Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1932 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday bv THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Kntcrod at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. J, H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President 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 ; Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 1 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 SCHERRER, Inc., 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago 115 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Let's make it 4,000 in Adams county. The McNutt rally will attract . hundreds from this section at Fort Wayne tonight. — Nineteen of the twentv-six banks | in the state of Nevada have taken ' a two weeks holiday. How do you think that state will vote? The Hearst poll up to Monday I nt this week shows a gain in Indi- ; ana. Illinois and Pennsylvania, for : the past week, which will not be analyzed by the Republican press. ! The Democratic national, state I and county tickets are composed I ol candidates who believe in the | rights of the people and will fight lor that. You owe them your support. Think it over when you cast yom ballot next Tuesday. The campaign will soon be over I and it remains only to get out the vote. That should be the work of every one interested in the out ! come. Don't be satisfied just to cast your own ballot, but see that your friend and neighbor does also. The final report of the Literary Digest will show Roosevelt leading in all the states of the Union but seven and editorially will declare
that five of those seven are very , doubtful. The truth of it is that ! j there is considerable possibility ( that National Chairman Farley's j prediction that Roosevelt will carry every state in the nation, ) may come true. t With Newton Baker, Carter Glass. Senator Hiram Johnson. Senator Cutting, Al Smith, Senator Norris i, ■ nil a hundred others of the great- ( est statesmen in America earn- ( laigning for Roosevelt and with ( only the cabinet members and ■ rt Henderson of Shreveport talking!, up Hoover, it looks like the battle , was won. if political arguments : ( count. I' -r I 1 ten years ago the tariff on sugar I produced $2(15,350,000 while this'' year it amounted to $250,576.000,' for the consumer. In 1022 our ex-j' ports to Cuba were $127,873 and in 1932 the estimated total will not ? exceed $30,000,000. Think it over. I, Every Gauntry in the world is off ——= — I low Modern Women Lose Pounds of Fat i 1 Swiftly—Safely? — Cain Physical Vigor—Youthfulness ! With Clear Skin and Vivacious Eyes That Sparkie With Glorious Health Here’S the recipe that banishes fat and brings into blossom all the natural attractiveness that every i' woman possesses. i Every morning take one half tea I, spoonful of Kruschen Salts in a! glass of hot water before breakfast—cut do vn on pastry and fatty ; meats —go light on potatoes, but-' ter, cream and sugar—in 4 wnekv get on the scales and not how many pounds of fat have vanished. Get a bottle of Kruschen Salts —the cost is trifling an<f it lasts 4 weeks. If even this first bottle doesn't convince you this is the j easiest, safest and surest way to, lose fat—if you don't feel a superb improvement in health —so glori-1 ously energetic—vigorously alive— | your money gladly returned. But be sure for your health's sake that you ask for and get Kruschefi Salts. Get them at Cutshall's Cut Rate Drug Store or any dtugstore In the world.
of the U. S. A. and will stay off so long as we demand exorbaut tariffs. We need a new' deal badly. James I. Farley who will represent the fourth district in congress the next tw’o years, will be the speaker at tTie Jefferson township high school auditorium at seven o’clock Friday evening. At eight o'clock the same night he will ad- ; dress the voters of Monroe and vicinity, speaking at the hall over the Model Hatchery. Other speakers will also be on the program. Join the Crowd. They are charging that Paul McNutt, Democratic candidate for governor and one of the ablest and I cleanest men in the state, wrote the 1929 legislative corporation law. Now isn't that something? That legislature was Republican in loth houses and had a Republican governor back of it. If McNutt was necessary to write the law, he must be big enough to fill the govII mor's chair. And make no misI take, he is. The News-Sentinel can now start |io work on the Literary Digest I straw poll. For several days they I have been frantically trying to prove that by the Hearst poll, the j Republicans are in the lead. They i haven't accomplished any thing but 'to make folks smile but perhaps | they think have. If they can work out any thing bright from the ■ fina's of the Divest, they will have ■to dig up a new mathematical | table. i The income tax law might be a 'good thing if any one was earning an income, but just now, to get enough money to pay for the operation, the exemption would have to Ik 1 so low it would effect every lone. We fear it would be only an additional burden at this time. We need a tax that will raise jmoney quickly and permit the relief that the $1.50 limit law was intended to produce. Vote your sentiment next Tuesday. Seuaym.garter Glass, than whom no one in all the word, knows more about the financial affairs of this government, says the president converted the U. S. treasury intt>
