Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 165, Decatur, Adams County, 13 July 1932 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT PublUhttd Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class .Matter. J It Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse SCc’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller.. Vlcu-Preaidenl Subscription Rates: Single copies $ .02 One week, by carrier - .10 One year, by carrier — 5.00 One month, by mail 35 Three months, by mail 1 00 Hix months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail — 3.00 i’ae 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 f>i<!ia:i.i I.' kgua of Home Dailies. Tile posloffice grounds are to be landscaped and beautified. adding to the attractiveness of that very beautiful corner. It won't hurt a thing. The advertising merchant is still the one you can depend upon. His goods move, he gains in volunin and has the advantage of the new I styles. That's the fellow to follow' and to tie to when trading. ", 1 ... Speaker Walter Myers is urging the legislators to get in all the bills, freaks and otherwise, they may have in mind so they can be duly considered, sorted and passed upon. The government has discovered that there are seven per cent less hogs in the country than a year j ago. Perhaps the men who make i the market prices go up and down knew that a couple of weeks ago. Any Way the prices have been steadily climbing, much to the satisfaction of those who possess porkers in any quantity. Now. honestly we feel that requiring a bride and groom to show tl.at 'flieir poll taxes are paid before issuing a marriage license, is going a step too far, even for these days retrenchment. That's one time when a fellow hadn't ought to be bothered with looking up any such an offensive document as a tax receipt. . Senator James Eli Watson, "our - .lint ’, who for years made regu ar visits to a’l sorts of conferences ami ministerial meetings, to tell them how much he loved the ISth amendment and the Volstead law, it- now proclaiming in loud voice, ills desire for resubmission and gets angry if any one doubts his sincerity. Jin) is nothing if not a politicin" and a foxy one at that.

TZey called her Front Door Girl' C HE never invited friends inside... never entertained ... because she knew her home was "run down" . . . floors and woodwork shabby, furniture scratched end scarred. Why sacrifice popularity and social opportunity when a dollar or so restores gleaming newness and smart color to floors, woodwork and furniture by use of —WaterSpar Varnish that even bailing water cannot harm. Water Spar Enamel that dries in four hours and gives beau* tiful china-smooth finish. Water Spar Liquid Wax to give supreme lustre and elegancel Marvelously soft huesl Glorious shining colors I Slop in for Color Cards. Lee Hardware Co.

Ogden U Mills, opening the Republican campaign, pointed to the t Pittance Reconstruction Corporj atlon as the big achievement. Now there's something that ought to be ll interesting. Try aud find some community that has really been Maided. The proposition looks good r. | 1 until you try to use It aud then you get trapped in its multiplicities 2 and technicalities. - 6 5 The lower house of the Indiana 0 legislature fixed $50,000 as the sum 0 required to pay expenses and sent 9 such a bill to the Republican senate where it was immediately advanced to $120,000, but some how they got the thing flabergasted and it came back with the figures changed to $l2O. Os course that was too little for even the economic house and it had to be turned over Ito a conference committee. Sounds ■like boys play! Well, that’s what ‘ ii is. » I The Republicans are going to center their fight on Speaker Garn ci. Democratic candidate for vicepresident, showing they are grasp--1 ing at straws. After all the job 'Han't important for that official Is 'only the presiding officer of the |-cnate with much less power than the speaker of the house. We venture the guess than when Franklin Roosevelt swings out they will know they have something else to discuss and Mr. Garner himself, will be able to take care of himself ■ when the campaign gets under way. While there seems to be more than sufficient "horse play" in the special session, we are informed I by those who have watched the proj i eedings carefully, that there is a • genuine desire to accomplish something and that the law makers are further along than usual for the number of days they have been at the state house. A hundred tax relief bills have been offered, some of them good, many so intended but of no real benefit and a lot that will never come out of committees. It seems as though we have been having more serious accidents and tragic deaths in this community lately than usual and it may be well for each of us to remember that it pays to be careful and then more so. Such things are depress-1 ing and these days of speed and heavy traffic, it is safest to stop, look and listen and to drive care- , fully always. Obey the state laws as to lights, signals and to all other things that are meant for the safety of you as well as others. We dropped in and took a "squint” at the special session yesterday and were led to believe that Governor Leslie was probably right on his first hunch — that to cal! them was foolish. Seems as though some one has shot througli a resolution to m ike the solons pay their own postage, so some wise bird has conceived the idea of a baseball game between the representatives and senators, the proceeds to go for the new three-cent brand of stamps. That may he economy but we suppose they will have to spend so much for arnica and adhesive tape that no one will really be much better off. o TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY II From the Dally Democrat File Pythian Sisters give farewell party f r .Mr. and Ms. S. E. Shamp. First 10 days of July have broken all wet weather records for last 39 years. From July first to 10th the record was 9.19 inches. Jerome Coffee falls from wagon and is run over but esenpes unhurt. Miss Neva Brandyberry returns from Terre Haute owing to nervous breakdown. I Ms. Ed Bailey and Miss Grace Coffee are from Marion Normal School. Mrs. Jane Hoover of Cadillac Wis. is the guest of Mrs. J. J. Foughty. Caroline 11. wiling, Clara Bochneccht, Leota Riley and Ruby Parrish have returned from 'Terre Haute. Mrs. Ernst Moon is improving from an attack of rheumatism. Glen Hosapple of Indianapolis is the guest of his parents. Miss Edna Hoffman is visiting her sister in Gary.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. JULY 13, 1932.

