Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 272, Decatur, Adams County, 16 November 1932 — Page 5
‘SJ*it |ns County school* | < ®nort on Attendance yw 1 - ■ c Union Township ■ S’rru-im. Arthur Blakey. HtW s ''artei 21.11 96.2 * V S'Hii-1' .... . 35 31.77 99.37 1 : Kgj M .1. Ernst- 11 2o 20 100 k.. - si|iiiliz 42 4i :rt 9s : - ; ■ Root Township ■ ~ ;t •*'' Sehieferstein Clem 31 29.72 96.42 11s - Hostetler, ■ Cat' l erim' " eidler. I’lpr.’ 56 53 64 98.72 “ 98.98 Schenck 26 2 ..3.8 B f 3» Fuhrman 25 23.75 95 !k| —— 3 Jhe cort w 1 Ti mc Tonight - actual P lctures °* the I SCHt ELING • WALKER Fight at the ringside. All talkie ■ — Doug Fairbanks. Jr. in ...WKc IS A RACKFT " You’ll I this sparkling picture. Also Cartoon. Kids ICe. Adults 25c, 2 for 35c ,v ! ' : '' Quillan in ■ ‘THE BIG SHOT." ■ Sitntl. Moml.iv. Tm nlay TIIHU I I)W.ML\DISE." ■ L-———— ■■ " —— jy .il l 25c. 2 for 35c; Kids 10c 1 SHE ADAMS ■pnight and Thurs. Q ■ ’STREET OF v H WOMEN” — ■ with Kay Francis, 32 1® Roland Young. ® (.live Her Heart I<> A I Mar e<l Man! Learn Hie secnrl <>l a Love sacrifice MK'li -ave a man a f uture until nave a woman a past. I Aided-! onudv. Rud) Vallee Meb lies and Hollywood on Pantile, SMtSMMBMBMaQIMHBSI
Suggestions To J Water Consumers MEIERS WATER CLOSETS Water meters are furnished by the Water Depart- a ftlipk T1 A 11’/AIPHTO ment but the consumer is required to keep the surround- fl IVI 3 Hflllßl Wi W ings of the meter clean, dry and of easy access and pro- £> liUvlj A kz tect the same from freezing. All damage done the meter ; by freezing or by hot water poured on or forced back Water closets and faucets should be examined frc through the meter is charged to the consumer. nuen ly in m der to keep the consumption of water on a normal basis. After a closet has been flushed and the PROTECT YOUR METER TODAY. tank is filled, there should te no movement of the water rn the bowl; if there is, water is wasting into the sewer, re 6' ho'ding a piece of paper or cardboard against the rear J' Tk* J Pl t portion of the bowl, a flow may be detected which an frozen r roes and nieters ° rd,nary nlO o d ot dsc se vuwaa a «»»»• sx STOP ALj _ LCAKS promptly as “a waste of water is a waste of money.” If pipes are frozen they may be thawed in some cases by wrapping cloths around them and pouring hot water IT* on. If there is a bad case of frozen pipes or if a house is rr iE Wy II ■ ’ll 1I 8 to be closed for the winter it is best to secure the ser- AAVz ■ » A\z kzAAAz A vics of a competent plumber. Do not pour hot water on the meter. Do not build a I ri yW Alp FC fire on the meter as it will ruin the rubber piston and az A A If A ® A AUA* celluloid register. In case of a frozen meter call this department before the same thaws out and causes a The ‘shut off” known as the stop and waste, where damage to your property and a waste of water. the pipes enter the basement or building is your immediate piotection in the event of a burst pipe or meter and ; also for the purpose of shutting off and drainage the house l o*ll 1 f* O • Il* pipes where and when there is danger of freezing; it \|j| J fW'IZC lAlf tHIC 101/ IlllCy should be easy of access and in good