Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 231, Decatur, Adams County, 29 September 1932 — Page 6

ECATUR DEMOCRAT Every Evening Except Sunday by JCATUR DEMOCRAT CO. d at the Decatur Ind.. Post ce as Second Class Matter. X Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. R. Holthouse Sec y & Bus. Mgr. D. Holler Vice-President Subscription Rates'. Single copies J .02 One week, by carrier 10 One year, by carrier 5.00 Jne month, by mail 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 wlllilu first and second zones. Elsewhere $3.50 one year. Advertising Rafes 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. Betting odds on the election in New York are now said to be 8 to 5 in favor of Roosevelt and no takers at that. It won't be a bad idea to keep the stores open here next Wednesday night. There will be a crowd in town and many of them are looking 10l their fall supply of goods. The state highway commission has fixed a decent wage for the workers in that department and now if they will proceed to do some road wAk, it will help Paul V. McNutt, Democratic nominee for governor of Indiana, will tell the people of Adams county what his position is on matters c f the greateat importance and you should hear him. “This nation cannot endure half 'boom,' half 'broke',” said Governor Roosevelt in his Topeka speech and the greet crowd yelled approval so earnestly that the candidate smiled as the phootographers snapped him. The state campaign has been formally opened and we will hear from the various candidates during the next several weeks. The election will be held five weeks from Tuesday. Are you ready? The road between here and Willshire will be taken over immediately by the state wo are informed, if settlement is made on the right-of-ways. Looks like a good deal and the sooner we do it, the better for every one. The program for the Democratic lall here next Wednesday night will include a big feature parade with plenty of music and pep. C. J. Lutz will preside, the local candidates will be presented, Mrs. Knapp and M- McNutt will be the speakers. Come in. Looks as though the sport writers knew their stuff when they said the Yankees are dvmnamlte when it comes to batting. They are so good that Guy Bush chose to pass too many of them with the result that when one of them got a hit it counted. At that the series isn’t fiver yet and you may be surprised.

«C8335k ’READS tike bullet RIES overnight EARS like leather Don’t throw old shoes away. So Lo mends the hole for Ic. Complete new soles and heels for a few cents. Easy —a Child Can Do It Just spread on So-Lo. No tools needed Wean bet ter than ordinary leather Waterproof Non skid. Flexible. Makes walking _ more codiiortable Guaranteed. Also repairs anything made TnX i of leather, rubber or cloth .fagfeSr | Fixes auto tops. Fills cuts in Ma, tires Mends rubber boots, etc , etc. Ask for So-Lo at hardware. Srug or Sc to 25c stores SoLo Works, Cincinnati. O. i « Morris 5 & 10c Store

I The public or at least that part lof it which watches congress, will I be pleased with the appointment of Charles R. Crisp. Democratic congressman from Georgia, as member of the tariff commission to succeed the late Lincoln Dixon of Indiana. I He is one of the real thinkers in I national life, a safe and careful I statesman who will perform well | ■ An that important position, so splen--1 didly filled by one of Indiana's best' men, so many years. . - [j The new report from the Literary i i Digest with more than 200.000 votes I pn shows Roosevelt leading by a I hittie more than 2.000. They call I it a see-saw race but when you stop ; Ito consider that this vote is from! I eleven states which gave Hoover u , I majority of millions four years ago.! you will realize that this is ?. de-1 tided Roosevelt showing. The re-1 port shows the governor leading in ! Indiana. California, Illinois, Ohio, I Pennsylvania and West Virginia I i wiilie Mr. Hoover has slightly the' best of it in Massachusetts. New ] York, Connecticut. Maine and New Jersey. From every indication : Roosevelt is gaining and it looks like a tough battle to even keep ; the reports interesting. Those who may suppose that the , candidacy of the Hon. James 1. Far-1 ley for congress in this district is ! based solely upon his position with j respect to national prohibition do; themselves no less than him an injustice. Mr. Farley stands, it is i true, upon the national and state Democratic platforms with respect ] ito the wet and dry issue. But bestands also upon the whole of those ’ platforms. More than that Mr. i Farley stands with Governor Roose- j velt in his demand for and support! [of a new deal for the common peo- . p'e of this country. The farmers I whose distress has won them noth-1 ling from Mr. Hoover and the Re• publican party, will find in Mr. Far-i ley a student of economics who will! know what he is about in Washing-: 1 ton and a man whose concern for I the agricultural interests of the , I country is rooted in knowledge and p J experience. Mr. Farley is not a'! I politician in search of a place, butii I a man of statesmanlike views, and p j • ! purposes who desires to help the, ( country, especially industry and -. agriculture, back to a level that'’ means sure and enduring prosper-p ity.—Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, i, o ti e— * I' TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY 11, li From the Daily Democrat File Ij ♦ ♦ i (Annual Cradle Roll welcome held at Presfoyterian Church with Miss ' ( Jean Lutz as superintendent. p Adalimda Zwick marries Earl], Kraft. Granny Syphers mistake wasi'.riug i, I fluid for wine and is near death. ], David Raker. 12 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Baker of Mercer Ave. was unconscious for ten Hours I, as result of being struck with base', bail. Vada Martin weds Oliver Chr n- ! ister. Frances Laman and Ralph Det- 1 , tingrr surprise friends with wedd- 1 lug. Decatur Shamrocks beat Lima 1 League Team 7-1. Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart and 1 s'ln. Meredith, motored to Warren. ‘ David Archer returns to Pleasant P Mills after two weeks in Maitland, ' Michigan. i 70 young men lock sten and:' march over streets of Decatur until complaints cause marshall to stop 1 i them. 1 ♦ ~— * Household Scrapbook I ‘ II —By — | I ROBERTA I EE Ip Gas Poisoning Carry the patient who has been | poiso' d by gas into the open air. | Apply strong ammonia to the nos-1 triis. Rub the heart, legs and feet I with dry mustard. Use artificial respiration. Give an enema of hot I coffee. Send immediately for help. Irons 1 One of the best methods for making an iron slick and am oth is to | I run the iron over a piece of an old | candle, used cn a folded newspaper. Roast Meat Whan roasting meat, place a dish of water in the oven with the meat ■ and it will prevent scoarching. . BARGAINS — Bargains In Living Room, Dining Room Suita, Mat- | tresses and Regs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number's 44 et Q j Get The Hublt — Trade at Home j