WAR MAY COME By JOHN R. QUU'N. County Supervisor, Los Angolts County.

The upright citizen eschews crime but that does not safeguard him from criminals. This nation might refuse to go to war under any conditions but that would not assure safety from attack. It we should be attacked our losses In lives and blood might be less without resistance, but what of our government's existence? Who that Is truly American would not prefer death in defense of his freedom to life as a slave or a poltroon? Existing world conditions and experience offer no evidence what soever that Amerlcp will never again become involved In armed conflict, therefore, with all our peace hopes and activities, we must be prepared for possible war. Deplore it as we may, so long as other nations resort to force to support their wishes we have no other recourse than to be ready to meet it in kind. But "war denies the fatherhood cf God and the brotherhood of man,” a noted non-resister insists. "It mocks the sacredness of human life, is merciless to helpless women and children, uses falsehood, ignores justice, releases the passions and cultivates hate. War means everything that Jesus did not mean, and means nothing he did mean.” This is rhetoric, hut is it logic? War is not a person: it is a physical struggle. Men may make war to do all the acts the non-resister rightly condemns; they may make war to stop such acts. Whether Jesus meant it or not, he said in Mathew 10:34: "I come not to send peace but a sword,” thereby intimating lie valued righteousness above peace in the abstract. Any physical conflict is a form of war. Bring the non-resister’s reasoning to our own communities. If we should accept it we should have to discharge our police force for they frequently have to club and shoot their fellow men to protect society. One school of thought would have

4. — ♦ Answers To Test Questions j Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two. ♦ ♦ 1. Bulgaria. 2. Dust from wood to:n or cut by a saw. 3. Germany. 4. "New World's To Conquer.” 5. Alaska. 6. Newton D. Baker. 7. Matter is indestructable; It can be changed but not destroyed.; 8. It is named from Captain Boycott, the first victim of the system. 9. Harvard, in 1636. 10. November 8. o ♦ * Household Scrapbook -By- I ROBERTA LEE * Soiled Elbows Use a brush to scrub the elbows dipping it into soap and warm water | Rinse well and dry. Then massage I the elbows with a good cream. Use this treatment every night. When Dusting The nose and throat will be protected from dust while sweeping if a piece of elastic is tied to each side of a damp sponge and fastened around the head, with the sponge over the nose and mouth. Gelatine Dessert When gelatine is to be served I as dessert for dinner, pr-pare it in the morning and it will be certain to be firm. 1 y * : —« -O : —r *” RADIO PROfiRAM * » — « Wednesday's Best Radio Features (Copyright 1932 by United Press) Central standard time throughout. WJZ, NBC network, 6:36 p. in.— Melody Moments. WABC, CBS network, 7:00 p. m. — Lombardo Orchestra and Burns & Allen. WEAF, NBC network, 8:15 p.m.— Adventures in Health. WABC, CBS network, 8:30 p.m.— Talk by Norman Thomas. Thursday’s 5 Best Radio Features Copyright 1932 by UP. Central Standard Time WJZ, NBC network. p. m.— Regimentalists. WEAF, NBC network. 7 p. m — Big Six of the Air. WABC, CBS network, 7:15 p. m. —Mills Brothers, WEAF. NBC network, 8 p. m.— Dance Jlpttr With Walter Winehell. WABC CBS network, 8:15 p. m. —Fast Freight. Friday's Five Best Radio Features Copyright 1932 by UP. Central Standard Time WABC, CBS network, 1:30 p. nt - Toscanini Fund Concert. WJZ, NBC network. 5:45 p. m —Jones and Hare. WEAF. NBC network, 6 p. tn — Concert and Cavaliers. WABC. CBS network, 7 p. m — Week-End Hour. WABC. CBS network, 8:15 p. m —Adventures in Health.