condition. In some k/11l V/VjlzllV IVi kzlzl lllllllllL basements it is covered with coal or it is in such bad ■ ** condition that It cannot be turned. Sill cocks or house faucets on the side of the house The man of the house should see that the stop and Should be shut off in the basement before freezing weath waste is in good order and that the folks at home know er and when this is done, the faucet should be opened so how to operate it. To shut off turn handle so that it is as .3 admit air, which will cause the water to run out at at r jght angle with the pipe, one-quarter turn or if a the stop and waste in the basement. This procedure wheel valve turn to right until comnletely closed, rhould be followed when it Is desired to drain the house pipes. Air must be admitted at the top to force the water ALL SERVICE MUST HAVE A PRIVATE SHUT out below. OFF INSTALLED AND IN WORKING ORDER. Tests of city water are furnished the State Board of Health and their analysis and report is on file in the office of the City Clerk for your inspection. For further information or for any We ar s 10 niak l e , y° ur J waler scrvice as near perfection as possible ano your co-opera-service call WATER DEPARTMENT lion is solicited. | City Water Department CITY BUILDING Phone 225 or 231 CHAS. BRODBECK, Superintendent
Movies Help Instruct U. of C. Students —<». - v -u-mri. - —-. " TIHSVWMMSBI ILI XoB T I®: JIS I ■L - < ySfflr 11 4 ■ i ’ iWk. -rr —•” • "W • ■ ■ " •Ogr’ 1t#"1 f r'iii- A B a# f / B-l Pm \ • ™ -.fl “■■ W^* 1 a w* ’ MH Uff*'? j?3l ■ ..JBh" ' jpWpW i \\ ith molecules in the star roles, talking pictures as an aid to education were given their premiere Monday night at the University of Chicago. The steel target and gauge (shown in the lower left photo), which recorded the force exerted by bullets fired by the gunner in the top photo, aid in showing how the continuous lomifaidment of gas molecules exerts pressure on the walls of their container. The action of the bullets was recorded in a sound film, “The Molecular Theory of Matter." At right. Professor Herman L. Schlesinger of the University of Chicago chemistry department, who supervised the film, at projector he uses when showing the film for the instruction of students. »
Parochial: M. A. Greunke 34 34 100 Preble Township Trustee, Ernest Worthman | Elizabeth Leyse 12 12 100 11 Paul Spuller 25 24.16 96.66 Nellie Brodheck 15 14 5 96.66 Parochial: 1 H. F. Neilson 48) 47.3 98.51 Frieda Buuck ... 30 29.5 98.5 Rudolph Stolp 62 60.3 97 W, E. Uffelmau 43 41.7 96.97 - Bartiara Vollrath 36 35.51 98.61 Kirkland Township Trustee. Daniel Scherry Edna Borne 28 27.6 98.6 William Griffiths 19 19 100 Oscar Geisel 37 35.7 96.47 Nellia Coppess 24 23.47 97. S Payline Buckmaster 28 26.83 95.81 Kaedel Andrews 38 36.08 91 Kirkland Twp. H. S. K. J. Mann, Albert Coppess, Lucille Beavers, Glennys Arnold 91 87.5 96.2 Washington Township Trustee, T. R. Noll Arlinc A. Becker. 30 29.72 99.04 Clyde O. Troutner 21 20.66 98.41 I Elmer Ehrsam 28 27.42 98.01 i Mary E. Potts 31 30.88 99.64 Marguerite Lewellen 19 18.66 98.24 St. Mary's Township Trustee, Orlen S. Fortney
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1932.
