed, to his American birth, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. He escaped in 1917 and fled to America. Later he returned to fight in the Black and Tan war and though near death many | times, lived to rule the country for which he so bravely fought.
Dublin. Mar. fk—The fact that President Eamoiui de Valera of the Irish Free State has been guilty of the unstatesmanlike conduct of endeavoring to fulfill his campaign promises has once mote put a tremendous strain on the relations between the Emerald Isle and Great 1 Britain. I Two of the foremost planks ia the platform of the Irish leader ' were the repudiation of the oath of j allegiance to the English King and 'the withholding of land annuities. I i amounting to about $15,000,000 an-i nually, which were paid to the Brit ' I ish exchequer. That President de : I Valera was sincere in his pre-elec- | tion statements is evidenced by | his formal notification to the Brit-I ish government that the Irish Free I State government holds "that the . oath of allegiance is not mandatory, and that the Irish parliament' has the right to modify the consti , tution as tho people desire." Meanwhile, the situation is re-' garded as grave in London and: there is much speculation as to; what steps the British government j ’ will take in the face of De Valera's defiance. However, there is little likelihood of an armed invasion of the Free State by England armed forces. It is just 16 years ago that the first blow was struck which result-, cd in Ireland acquiring her pres-1 etit status, but not before a guerilla warfare for nearly six years, at
j Household Scrapbook t If —oy— i ROBERTA LeE • —_—.——- e Yeast •To keep yeast for two or Hire' days, without any odor in tin- i<.e- --' box place an inch of salt iu a half pint jar. then a cake of yeast j ’ wrayped in tiu-toil. another half inch o salt, another cake of yca.it. 1 until jar b filled, the top layer i ' | should be tin inch of .;»M. Screw on | the cover and piu' e in >< »• to>x. The Hands t If tliu bauds xhrlvel *h> a placed I in water for a h ugtli of l ime, try I ntMviag them with vinegar or -ai'. ' Th" wttpleasaul. feeling will ie.,,.and the skin «ill be soft and fine, i Papering • A mue.li neater job will be Hie result, when papering a if all | the prnvioiK p»per is rem ted. ' * TWENTY YEARS ? AGO TODAY -I — • 1 f rt>m the D»Hy O*i>ioor»t FHe i r Atts. D. B. Erwin-.md J«vni- Silt I ton are in Portland today. ('. c. Ctomens lias returned from Colorado where ho npetit five • month'*. Seven affidavits have been filed . before Squire Stone charging haul- - ing excessive loads on the pikes. "Jack the Leg-grabber " ha* been :, school children, Ileury Thomas ia iu Portlaud.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. MARCH 28, 1932.
I intermittent intervals, had stained; . uiany pans of the Emerald Isle a, deep red. Open rebellion broke out in Dub-. lin on Easter Monday. 1916. after a ■ -(series of happenings, during which , i a German ship, the And, was Sunk while running arms to the Irish Volunteers. i A great Sinn Fein (tor Ourselves) i •fparmte was'to be held in the Irish [capital, but in some manner the 1 iword got around that the British, authorities intended to raid the i procession with the object of ar-1 ' resting all the Sinn Fein leaders. The Irish, already armed with an 1 of obsolete rilles, shot-1 I guns, pikes and even clubs, deeid:ed to fight. At noon on Easter' Monday the Irish Republic was ■ i formally proclaimed ami insurgent I , forces occupied all the strategic; , points in the city. I General Padraic Pearse, coni mander-in-chief of the rebels, took, jover the General post office after: a short battle: railway stations and, I factories were seized and the war was on. De Valera, then a professor of | mathematics in a Dublin university, discarded his cap and gown | I when the call came and took up a, (rifle. He was assigned to com ■ mand the rebel forces in the Ring-: send section of the city and h" iproved himself an able general by, j withstanding tho attacks of twoi divisions of British troops, backed