us brand nil war as a sin but unite with other nations to prevent it by force if one or more nations shoti'd physically resist the verdict of the i majority. Much emphasis is laid on the Brland-Kellogg Pact in eflforts to prove that was Is completely out la well and therefore all prepj nratkins for war are unlawful. Secretary of State Kellogg, a coauthor of the pact, speaking before the American Society of International Law. April 23, 1923, said: "(1) Self Defense. There is nothing in the American draft of an |anti-war treaty which restricts or impairs in any way the right of self-defense. That right is Inherent In every sovereign state and is implicit in every treaty. Every nation is free at all times and regardless of treaty provisions to defend its territory from attack or invasion and It alone Is competent to ■decide whether circumstance! rei quire recourse to war in self-de-Ifense. If it has a good case, the world will applaud and not condemn its action. • • •.’’ Had the Kellogg Pact been placed in effect when our government was born it would not have prevented us from entering a single war in which we have participated. We did not renounce all war by signing the pact, neither did any other signatory. That other signatories do not so understand it is proven by the military establishments they maintain. America should not have a military machine which would constitute a menace or a threat to the peace of the world, and tto/sound citizen wants one, but before the tremendous armaments of other powers we must be able to meet any emergency. If we are, in kind ly spirit toward our neighbors, there should' be no more reason for objecting to it than there is to the disposition of a righteous man to protect his loved ones at any cost. Tomorrow: John J. Pershing.

Spray Second Brood Codling Moths Now , t By County (Agent , The codling moth has been very ( abundant in Indiana so far this year ( Im fact, there have been more first , brood worms in many localities this year than at the same date a . year ago. It, therefore, is necessary that I the fruit growers put on sprays for ■ the second ‘brood worms, keeping w I mind that thoroughness of appli- [ cation is essential for good control, i According to cur records, the ; first larv.te of the second brood will ' be hatching and entering the fruit 1 on the following dates and sprays I should be applied by these dates to get the best results: Fort South July 13 to 15. | , Extreme North end of state July ' ■ 15 to 17. I The first cover spray for the [second brood worms should contain not leas than 1 ‘pounds of arsenate | rtf ead to at) gallons, excepting for .the earlier maturing varieties, when [only one pound should be used. Our experiments for the past 5 years with summer oil sprays have given control comparable with the standard letd sprays. Fruit sprayed, with 2 percent summer oil, except i in rare instances, did not contain a' residue above the tolerance at harvest, while almost invariably the standard lead pots did bear aa (excess of tesidue. However, since 1 I some injury has been noted the lust ■ I two years, we do not unreservedly I rec mmend i|t<> summer oils. 1| summer oils ire used, care should be taken to avoid spaying on; very hot days and also forceful ( raying to the under surfaces of[ the leaves should 'be avoided so far! as possible. 1 A one percent summed oil spray I with nicotine sulpliatjs at the rate| of one pint to 100 gallon- of spray' matetial gives results compa able with the 2 per cent oil. If oil sprays are used, sulphur I sprays of all kinds should be avoided as the combination may result 1 - in injury. HOSPITAL NOTES . Edward Isch, 120 South Third; street, underwent a major emergency Operation at the Adams! County Memorial Hospital Tues- . day afternoon. ARRIVALS Frederick (Allan is the name of the eight pound boy baby born - Tuesday morning. July 12. to Mr. i and Mrs. Raymond Eya son} at their home 1227 W. M tdison street. RINGLING IS s MAKING FIGHT ' I 'ON''riNUEp FROM PAGE ONE | 1. chair. He said he hoped to be recover1. ed fully within a tew days, when he would leave the hotel. Jobless Pick Peas The Dalles. Ore. — flj,R) — Some 566 unemployed went to work here n. as picking started of a $70,000 pea crop.