a national pawn shop and that if Hoover's proposal had been carried out. they would have rocked our banking system. That ought to be sufficient answer to the president's mysterious charge that we were within (wo weeks of going off the gold standard. A friend from Blue Creek township writes to urge tnat farmers forget trivial and petty matters in this campaign and vote the Demo'eratic ticket so that at least a part of those who have worked a lifetime on a farm may save something. Many ways of detracting from flu- real issues have been tried but surely no one this year will forget that the issue is bread and Jobs and a chance to live in this land of opportunity, resources and riches. The Townsend meeting in Kirkland township Tuesday night was the largest political farm meeting ever held in the county. Hundreds I attended and enjoyed it. Mr. TownI send is a convincing speaker and I brought out point after point tn induce his hearers to vote the Democratic ticket from top to Ixit I tom and give that party a chance Ito trove that they are really for the people. He was in earnest as was also Mr. Hull who gave a short I address. It was a great meeting ■and will solidify the vote of the (farmers in Adams county. There is a great difference between Owen D. Young, chairman of tiie board of directors of the General Electric and Henry Ford. While the latter is trying to force his employees to vote as he wants [them to, Mr. Young, a leading , Democrat and acknowledged as | one of the greatest diplomats and thinkers in the world, tells the thousands who work tor his great company, to vote as their “conscience and intuitions, which I val-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1932.
The Four Horsemen A ■■■ ■ n -W 1W «&. o—-« r. jft *.pz~~ ’**<■
ue highly, dictate.” Which sounds i the most American? Only four days until election and yet the show a continued decline in about every thing The Chicago Tribune, great Republican newspaper carried these headlines on its market page: "Wheat declines again ami sets new record low;” "Hogs lowest for November since vear 1878;” "Small selling wave pushes stocks lower.” M hat further argument is necessary to convince you that the country needs a new deal? Don't you think that it the present administration could help any, they would have done so now. just before the elec-' tian? They are on the wrong track, ♦ « Household Scrapbook , —By— | ‘ ROBERTA LEE » • Setting C-dors E;snm salts is xcelle'it f- r s-.t---j:ig coloc of a delicate fabric. Add a ttt spoonful to tach gall n of «at. r and the article will wash easily with:tit losing i’s color. Odors There will be o odor f fruit juiee\when it ruts out in n oven or on top of the st ve, if si t is thrown on it. It cat b arily cl ailed when burned to a crisp. , Olive Oil Do not Jeep olive .11 ii a cold plac;. because it is injured by I e zini'. Always V pin air-tight tins, i TWENTY YEARS * AGO TOIiAV I I i From the Daily Democrat File > Oswald O. S. rit tger weds M:;;.i, F-rtiny Baumgartner. Roy. 12 year old son f Mr. ami Mrs. Ed Gi Idner of Prehl fijul;, revolver in ditch and sho ts nelf through the ha»l. M . an 1 Mrs. Erl Butler of sth str et nteriain .in i.her o friend:; at dittoer Mr. ami Mrs- ('haw cv Fuhrman of Marion. Ohi, wi : Sunday giiesir of Mr. and Mrs. John Tyndall. Misses Hu Ida aid lE'fi Mu.'scWer ' ' lain at .-n; p< r f..i Mi .<■:< Ly dia Kirsch, Hope H •ffji.in tu.d Pearl Purdy. Miss Amy M riia spends Sunday with th:- Fri k Moyer Family. Miss J| -‘•phiro Krick of Fort Wayne is the guest f her parant".. El Uhlman at Union township ill with tyt,.hold fever lufk:. s ar* lapse. Miss Sti Mayer is visitk.g in Fort Wayne Who ping cow h kills lo.onu children per yiuf is W..p,iug sent to mothers. Chris Boose and feinily nt. r. aiii out of town guests and re'.ativea. Answers To Test Questions | Below are the Answers to the test (junctions Printed on Page Two. » .— « 1. 1877. 2. Assistant’ Secretary of the Navy. 3. North Topeka, Kausie. 4. N.w York City. 5. New York. 6. Gneiftn, white and orantje. 7. Prine ton, N- J. eeeeeeeeeeeee' — 8. M;: sitapii H. plu'tal of Madame. 9. Maryland. 10. "Tbs IC.ivien.''