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Answers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two, 1. A form of apoplexy. ! 2. Yes. explorers receive severe burns there. 3. Switzerland. 4. Ge vge Arliss. " About 60.U00. t>. Virginia Dare. 7. Princess Alexandra of DenI mark. 8. Between I*aly and the Balkan i peninsular. 9. Portland. Oregon. I 10 Charles Dickens. —o— I DON'T QUOTE ME I*— (U.R) - —♦ Washington. Sept. 29.—(U.R) —One of the first acts of Jouett Shouse las president of the association ! prohibition amendment was to announce that the organization would! ; oppose William G. McAdoo, Demotrade senatorial candidate in Calijfornia. They «nce Uere close: friends. McAdoo as secretary of Treasury made Shouse assistant' secretary. was one of the' chief lieutenants in organizing Me-1 Adoo's campaigns for the presidential nomination in 1920 and 1924.1 After that they broke. Shouse join- 1 ed the Smith forces and was the; real organizing and driving force] in the Democratic national commit-j tee from 1928 until Franklin D.} Doosevelt was nominated last] June. He was not enthusiastic for Roosevelt before the convention ! He was less so after McAdoo I brought about the nomination. Mrs. William E. Borah, wife of J yie Idaho senator, always has been: fond of parrots Friends here won j der if one of the novelties of the! Borah's Washington homo will b» done ;\way with as a result of the senator's wife contracting parrot : fever, from which she now is recuperating. First time visitors at the Borah apartment have been surpvised by the number of pet birds' about. Sometimes Mrs. Borah lets! the canaries and parakeets fly [about at wil'. They were fond of her. and would perch on her shoulditr, as they fluttered from cages. ! Mrs. Borah is one of the least; I known women in capital political' life. As her husband's Influence i i.nd responsibility increased, so did! his aversion to dinners and public [social occasions of all kinds. So while Mrs. Rorah in recent years has been a popular figure at many smart afternoon teas and racep-j tions. her evenings have been spent quietly at home. Stories float through Washington society that Mrs. Rorah Is one of;

..— —— —■ THE CORT Tonight - - Tomorrow ‘‘WEEK-END MARRIAGE” with an outstanding cast Loretta Young, Norman Foster, Geo. Brent and others She wanted a husband but she couldn’t keep him because she was too busy to Ue a wife. ADDED — "ON EDGE” Musical Comedy. Also-Football Thrill. 10c -15 c SAT. - 808 STEELE tn THE NEVADO BUCKEROO” 10c -25 c —SUNDAY & MONDAY—"IT S TOUGH TO RE FAMOUS" with Doug Fairbanks.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1932.

J the wittiest women at the capital J 'Many smart “wise-cracks” that go[ the rounds, originated with her. it I jis said. Mrs. Borah merely smiles ' I when she hears this. Her husband is her main inter-1 lest. She is thrilled when she finds ;- !a new and better recipe for onion 1 ; isoup. The senator is fond of rhe' dish. She painstakingly tries to] I interest tbe senator in his clothes. ] It is said that on one occasion ; I when she complained that his suit' 1 needed pressing, he said: “ Why, only today I was compli- ] ’ . mented by a colleague as being the best dressed man in the senate.” i* "Yes.” responded Mrs. Borah, ii "and I know who that senator was. [ s It was Senator Gore.” < Gore is the blind senator from i. ; Oklahoma. o < ARE UNABLE TO TRACE ROBBERS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i Gass store and received the merl 'chandise. Authorities were conferring with owners of similarly painted trucks in Fort Wayne’today. As far as known no one saw an! aut-mobile or truck parked in] ; front of the store at any particular ■ time durinz the night and no one: : wm seen loafing in the vicinity of I the store. The job was a slick one.! I probably performed by expert yegg-| imen. Similar robberies were report-] : --d from Lima, Ohio, South Bend ] land Auburn. Ind., recently proprie-|t-rs of stores nainb just returned I from market with new merchandise land the pillage of their stores taking p'.ace the next tiav. o Airplane Smokers Provide Hazards Indianapolis, Sept. 29 —(UP) —Air, I plane smokers are providing a new: (hazard to state forests. Ralph Wil- j eox. of the conservation department, revealed after a survey of recent! wuodland fires. Wilcox, a state forester, reported! that several blazes had been traced ■ -n cigarets dropped from planes.' i He urged fliers to caution passer.-1 . gers to extinguish smokes before i throwing thorn overboard. Wilcox pointed out that time of| year is approaching when constant I watchfulness is necessary to avoild ■ forest fires. He also urged cooper-' alien of hunters and other persons I I fresß'.enting wo.tdland areas. Get the Habit — Trade at Home