AMELIA SPANS COUNTRYTODAY Lady Flyer Adds to Laurels By Making Successful Flight Today Newark. N. J., July 13. — (U.R) -- Amelia Earhart Putnam, who soared off from the Pacific coast at 5:11 p. tn.. EDT . yesterday, spanned the! continent successfully by plane and I reached • Newark airport at 12:15 EDT., today. She had been forced to alight at Columbus this morning to get more fuel, thereby shattering her hope for a non-stop trip. The elapsed time was 19 hours and 6 minuteg, ate thereby failing, to set a new record for the coast- j to-coast journey. She soared over the airport at i 12:17 p. m. and alighted 10 minutes! later, thus making the elapsed time! 19 hours and 16 minutes. Frank Hawks had made the coast' to coast journey in 17 hours, 33 minutes and 16 seconds, non-stop, which (’apt. Jimmy Doolittle, witli refueling stops, had made it in 11 hours. 16 minutes and 10 seconds. Thus she failed to beat the Hawks record at which she was shooting, but nevertheless made a brilliant effort. LEGISLATI RE DELVES INTO CONTRACTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE introduction. The proposed measures which would lighten levy burdens were decided upon favorably late yesterday by the house ways and means j committee. One would prevent utilities from having a valuation for rate-making purposes higher: than the assessed valuation. The other would reduce the state forestry fund from SIOOO,OOO to $50,000. The relief bill was drafted by, Representative Jacob Weiss. Dem., Indianapolis, and Fred A. Egan. Dem.. Gary, both from sections where unemployment conditions are acute. Weiss said the bill would provide aid supplemental to present relief measures. The funds

Gass’ Ready-to-Wear OF COURSE. YOU'LL GO Swimming — you're probably going swimming! What you wearing for a suit? A last years model — moth eateti? Goodness, I hope not! ft isn’t necessary any longer—drop in at the E. F. Gass’ A Shop and clioose your favorite color in the lattlle Rusby Kne of bathing suits —they range in price from $2.95 to $5.95. You'll find the styles they're wearing at all tlie smart iteaches. Swimming is a grand sport when yotr know you're looking smart in a Rugby suit —you really must buy the most flattering color and style! S. E. Black Funeral Director A FUNERAL IS N()T A pleasant thing to contemplate, in either the future or the present. But looking backward, the funeral of a loved one becomes a treasured memory. As I think altout it now. the details of the services and the sympathy of friends dk Save become a source of great comfort to everyone. Thinking of it in that light, WjflF how important it is to have the yii funeral plans properly carried out. The S. E. Black Funeral Service sees that every wish of the family is looked after, and the t'aniily is relieved of all responsibility. Modern funeral directing is more than a profession, it is a gratifying service. Cloverleaf Creameries I ATTENDED A LUNCHEON NOT long ago where the hostess served a most delicious dessert — she had filled cream puff snells with chocolate ice-cream and over them had poured a chocolate syrup and topped it with whipped cream .of course, it was very rich, but doesn't it 'listen’ good? 1 inquired a 'l about them. Tl* of course, and learned that any flavor ice-cream is good. You'd make the syrup to go with the tce-crcam, of course. Now. when you get ready to try this phor.3 50 or 51 and ask the Cloverleaf Creamery to send out your favorite ice cream. You can get almost any kind you’d want!

would be ohtainetl ' tax of 10 cents on all notoriz documents. . . Absorption of all county mdtb> . the state highway system in s , , year program was sought n a . I presented in the n*nate h > cis Ixichard, Dem. Milan, and Rob ert Moorehead. Hep. Indianapolis, n Each year for five years, th'’ state ! j would take over 20 per centoif county roads, in addition, the state l would begin maintenance of all, city roads which are a part of the highway system. An appropriation of $120,009 forl the special session finally i iagreed upon in the house after a. conference committee of bo t h houses reported in favor of tha amount. A few hours betore final I passage, the house agreed to the, amount and then discovered that when the senate amended the i I.ouse’s original appropriation of, $50,000, a typographical error made . I the amount read $l2O. Ihe full . (amount was agreed upon when the [collection was made. I The,bill now goes to the gover-, I nor for his signature. Two senate bills were withdrawn (yesterday. On a motion by Addis-1 !on Drake, Dent., Fairbanks, senate j bill No. 333, introduced by him- ! self. was withdrawn and his name placed on bill 339. introduced by : Tholiie Druley, Dem.. Boston. Both] ■ bills demand elimination of the fee i [system by placing all count} offi-■ lews on straight salaries. The joint ■ [hill was recommended favorably. George Sims. Repn., Terre Haute. ■ withdrew a biil which would create I a commission of both houses to ( [study feasibility of the state can- , (structing a plant to manufacture’ ' Portland cement. The cement , Would be used in road work. "The bill is a good one,” Sims | commented as he asked for with-; drawal. "But it is too far out of | line with the purpose for which this , session was called.” Sims in previous sessions had made demands that legis.ators rej train front presenting bills not [specifically dealing with tax relief. A concurrent resolution in built 'houses set out that contractors who [pay less than stipulated in bids to I men they employ “shall not be rei garded by the state as worthy bidI tiers.” . I Bills reported favorably to the i senate included proposals which I would make deposits in building Hand loan associations negotiable,