’* DON’T QUOTE ME ~| ♦ -RJ.R) ♦ Washington, N <■ 3- U.R)—The :l:>ckliiig and booing business isn't! ; nearly as exciting as it used tit lie. 1 President Hoover's method and ! ■ that generally used by candidates, 'nowadays is to ignore interrup-l itions. The theory is that if ignor-1 led the disturbing persons will soon j grow discourag'd and quit. It Jakes a'l the fun out of heckling 'and booing. In the old days it must have I I been a lot more fun to boo a speak-' er. In the Republican political' textbook compiled by Horace Gree,ley is a verbatim account of ,i political meeting at the Academy ®f I Music which shows an old fashioned orator dealing with hecklers aaj 'follows: Charles O'Conor speaking: I insist that negro s'avery is not un-l just.. (Long continued apidanse.) i It is not unjust; It Is just, wise' and beneficient. (Hisses, follow-' 1 i (t by applause and cries of "put | ihim out.” I.ot z him stay gentle-; mei» Serpents may hiss, but good men will hoar. (Cries of "put him ut” again; calls to order; ; confusion for a time). The chairman If anybody hiss ! es here, remember that everyone l has his own peculiar way ot ex- ! pr< ssing himse'f. and as some ,birds only understand hissing, they must hiss. (Applause). Mr. O’Conor —Gentleman, thole is ,n animal tip n this earth that has no tacu ty of making its senti- . ir nt known in any other way i than by a h'ss. I am for equal lights. (Three cheers were here given for Mr. O'Cnnor, three for Gov. Wise and three groans for i John Brown ). I beg of you gentle- ; men, all of you who are of my mind at least, to preserve silence, .end leave th hissing animal in 'the full enjoyment of his natural i (Cries of “good, giod” Slaughter anti applause). The first human society that ever broke up i through sin and discord had its •happy union dissolved by the entrance of that anima'. (Applause).! Therefore I say it is his privilege tn his. la>t him hiss on. Gentle-!
"-!■ » ' . i —.in. , ■■ . The Two-Year Guaranteed BEE-VAC I Straight Suction Cleaner w Fast-Thoroußh-Safe F»<O*V Now as Low as L '22.75 > GETS ALL THE DIRT! ASK FOR A DEMONSTRATION The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS ' TI "' " ' '"""' ' " - ■ - - 5...' .———l.l
Critically 11l jFK. ■ - i «wMI!Rr ' t W1 I > Is J J j «J i The hard-riding hero ot a hundred battles with Wild Western gunmen on the films. Buck Jones, famous eowboy screen star, is now fighting the greatest battle ot' his life. The actor is in a critical condition in a Hollywood hospital as the result of an attack of pneumonia following Influenza. men. 1 will not detain you much longer. (Cries of "Go on, go on.”) I maintain that negro slavery is not unjust, that It is benign in its influence upon the white rnati and upon the black. (Voices, "that's 'so. that's so.”) I ( , The hissing gentlemen was heard fiom no mere. The handbook has ithe verbatin contemporary accounts of the Lincoln-Douglas debates and all other important political data which was used in one of the most decisive presidential | < ampaigns in American history. , Harry W. Frantz of the United Press staff found it in an o'd bookstore and bought it for 25 cents. It was marked down from $2.50. ■ The flyleaf bears the inscription: "Simeon Baldwin, Jr., August, 1860, i Clinton, la."
