Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 268, Decatur, Adams County, 11 November 1932 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday bv THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered ar the Decatnr. Ind., Post Office aa Second Class Matter. I. H. Heller . Pres, and Gen. Mgr. k. R Holthouse S ( ‘c'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies ...... $ .02 Due week, by carrier 10 One year, by carrier 5.00 Dne month, by mail .. 35 i Three months, by mail... 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 J 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. 'Who.' asks an ardent southern . orator, "would countenance the , idea of robbing Peter to pay Paul? - ’ Well, we dnnno, unless it might be Paul. —Boston Herald. We dislike to disillusion you. but lhat corner around which they now say prosperity is turning isn't located on Easy Street. — Atlanta Journal. The quail season In Indiana came in yesterday and those who want these quality birds will have tc. hurry as the law only permits file days of the sport this year. So many Democratic congressmen and senators have been elected in the northern states that the Republican press will have to quit crying about the south being ‘in control. Kentucky's returns came in a little slow but they were right in line with the rest of the country, rolling up more than 200,000 majority for the Democratic candidates. There is a feeling of optimism throughout the land and oven such leaders as Will Hays admits that with the new organization in gov eminent we will soon be out of the depression. » Congress may be asked to reimburse those who spent their money for street lawn mowers. Machines , of that kind depreciate rapidly and with the present outlook for busy days, it doesn't look as though we would need them. By the way. what became of the big swing to Hoover of which we heard so much the last two weeks of the campaign? There is much bunk in every campaign and now as four years ago there is a demand that the straw vote business be discourage or prohibited. Its alright with us for usually its aguimt the Democrats but the doggoned things are so nearly correct as to be almost uncanny. Ibaus of the largest business corporations in the country are cut with statements that the future is optimistic and that the change * in administrations will not interfere. Big business may he expect- - ed to step out the first of the year ■ as rapidly as conditions will permitjyul to build in a constructive ard sensible wav. We are eoine AUTO LOANS Borrow needed money on your auto. Repay on easy terms. Confidential Service. Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hardware Store Decatur, Ind. Phone 2-3-7 < ”■ ... — Ashbauchefs MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING t SPOUTING LIGHTNING HODS I Phone 765 or 739 <

into a period of prosperity and it you doubt it, wait and see. Now' that the people have decided who is to he intrusted with leadership, it is the duty of all to put a shoulder to the wheel and help. The winning nominee may Ibe the leader of a party before election, but after the votes are counted he is about to become theleader of all his countrymen. Wholesouled acceptance of defeat is what makes ours a great governI ment of the people in which the will of the majority is supreme.— Indianapolis Star. The Republicans will have but fifteen or sixteen members out of 150 in the Indiana senate and house of representatives in the session v. hicli convenes in January. According to returns to date it looks like seven senators and nine house members. With such majorities the party in power assumes a great responsibility and one that will require some leadership of merit. Chances for slips are great but there is also the opportunity for service, which if given, will help the great state of Indiana for many years to come. It s a great country. After one of the hardest campaigns ever conducted in the nation. President Hoover and President-elect Roosevelt. with their closest advisors are already planning a change in the national administration that will make the least economic disturbance. Every good citizen will do his utmost to lift the country out of the depression, regardless ot what may have been said by either side during the heat of the campaign. It's going to go and , those who hang back and do not assist, will be out of the picture one of these days. I Fourteen years ago today we were a happy people because of ' the signing of the Armistice, which meant the end of the World war. today we observe a holiday in memory of that important event. We have had a strenuous time since, enjoying the greatest prosperity ever known in the world and then dropping into a depression, unequalled in this land. What of the future? A nation that could win the war and do other mighty things, will not falter now because of a let-up business. Let's renew our faith in America today, honor the boys who fought the great battle and determine to go steadily and always ahead. 0 ♦ • Answers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two. 1. In some states it is: in some It is not. 2. Puerto Rico. 3. Florida. 4. Germany. 5. Boulder Dam. ; 6. Penn, ylvamia. 7. The abolition of slavery in the U. S. 8. Datum. 9. Charles Dickens. IG. Wordsworth. Southey and Coleridge. » • The People’s Voice This column for the use of our ! I readers who wish to make sug- | gestions for the general good | I or dismiss questions of Inten- | | est. "'lease sign your name to I | show authenticity. It will not I be used if you prefer that it ! not b« Editor’s note We are in receipt of a letter from a person who writes relative to a certain advertisement published in this paper. The mthor's correct name is not given If the person will identify himself at this, office, the letter will be published. The Editor. — —o Card of Thanks To the People of Adams County' I appreciate and thank you for the support given me in my campaign and election to the office of Judge of the 2fith Judicial Circuit and I assure you that I will make every effort to be an honest and trustworthy official. H. M. De VOSS.