Shopping -

Blue Creek Dairy DEMAND SAFE MILK when you buy milk. Even if you were buying certified milk, is it safe milk unless it is pasteurized? Certainly not. A unique demonstration of the value of pasteurization in preventing milkborne diseases has recently been made, purely by accident. A milker x on one of the large dairy farms -juX in Wisconsin developed typhoid/ fever. The milk from the farm was sold in two API ii cities. In one it was pasteurized: in the other it was not. In the second city there developed a number of cases of typhoid fever THAT W ERE TRACEABLE TO THE MILK; in the other there were no cases. Through such accidental experiments on human Laings, the value of pasteurization of milk is gradually being brought to the notice of the physicians and to that of the people in general. Buy PASTEURIZED milk from the BLUE CREEK DAIRY. Call 167 and ask them to leave a quart on your porch in the morning and every morning thereafter they deliver the milk before breakfast. Cutshall’s Cut Rate Drug Store I HEARD AN OPTIMIST remark the other day that the Sahara Desert is twice as large as the United States and has been dry for centuries. But as far as I can see, (here’s no harm in quenching your thirst legally at the /k soda fountain at Cutshall’s C u t Rate Drug Store. And if it were illegal to drink cokes, I’d probTF ably break the law, because I do think they’re delicious — especially on a hot afternoon after I've spent most of the day shopping. It's wonderfully refreshing to drop into ( utshall s Cut Rate Drug Store and order a coke, soda or sundae — try it for that mid-afternoon fag—it works wonders with the disposition.

[provide additional year In which to redeem mortgages, and provide that no marriage, fiahiug >r hunlin g licenses be issued unless applicants have poll tax receipt.. — * Historic Bar to Go Kansas City. Mo.. Iftood M thogany Bar For bale will . end the sign ejected to be put , U p soon at the Hotel Muehlbach i here, when the last relic of pre- ■ prohibition days give* way to a I new coffee shop. The bar had been ■pait of the furnishings for a sntal- ! ler coffee shop, which replaced the 1 old bar room, but now it must go. Fortune to Housekeeper [ Moulins. France, — (UP) — The late Col. Samuel Slater, weathy (Am'.•rican, who died recently in Paris [ is reported to have left Ills entire ! to tune to his housekeeper, Mme. : Danto 35 who lives with her hitsi band at Belleville- sut-Allier, near [ Vichy, where Colonel Slater lived j ■ for several years. Slater was a na-1 Itive of Providence, It I. 0 ~ Socialists Enliat Jobless St. Louis —(UP)—The socialist, ' party, which polled fewer thtui 2.590 1 | votes in Missouri in 11*28 has placed | a virtually complete state aud ua- | tional ticket in the field thia year. ■ . The party has started a campaign s to enlist unemployed. — O- ... I. "|I )—■■ Indians Study Printing i Santee, Neb.. — (UP) — Indian : boys and girls at the Santee Mission 'lndian school here are trained [io be irst class printers. Indiana (boys particularly, take to the print(ing t.ade and develop into gkod (Criftsmen. ■ ■lft ■Willi. II ———»waan———

- th Immediate ReM CkJrUND Quick Remo« NEW - DIFFERENT f El ■, ■] W -- n JUNG’S CORN PADS arc g,” VA PAD t h e molt icitntihe treatment [C?.*** A . < H \ tor corns ever offered. Supevs rior, specially medicated pads W/W.- remove pressure, soothe and ' J j-fp BMK 1: \ rW heal. New scientific "Meds”, FjfMBB ■- -- remove the corn. Try them! ' ■ copVnZ Special 25c nW > »h B, J. SMITH DRUG CO. | THE REXALL STORE K W