Tom Noll Appreciates Help Os Unemployed We have hefcbd it said that those who are Ueing helped because of the uunemplbyment situation, do not appreciate It. but you will have a tough time convincing Thompson Noll, trustee of Washington township, of that. | Tom has been giving much time' outside office hours tn the work of aiding the needy of the com-! mnnity and with others has so far done a splendid job of it. Yester-' day eighteen unemployed men, who appreciate what has been done for them and their families arrived at the Noll farm and stated they had come to husk his corn. They went to work with ,i vim and kept at it all day, turning | out over five hundred bushels and announced they will return, Monday to finish the 84 shocks. Tom says the men did a first class job and ho never saw any organ! zation work better. Os course Mr. Noll furnished dinner and supper and Tom came up with ice cream and cigars and the day was thoroughly enjoyed. Mr. and Mrs. Noll were deeply touched by the deed for they were behind with the farm work due to busy days in the office and want al! the men to know their feelings ' of appreciation. o Church of God Revival '‘Thou art weighed in the and found wanting," ws the sub-! j et of Rev. Marshall's d'rc urs’ in the revival at the Church cf God last evening. He drew a, number of leu-' sons from Belshazzar and the reading and interpretation of the hasudwrittn.j on the wall. He also gave a sekinn ex'A tation to the unslaved and urged that they be saved. 8 uhr are still being saved in th» services. The revival will cor!) i. iue through this week beginning each: eening at 7:30 oc| ck. HOSPITAL NOTES Lee illakey, Hoagland uid-erwent a major opc.i t!' n at th> Alams County Memorial .Hospital Wcdnee-i day ifternoon. Miss Adele Buuck. Rou'e 1. Decatur. is a patient at the Adims C unty Memorial Hospital wh ’-e her lousila wise removed this me n-1 i.,T. — ARRIVALS Mr and Mrs. Grover Owe s of Convey, Route 4, are the parents of a girl biby burn at the Adams] Ccunty Memorial Hospital Tuesday , night.
Special Sale ©£ Leather Halters These splendid all, leather Halters are made in Decatur by Schafers. This is the time to buy as bad weather is just around the corner and you will want to tie up your stock for the winter. These prices are based on the new low levels, in fact, leather prices are the lowest they have been in 25 years. “W hen Better Ilalteia are made we will make them." fi 1 F U L L SI Z E II Horse Halters “(If No. 722—One inch Riveted—Price Now ?: No. 723—1*4 inch Riveted—Price N<»" ; ■ ■ / B g Jim—l'4 inch Riveted—Price Now it »jjj No. 715—1'4 inch Sewed—Price Now i <ij| No. 71fi—P/ 2 inch. Sewed N<>" Colt Halters ■ll' ~ 5* Vl No. 726—% inch Riveted—Price Now vFI .. "S* kJ No. 721— 1 inch Riveted—Price No" Cow Halters IJ K « w No. 727-C—l inch Riveted—Price No" ' No. 7 28 —inch Riveted—Price Now The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME
The Forgotten Maj) By EDWIN MARKHAM 2). « tk/ I —: I Not on our golden fortunes builded high- I Not on our boasts that soar into the sky- K Not upon these is resting in this hour ■ The fate of the future; but upon the power I Os him who is forgotten— yes, on him H Rest all our hopes reaching from rim to rim I In him we see all of earth’s toiling bands, I With crooked backs, scarred faces, shattered H E seeks no office and he asks no praise I For all the patient labor of his days. I He is the one supporting the huge weight' I He is the one guarding the country’s gate. I He bears the burdens on these earthlv wavs' I We pile the debts, he is the one who pays, I He is the one who holds the solid power I To steady nations in their trembling hour. - I Behold him as he silently goes by I For it is at his word that nations die. I Shattered with loss and lack. I He is the man who hoids upon his back I The continent and all its mighty loadi— I This toiler who makes possible the roads I On which the gilded thousands travel free— I Makes possible our feasts, our roaring boards, I Our pomps, our easy days, our golden liozrdt He gives stability to nations: he Makes possible our nation, sea to sea. His strength makes possible our college wallsMakes possible our legislative halls— Makes possible our churches soaring high With spires, the fingers pointing to the sky. SHALL then this man go hungry, here in lands i Blest by his honor, builded by his hands? Do something for him; let him never be Forgotten: let him have his daily bread: He who has fed us, let him now he fed. Let us remember all his tragic lot—, Remember, or else be ourselves forgot! A LL honor to the one that in this hour Cries to the world as from a lighted tower— Cries for the Man Forgotten. Honor the one Who asks for hun a glad place in the sun. He is a voice for the voiceless. Now. indeed, We have a tongue that cries the mortal need. J •. Copxirht, 1932, Edwi» NMW