14 Years After “the War to End War” ■■ "j" 1 — ■" "~i i I ■ ■ mk 1 WirnWn I «-’*• ■ .*1 r—-| - ’>juMwrrri»J r ii riirirP'T- - A ~ ■ 314- ----- c

e TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File . » ♦ Ruth and Thersa Baltzell begin 1 duties in county auditor's office. Miss Mtmie Harting D hostess, to the Poinsetta Club. Mary Hite is in Fort Wayne. John C. Moran is a Portland visi- > tor. I Lewis Fnichte is in Huntington , on business. Chas. Voglewetle, B. J. Terveer and Miss Maiyme return from

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By HARRISON CARROLL. Copyright. 1>33. King Features Syndicate, Ine. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., — It’s a chuckly story Al Jolson tells I about his experience at a national _____radio broadcast. Just as he was a ‘ >o Lit t 0 on, he got a k S long distance T call from a pal in a distant city. I* “The bread■L* cast was K reat ' Me ,■ you were marSSL velous, Al.” the flk. friend gushed. mQHk "But.heavens. man I" shouted Jolson. ■SHBLkW haven't ■' started yet." A) Fora moJolson ment, there was silence,then this comeback: “Yeah, but you forget the three hours’ difference in time. You’re all through here,” Studio sound departments are used to reproducing thousands of queer noises, but the most bizarre assignment of all has just been completed by Murray Spivak, of R-K-O. This expert has giver, voices to eight prehistoric monsters which fellow technicians had visudily reproduced and animated for the picture, “King Kong.” Several of the country’s most distinguished scientists were stumped when Mr. Spivak asked them what kind of noises you might expect from a dinosaur, a triceratop or a pterodactyl. O. A Peterson, curator of mammalian paleontology at Carnegie Museum, argued that modern reptiles are so limited in their abilities for reproducing sounds that it would be futile to speculate upon the vocal aptitudes of their ancestors. Refusing to give up, Mr. Spivak appealed to J. W. Lytle, vertebrate paleontologist of the Los Angeles Museum. Dr. Lytle was less discouraging. He said: "That is no proof that these monsters made sounds yet it would be presumptuous to say they didn’t. “For the dinosauria, I would suggest, you reproduce various degrees of hissing sounds; for the mammals. such as the arsinotherium, an admixture of grunts and groans would seem in order.” And so Mr. Spivak set to work. The first hisses of the tyrano-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1932.

; Toledo. Dall, s Brown is home from North Dakotii where he spent summer on I the ranch of his uncle. Sam Peoples. O.iions 75c bu. Cabbage SI.OO peri I htsnslred lbs. Helen Catherine is 'he iwne of: the eight pound daughter bom to Mr. ami Mrs. Arthur Mangold. Hunting season opens today. i Mrs. WiU Butler becomes mem- | her of Eastern Star. . BARGAINS — Bargains in Living i Room. Dining Room Suites, Mat-j tresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our phone number is 44ct. r

saurus were too effeminate. After many efforts, he finally turned the trick by forcing columns of air pressure through various sizes and shapes of apertures. And to give the hiss even more menace, he rerecorded it at a subnormal speed. This lowered the sound an octave. The arsinotherium was vocalized by blowing a column of air through a vox humana pipe of an old organ Because this was a recognizable sound, Spivak reversed the noise track. A simple little trick but it produced an awful bull-like groan. Eight times, the expert taxed his ingenuity to the limit and eight times his efforts met with final sue cess. Many months of labor but just an incident in the great romance of film making. HOLLYWOOD PARADE: Latest polo casualty in Hollywood is George Brent He twisted two vertebrae in his neck. But he will not give up the game. . . Arthur loew, M. G. M.’s air-minded executive, cables the studio that he hopped in a single day from Hanoi. F rench Indo-China, to Calcutta. By boat this would have taken eight weeks. . . . Charles “Buddy” Rog <tra is giving Mary Brian a terrifi rush. They had t another date Saturuay night st the first Mav JL'-l fair party of th jgy ■■*-. ■''Wlfc year- • • • Anr: T» W' Jackie Coop», ’iK - spent the week 41 Pn, l 0 n To rr W Mix’s ranch si Jf' X ... You have to admire the phil~**?y*TK otophical wa y . lr " bich George O’Brien takes Mary hi « ma!l s’ in ' Brian juries. I him yesterday and he was wrapped up in the usual yards of tape. “This year,” he flipped, “I thought, iuck was on my side. Then I waked up and i found it was a horse.” When Helen MacKellar arrived in town, photographers wanted to get a picture of her against a truck- ■ load of baggage. As iuck would 1 have it, they picked the grips be . longing to Ruth Tayor (Remembe: . “Gentlemen Prefer B.ondes?”! i Such is Hollywood. ' DID YOU KNOW— That the M. G. M. Studio tele- . graph office sends out an average • of 100,000 words a month?