Pleasant Mills H. S. Henry Snyder, Mary A. Gulick, Helen Schenck, Velma Fortney 94 91.22 96.6 ; Grades: ; W. G. Teeple 22 21.77 98.98 William Noll 22 21.61 98.23! Francille Oliver 29 28.83 99.42' Matie Stevens 27 25.88 93.95: Bobo: f Harve Haggard .. .30 29.69 99.58 t Mardelle Hocker 28 26.27 96.88 Blue Creek Township Trustee, D. D. Habegger j H. M. Houck . ... 44 41.22 96.1 I Estelle Campbell 30 29.19 97.22 ; i James L. Fravel 27 25.66 95.06' Eldon Sprunger 33 31.23 95.90 | Monroe Township Trustee, Noah Rich Mildred McCray ... 42 40 95.23 A. E. Hunt 30 27.80 93.05' Rosamond Gould 25 23.77 95.3 ( Myrtle Clements 21 20.75 98.02 1 J. Ray Duff 28 27.61 98.61 i Ezra Snyder 27 25.80 95.6 I Leo Strahm 43 42.41 98.64 i I Monroe H. S. I; V. H. Wagner, Rolli land Sprunger, Ves- ii II ta Rich, Dorothy 1 1 1 Sprunger 111 108.28 97.55; i Grades: | Lloyd Bryan 2S 24.71 98.831
Floyd Johnson .... 34) 33.63 98.93 Ruth Gilbert 29 28.19 99.11 I ■ Parochial: J. D. R. Schwartz 53 52.69 99.4 French Township Trustee, Edwin Beer j Myron Lehman 27 26 19 96.80 ' Dorothea Bentz 26 25.41 97.76 R. D. LeFavour 38 26.86 96.10 Marcella Robin 28 26.30 93.94 I Naomi Yager 32 30.90 93.94 Elizabeth Cramer 27 24.94 94.44 Hartford Township Trustee, A. F. Baker Linn Grove Schools Edna Glendening 24 23.91 99.65 Mary Schlagenhauf 29 28.61 98.65 Hartford Twp. H. S. Lester Kerr, Mary A. Sullivan, Mary Ann Pusev, Ruth Mahoney ... 84 82.58 98.34 I John Whicker . 43 42.25 97.87 I Grades: I Louise Neusbaum 26 25.05 99.34 Lester Reynolds 30 28.53 97.25 Wabash Township Trustee. Ed Stahly 'Harold Long 36 35.83 99.53 Russell Steiner 20 19.83 99.17 I Gladys Long 28 27.27 97.42 Geneva High School R. O. Hunt, Nell K. Pyle, Peter W. j Vitz. Blanche Aspy,
Margaret Rhoades, Geraldine Runyon 116 113.16 97.79 ; | Grades: A. C. Cook 43 41.88 98.4 Mary Brennan 39 38,38 98.86 Goldine Butcher.. 43 42 97.67 Elizabeth Kraner . 38 36.73 96.71 Magdalena Hirschy 44 42.83 97.35 1 Mary B. Wheat 38 36.33 95.61 I Catherine Fravel.... 36 35.25 98.68 Jefferson Township Trustee, Charley Abnet Jefferson Twp. H. S. Olen Marsh, Merrill Tharp, Dorcas Petty. Mina Collier 77 74.02 98.05 Grades: i J.Chalmer Edwards 41 38.5 95.71! Helen Kenney 48 45.5 96.12 Madeline Robin . 44 42.66 97.83 O ,-t. Dividend Is Declared New York, Nov. 16 —(UP)—t>irectors of American Telephone and Telegraph company today declared the regular quarterly dividend of , | $2.25, payable January 16 to stock-' I holders on record December 20. Kills Son And Self Waukegan, 111., Nov. 16—(UP) — Henry Nelsosi', 28, killed his two-year-old son, Daniel, with a rifle last night, then killed himself by firing a bullet into his head. Nelson’s wile, Florence, who was i outside their farm home near Gray's ' lake at the time of the tregerly, said I her husband had been despondent‘ i ovr lack of steady employment as a farm hand. Get the Habit — Trade at Home i
J Sail away to JeSBL- Pirate Seas in ‘lfni Rafael Sabatini’s th NEW SERIAL most siting stor ) yet Erar* > au tbor oj ' *wJWMB SCARAMOUCIIE iLXSXv 1 Ca st off from the present. .. . Set sail under the blue skies of Romance. . . . Live Lj again the glorious past when love called ( forth chivalry and men still fought with * swords for a woman’s honor. T Piracy, that’s the stuff.... The most colorful, the most exciting times in the history of our continent. Only \ -jw| Sabatini, the man who wrote “Scaramouche” and “CapA ta * n Blood,” could take you there. ~. Here is an author w h° m akes history glow with life. f ' Cast off then! ... Clear the deck! ... Man the guns! ... — ' ■ Up the mizzen-mast goes the Jolly Roger! ... There’s goDID YOU KNOW * ng to danger, high courage and a romance That the pirate Henry Morgan that will SCt Y OUr heart athrob. .. . Stand by all! ! ! i (one of the, characters in this story) I ! massacred 1,400 persons when he took Panama? That the king rebuked him for his X J N ""’ST' A v cruelty and then made him Sir ' g t 1 ■ 1 A ff Henry Morgan, Governor