Mi . Jennie Fuhrman ba return- t i led from Cuba Mid h visiting her.-.; The Mcrvk > is busy remodel-i | ing. * ! < 1 Mr;.. ( has .'-ftnw entertained ; ' I twenty of the -Royal Neighbors at a: 1 •quilling party. Mr-.. John Herman and children ■ ' have returned from a visit at St. ! Henry, Uhio. Michael Kuhn. Jacob Vogt and I , Jtd.n Ho tman have gone to Mich-; , igan to purchase farms. I , o — CHI'RCH VIEWS ARE DIFFERENT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j sei forth in four rwommeuda-- . • Hous: "I. Where the iH-rsons cotiteui-- , I plating marriage are members of] | different cominuiiions nearly re-1 latod in doctrine or policy, they, hniuy well l><- advised by their re- ’ spcctive pastors to settle tlte hues ' I lion before marriage by agreeing: tn attend together one or other of | their churches. or even a third t bwrshr mid to bring up th n ir| ' children in it. Where only one of the per-1 sons is a member of a ehnrcli ofj the Protestant group And the re-1 i’gious differences are profound.! ■>u« It persons should lie advised to 1 t-ottsidrr the situation with great •j x I ioUuness. in all its aspects, and ,to reach an agreement before i tusrrtage Where intolerable conditions are imposed by either church .
iby artillery, for five days, though (his entire force numbered only 200 | men. On the fifth day, General Pearse. Ito prevent the wholesale slaughter of innocent non-combatants by .British shellfire, ordered his little army to surrender, having made an agreement with the British that ‘the rank and file of the rebels would be treated as prisoners of war. Once iu British hands, the lead lers of the revolt were summarily dealt with. All were sentenced to death, among them Eammonn de Valera. But Destiny hud other plans for the American-horn Irish pitriot. Though his comrades met death before British firing squads. De Valera cheated the grim reaper, it is still a mystery why the sentence el death, which was passed on him, was not carried out, but many hold the theory that owing to his American birth, the British were uneasy as to the effect his execution would have in the United States, for the co-operation of which England was angling. De Valera escaped from his English prison in 1917 and went to ! America. I-ater he came back and [fought in the Black and-Tan war, .during which he was hunted with I a price upon his head, but his star ■of destiny guided him onward until [he recently won the highest honor lln tin land for which he so bravely fought.
in which membership is held, per•ons contemplating a mixed marriage should be advised not to enter it. The committee on marriage and the home protests earnestly against the requirement by any church that the children of mixed marriages should be pledged to that < hurch. "4. Where .otucreuccs in the c'uurches interested in the questions arising from mixed marriages •an be arranged, such confer-' ernes should be welcomed with a view to safeguarding the sanctity of marriage and the spiritual welfare of the home.” Strop.: emphasis is laid in the report upon th*- avoidance of any "ecclesiastical interference" which would force upon either partner to a marriage any rigid church requirement which is contrary to his own religious convictions. u “Figurehead" or Ornament If ship is a figure projecting fr*>m the stem of rhe vessel. It Is called a 'qurehemi If It is an ornament in the form ot an emlc'esed shield ibst does not project in any It is ailed a how ornament — ;— No Sleep, No Rest, Stomach Gas is Cause Mra. A. ( loud aayg: “For years I had <i bad stomach ami gas. Was nervous and could not sleep. Adlerika rid me of all stomach I trouble and now 1 sleep flue." 8.1 J. Smith Drug Co. *