♦ ♦ RETROSPECTION 1918—1932 By HARRY W. THOMPSON o— — | Dedicated to the Mothers, Whose Boys Did Not Come Back. • ♦ I watched him as he nfarched away, A boy of mine who learned to pray At my knee. He knew naught of I war. i Nor hated men. He loved them more Like God loves men. Good will his store. iln spirit then I marched with him.] I And watched the glow of faith ' grow dim In him. as fear his courage sought I To break. Like millions more his 1 lot ,To give the life, which God '•id' wrought. tin spirit too, i watched him die. But not before he gave the lie To death. O yes my boy was brave! Small recompense »n mark his grave To pay him tor the life he gave. ] O would that inen could only learn I That hate is horn in hell,' and yearn iTn find a better way than killing Youth. A life sgainst a shilling? Such a fame be shame, God willing. o — IN MEMORY t Just o: e yeir ago today My dear husband werit awty Ilow I miss him no one cam tell F it he's gone with Christ to dwell » : He had gone and left us weeping j He's wot dead, just only sleeping ■ tie is happy with the Lord. An J receive 1 a gre’it reward. And with all them sweet remembera'ces. Comes i thought of ns we dear Foe we know you passed through the glory gate. To waii ti-s over there. Mrs. Dj'dia Durbim ■and children o_ Household Scrapbook ? -ByROBERTA_LEE Testing Eggs Hold an egg up to the light, and if it appears clear it is good A stale [egg will present a thick appearance. |lf it shows a black spot, take it carefully osit in the yird ard bury it. " Indelible Ink 'indelible ink marks can be removed from fabrics by sponging with equal parts of ammoniu and tun; entine. Linoleum C e can take away that < hilly look of linoleum by laying small w ishabie rugs on the kitchen floor. I; ilso adds to the winter comfort. IV. A. Klepper will arrive home ] tomorrow :rom a trip to Pittsburg • and Cleveljipd.

f DON’T QUOTE ME~J ♦- (L'.R) ♦ Washington, Nov. 11. — (U.R) — Secretary of Treasury Mills, one of President Hoover's closest advisors in the campaign, sees one consolation In the Democratic landslide — beer. He believes a bill legalizing beer wiU be passed by the short session of congress. “We should at least get that much out of this election." he said. Mills accepts the Republican defeat with the philosophy that seekers of public office must expect such misfortunes. He believes the. Democrats have dug themselves in for a long tenure of office. “The books were closed against the President a year ago." he said. “With wheat selling for 40 cents, I corn for nine cents, and with W.- * 000,000 unemployed, there wasn't; a chance for the President's re-. election." He added that the straw votesl

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this year were "distressingly too accurate.” Mills was asked about his future plans. Would he be back in public life within two years? “After studying the returns." he opined, "I would need a set nf burglar tools to get back in through a key hole." Would he like to be the Republican presidential nominee in 1938? "Why wish that on me?” he shot back, taking a quick puff on a fat cigar. Post-election sign in the inter .state commerce building: “Say it .isn't so." signed "H H." And in the Reconstruction Finance Corporation quarters: "There isn’t any grass in these streets vet “ ■ ' The Washington Advertis. ~g Club i ; wants President-elect Roosevelt to i .revive, the pompous inauguration; ■day ball and "other good old Amlerican displays that were former-1

,1 ' Vi datp, *» t 8 " gfj iia;, ’”v on asks i, >« y ” ur Mult an - i 11 "”"''' '■ "i-1 . ’ !l " now deJd > enißi other ...