Dr. H. Frohnapfel CHIROPRACTIC IS THE answer to a lot of physical troubles. It removes the pain by removing the cause. There is a definite cause for every failure of the human body to function properly and this cause is v found by the chimediately starts removing that cause with treat•\F" ments. Your own chiropractor, Dr. H. Frohnapfel, will make calls to homes of those you cannot call at his office. Make appointments for Monday, Wednesday and Friday —other days you may go to his office at any hour. Try doctoring the children chirop radically! Mutschler’s Meat Market WHEN YOU'RE BUYING your meat for Sunday dinner at Mutschler’s Meat Market you can save time by buying your baked goods there, too. These goods are real home made —they’ll save you fuss and muss of bak- A Ing .:t home. Yon might have on:: a lunch Saturday evening — try some Bologna Filling for sand- App wiches. Cut bo- yg logna through food chopper and add a few sweet pickles and enough mayonnaise to make consistency easy to spread—it really is delicious Mutschler’s deliver to your door phone 106 or 107. Riverside Super Service THE TOW CAR AT THE Riverside Super Service j s always right on the job so if you ever have the hard luck of having to be towed in, that’s the place to call. Their number is /Mk 741 ‘ all 'i tlvy ll AOnk t,e (here in about / J®** Al ' eilli. y er <la y or night. lUs sue: AW how many tow il’ calls they got and still manage to he right on the job when your call comes tn. But. then. as they say. "service isn’t their motto, it s their business.”

COURT HO® Ma " J S' i-'cettu Chalmer L t<. n, i,., , r Rout, R.al Estate Tr , El I>'»‘ U. Ft.., '.‘’nr to Etlv „■■■ t , ( ’|fij I’J bash towualiip tetson tow:,-:, , X"»" h ” ' '■ s '''■ Purchasing A:jen ts c ■< they spent it. : d ’ I s2O.'9u<i.O>M). MB Books Worth Austin, Tex. jp. " ■ shelf of book- tll . bt’.ry of the I ~ i lias been vain- . t ■ First editions , 5 - a Milton's i;,. I Harold s I'iic,. . 4 4 't ed. t*’ l * _ d Statue to P enter ' Eugene. (j,pj I'lonze statue * giuecs the can : ■" of Oregon ■> t i was given to v . . ' i

Rice’s Hotel r I 'Till-: ci:l . TRI E creases on >\ fal>e, that is something -r- ■ with tin- rigli' it is not merci'. • of fancy." I.- - let Jk • . U SJ\k ® ton 'aß f ’B Y* ami ■ to complexion. li.< If your hair is -i.-iiy ly. vet the ends to go wrong. w: an end curl. I: u haiaH look like a wa.- -g»B it might help t auce to have every so often ' iMM it? Phone 57 the MM Hotel Beauty S: e-<l httlH those beauty attended to. K Pumphrey! Jewelry Store B I AM AN EXTHi'-MSj on costume jew- ' are featuring it ,y»h«W and it is no lona-' a it seems to grow ; ity every year ->nd ““tj beautiful. A vc- drfl ß can be made < v tn-’h i! 'B tractive with jits' I the right ton-li duk ■ of color, and yon can always got yjBI the right touch ‘-Jjfß The Pumphroy YB ■ Jewelry Store Ir I has a handsome / B stray of costume y-weW B beads especially took *■ eye. For gift purpe*** I can’t think of any .ng "‘"’J appropriate than costM | jewelry, and then - B any danger of an ovei ! ply. Several strands ■ leads are none too ® a I for any lady. Adams Theatre IT’S THE COCI-Etf PLACE in town! When R ladies are di : vn town s ping these hot Saiurdi'? ernoons, it's mighty l* l '' 11, to drop Into Adams The’ and rest and enjoy a f show. The Adams I |iea A is always cooH /4IL they have a P** vintil-O' and r come relief W walking 10 1 ,?■ J* hour or so in 1 blazing sun. Try it sO ®J; time when you're hot tired — it's a complete TJ( pleasant relaxation' , program for this _ eludes some good p i(ln better try and see them