L — The People’s Voice Thi» column for the of our roodore who wi»b to make »uggea:ions tor tho general good or dlecuea quoetioue of lnte»eat. Teaao »i«n ?<>'« name to ahow authenticity. It will not be used If you ureter that It not be L Think Thia Over We have been awked to publiah i the following verses taken trvm the I Urn klayers Magazine; Old Men In savage tribes where skulls are tkiok And primal passions rage. They have a system, sure and quick. To cure the blight of age. For when a native's youth has fled And years have sapt-ed him vim They aimply knock him on the head Ami put au end to him. But we. In this enlightened age. Are built of nobler stuff. Anvf so we look with righteous rage On deeds of harsh and rough. For when a man grow s old and gray And week and short of breath I We simply take his jot) away And let him starve to death. • I RADIO PROGRAM , » ♦ . Monday's 5 Best Radio Features WABC. CBS network. 3:3t» p. tn. I —Artist Recital. WEAF. NBC network. S:S« p m. —Parade of States. WABC. CBS network. 8:30 p. m. —An Evening in Paris. WABC, CBS network. » p. tn.— Gay Lombardo's Orchestra. W.IZ. NBC network. Iff p. nt. Slumber Music. j Monday Columbia chain 10: it* 10:45 pm. ES T Chester I field Orchestra; Boswell Sisters and Nat Shilkret. Mann Named Chairman Bloomington. Ind.. March 28— IL ' J. Mann, Kirkland township. Dei a-i tur is Adams coflnty chairman for j the annual state high school discus i sion league contest which Ls being I sponsored by the Indiana university , j extension division. The distret : meets of the state contest will be held Saturday, April 2. the winners of which will be entered in the final meet to be held at Indiana university Friday. April 22. The champion high school orator of Indiana will be chosen from the group taking !
You get the best CHEVROLET SERVE from your Chevrolet dealer at the LOWEST PRICES for quality work Your Chevrolet dealer is in a better position than anyone else to give you quality work at lowest prices. His service station is factory -super vised. He <tas factory-designed tools and equipment—factory-trained attendants and mechanics. He uses only genuine Chevrolet parts. And he is personally interested in seeing to it that you are satisfied with your Chevrolet A series of weekly service specials to emphasize the low prices on Chevrolet repair work starts today. For the week of March 28th, the special will be brake adjustments, for which the bargain prices below prevailCHBVROLBT MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT. MICH.. DIVISION OF OBNKRAL MOTORS MKOiTiil teHjJT * : ' ■ ’’ • ' • ■. Neering Chevrolet Sales • N- THIRD STREET PRONE l“"
part in the state meet. I "Compulsory Unemployment In- 1 surance” is the subject being used 1 ! for the state contest this year. A•' debate handbook on the subject s I waa prepared by the I. U. extension ” | division for the use of the contest. | ants. In the district meets each v I'oiitcstant will be allowed eight a minutes for his constructive speech I and three minutes for extemporan- ’ eous rebuttal. In tile final slalff contest the time for rebuttals will be increased to five minutes. Plane Lines to Replace Asia Minor Caravans i ISTANBUL (U.R) —Asia Minor, I once the gateway between East and West through which the cars- i vans of traders passed, will be ; restored to its former importance ] by a network of modern air lines. The Curtiss-Wright Corporation (
WHY TAKE A CHANC A bad accident—sudden sickness—a time comes ] to every farm home when a doctor is needed m a hurry. If you have a telephone a doctor it with, in instant r cach. A doctor s mtdnight directions—or starting his swift trip in time may preventive loss of life. A telephone call will summon help quickly—and may save the life of a loved one. | You owe your family this telephone prelection against disaster. “’ Citizens Telephone Co
has signed a 7~"' ■’■4B Turk ' sh «<"’-‘rn m T t ; >»R “>r tra ospo JJ**‘*O Anu, ” li “ Th, ■ •Partly settled uneconomic. r «il« T'lc air line, win ft with coinniereial i», and East , "’" 1 'I f-bizond t„ i,,?* 1 ! rebuilt when the,- J, ■ ‘ Ma ".' '>v CnwplJ Washington. Mar « fl KWtt million p.. rsoß> of work i n (he at.ordmg t» d-'t William «| "a" >"deration of . ' March had fa (W normal season ahrntt lllHl pprßoM Jobe during (he n 1 „ 11 , <Ut the Hghit 4g7|