I i 1 adult 2sc, 2 adulft 35c, Kids 10c THE ADAMS - Last Time Tonight - GEORGE ARLISS in “THE MAN WHO PLAYED GOD” with Violet Heming. Bette Davis. Added-Comedy and Traveltalk. Friday and Saturday “TOM BROWN OF CULVER” ‘j With Tom Brown, H. B. Warner,' Slim Summerville. Richard Cromwell. ! Sundav. Mondav. Tnesdav “RED HEADED WOMAN” • with Jean Harlow, Chestet Morris. Lewin stone, Lena Hyams, Una ' Merkel, Jean Harlow's latest ; picture. A SENSATION.

COURTHOUSE Marriage License Harold Mills, truck driver of Fort Wayne and Mary Anne Falba, of Decatur, route 3. 17th Glass Got Him Paris. — (U.R) — The 22-year-old Frenchman. Marcel Pion, who boasted to his friends that he could drink 21l g asses ot any liquor coming from the apiaceous plant cal' ed anise, turned pale and collapsed at the 17t‘h glass and was taken to a hospital where he is recuperating.

STARTING SATURDAY MORNING ‘Finishing-Up Sale' We have cheeked through our stock and what they didn’t take in the Burglary Tuesday night we are going to offer at a tremendous sacrifice as we have no plans for the future. ALL REMAINING FALL AND WINTER COATS S ' riroccfic A " thatKemai " U I WvW'WW * n Knit and Silks. tV iRS? ? Not Many Left hut a real sacriiice on I htlh remaining stock. This is your Big K *** KSES Opportunity. Come in and save. t • •- S ILK . I.ISGMUE II _?— __ _ Gord.ni * /■y “ p Hosiery y VX INFANT SWEATERS # ANO DRESSES if Au r. u »t o ore ß a-die«., ■ V Pure Silk —All First Quality and Priced . for w. h.v. no p.an., J Below Cost for Immediate Selling. H <•11 • ALL. CORSETS and CORSELETTES also will be closed out completeiv. By sheer luck (hey did not touch our millinerv " ~ ~ but this must be sacrificed because we do not CHILDREN’S know what the future holds—ALL ARE BRAND COATS AND DRESSES NEW FALL STYLES — majority just received this week. We promise vou a Real Saving! All that remains must and will be sacrifice >• E.LGASS,

Life Prisoner Files New Writ Terre Haute. Ind.. Sept. 29— (UP) —<A writ of coram nobis has been filed in Vigo circuit court on behalf of SJloyd Black, serving a life sentence in pris n for conviction on a charge of wrecking a train in

... .1 _ ‘’ 1 ) Miller-Jones substitute for ■ < For All s he FviAil » STANDARD 142 Second St Decstur, Ind. QUALITY y Saluting the New Season With Our 7 Economy ' ‘‘ wSrab- Smartness isn’t expensive here! Commonplace I Th ‘’ o " c ,hue ‘ketched is zr» rnm T . /' ample proof. marvelling jt' X cb kPT Si How can M. ue-otter X 1B ,jj shoes like these r such low < J S 3 umiZSM prices?" In m-wer to th:i W common question wc ilwiyi \ Snappy Shoes Jor Men ! explain that our modern J „ v ., . 1 methods enable us to make ' y Dont let !habby sb, h \’ savings. Wc c.n fortha appearance- 1 ‘ us nra t oxford is only reason, give you . etter X , for less money. / \ I $ PRICE RANGES N _ Womin’t / J Boys'and Girls' Shoes! i 7 All children's shoes are made of dur- | Childrtn'i | ‘hie leather in many different styles, — H —*l79 / y to size at q 99 4<?-} 9?? \ tQ$ 2.99 Jj (195 ’250-1295 *395 ; y ■""■I o— - ■—i — -J 1

1928. Through the vjr._ it is sought to bring before the court evidcncSe said not to have heAn revealed at the trial. According to th© writ. Floyd's brother. Lester, convicted for implication, now admits he offered perjured testing <ny against his brother, thereby winning for himself a lighter sentence.

Golden Falun. > dish Peace and ArtZJ . will observe lts 50th , | next year. At th e ■ meeting in Falun ste-- . to make tn. necessary 'I for the celebration i„3 {collection of a J ubllM