of the g g' ggJ I ■ /'“'’la Island of Jamaica? g g B- -9 JL W J Js. That an expedition is now search- ! ing Cocos Island for pirate treasure? That it is doubtful if Captain Kidd "’W TT T" A ~T” iicSravK ’ was ever guilty of piracy? } W %/ / I That there was a girl pirate who 5k I | wjkj tt’HT*'' 4 * — concealed her sex until she was cap- I g g A >. tured? She was hanged on Execution W|— * ’ /i- .'I 1/z/Tk Dock, London. I J W) Historically authentic details of pirate lore, captains, ships K H(t UN S f < and fighting methods make J the buccaneer days live again I iig"' "■ SATURDAY Decatur Daily Democrat
COLT CHIB HAS MANY ENTRIES With 549 weanling draft colts > nominated from 38 Indiana counties by 409 different farmers, the Hoosier Gold Medal Colt Club is starting on its eighth year with the big-, Igest enrollment of its history, ac- ! cording to P. T. Brown of the Pur[due University Animal Husbandry , Department. This new enrollment [represents an Increase of 145 colts, lover last year’s record and is an indication of not only the increased interest in horse development but also of the increased demand for horses throughout Indiana. Adams county horsemen with 57 colts lead the -state with the larg est enrollment from any one county. This unusually large number ( of entries is the result of good work done by County Agent L. E. Archbold of Decatur and the Adams County Horse committee, composed of five members of the Adams County Belgian Breeders’ Association. Other high counties of the state, the number of colts nominated from each, follow: Delaware, 27; Lagrange, 31; Hamilton, Henry, (Laporte and Whitley with 27 each; Carroll, 25; Wabash, 22; Grant, 21, I and Wayne, 20. Counties that have turned in enrollments this year for [the first time are, Clark, Grant, Owen, Shelby, Vermillion and Warren. The Hoosier Gold Medal Colt Iciub is a statewide club open to
any farmer in Indiana. It is spon-1 sored cooperatively by Purdue and the Indiana Livestock Breeders’ I Association. The colts are nominated by weighing during the I month of July while they are still I foals. A gain of 650 pounds made : during the 12 months following! nomination qualifies the colts for I I competing as yearling in one or [ ’ I more of the authorized Gold Med-, lai shows held in the various coun-1 |ties and at the State Fair. Gold,! silver and bronze medals are award’led b/ the Indiana Livestock Breed-’ ers’ Association to the winners at , ' ithese shows, the number of medal 1 1 awards at any given show depend- - 11 ing upon the number of colts ex-, ’ihibited. 11 Records kept by cooperators in I this club during the past seven , I years show that tlie most success ' ful results have been obtained by I observing the following practices ’ I and principles during the first year - lof the colt’s life: I.—Use outs as the chief grain , ifeed, giving weanlings about all i they will consume. 1 1 2, —Use legume or mixed hay. | 3. —Give the colts unlimited out- ; door exercise. 4 —Keep the coils’ feet level by using pincers and a rasp on them every month or six weeks. i 5. —Keep the colts free from exI ternal and internal parasites. j j 6. —Well-bred, good typed colts . 1 have made biggest returns for the feed they consumed. ; o Trade in your old pens, any make, for new Parker, l i Fountain Pens at Callow & 1 Kohne.M-W
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I BARGAINS — Bargains in Living Room, Dining Room Suites, Mattresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our phone number is 44 ct. 0 Get the Habit — Trade at Home ' t. ... .
'“'Watch Your Kidneys/ A - Dont Neglect Kidney and Bladder Irregularities If bothered with bladder irregularities, getting up at night and nagging backache, heed promptly these symptoms. ! They may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder condition. For 50 years grateful □ users have relied upon Doan’s ■ Pills. Praised the country over. ■Sold by all druggists. r Doan’s A Diuretic for the
