Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 8, Decatur, Adams County, 10 January 1933 — Page 5
(ML TESTER WINS HONORS er win Miller Is Awardc(| prize During Agricultural Conference Lafavette. Jan. 1(4-(Special )- rv;in Miller, tester of the AdCount} Herd Improvement Elation, received special recnition at Purdue University toV alien official testers from all rts of Indiana gathered at Layette for their annual meeting rin g the time of the agriculturconferenee. In 1932 Mr. Miller submitted the st series of news stories to The liana Farmer’s Guide from the B tern half of the state in a const promoted to improve the domination of information relative dairy herd improvement proPSS in Indiana. Mr. Miller's iniallstic contributions were iut e(l in The Guide during the s( year under the heading Oings of the Dairymen," togethwith nearly 100 other news iries submitted in the contest 25 oilier cow testers. In his prize-winning series of as items. Tester Miller referr to a number of Adams county irymen, among them being Dan begger and Sons, Poter B. Loh in. Teller Paxson, Sol Mosser, mry Aschleman, Ralph Henry, arles Harris, Dan P. Schwartz, ah Rich, Otto Bieberich and nest Kruetzman. from Hie eastern division of the
Wednesday Specials Fresh Boiling Beef, 3 lbs 25c Nice Shoulder Rihs of Pork, 6 1b5.... 25c Spare Ribs with meat on them, 3 lbs. 25c Nice Pork Shoulder Steak, 2 lbs 25c Pan Sausage or Bamberger, 3 tbs. .. 25c Lard, freshly rendered, 3 lbs 20c Perfect Coffee, 3 lbs SI.OO Wayne Malt, GOOD, can 25c Cottage Cheese, pint 10c Perfect Oleomargerine, 2 lbs 25c Bacon Squares, 3 lbs 25c Creamery Butter, Fresh, 2 lbs 53c Gold Medal Flour, 24 lb. sacks, each 65c Plenty Fresh Eggs and Country Butter. Free Deliveries—Phone 106 or 107 Mutschler’s Meat Market January Sale NOW YOU CAN BUY BLANKETS —at the Lowest Prices we have ever sold them! Handsome Plaid Patterns in all colors, Edges Sateen Bound. '‘■rA All Wool, Reg. $9.95, now pair $6.95 , ‘"j *** Wool, Reg. $7.50, now pair ... $5.00 ' Part Wool, heavy quality, pair .. . $2.49 „ xß ° Part Wool, Reg. $1.99, now pair $1.58 /2x84 Cotton, Best quality, pair $1.29 p ’«*n Grey, color border, pair . $1.39 „. Cotton Plaid, best grade, pair . $1 00 “ lri 9 e Blankets, 7CxBO, Cotton Plaid, each 50c ®"’9le Blankets. 70x80. Part Wool, each 79c nea. Made Comtcrts, 72x84. Cotton filled . $1.98 6a.een Covered Comforts, 72x84, Wool filled $2.98 V ARD GOODS BARGAINS — ' uinen Toweling, 18 inches wide, Gcod quality IQI /z» ’cd or unbleached, yatd 1 / ijC 111 reached Muslin, 30 inches wide, Q i Limit 20 yard: to customer) yard OV ■ l;.y.hcri Muslin, 26 inch, Fine quality ' lfd ' aC ‘ Cd GhCet "O’ 81 i,lrh Wlde | 11 onk'a G oth, 36 inch wide, natural tan color, r / p'pu'ar for drapes, yard ia-oL ' ■" y Shepting, bleached, fine soft finish HP■i inch wide, yard 29c; 81 inches wide, yard ftlJv r >s Prints, guaranteed fact color Q., yard • OC lied Canton Flannel, 27 inch 10(3 * k Heavy Outing, light or dark 1!T ~ Hard • - H Waal Dress Materials JOC Ri filed Curtains, ■, price >’•so, now, pair I f/t t°; h Regular Length or Cottage Sets "fn,, new, pair iJW NIBLICK & co.
state, Sanford Frazee, tester of the Huntington County Herd Improvement Association, won sec- , ond prize, while in the western half of the state Wallace D. Hast-' ings, of Vigo county, received first ! ! prize and Dale Haselby, of the 'lt hite-Carroll counties associa- , tion, was second honors. Prizes for the contest were pre-: sented to the testers during their conference at Lafayette by James H. White, assistant editor of The Indiana Farmer’s Guide. o — —. PRETTY WIDOW TELLS OF LIFE CONTINUED FROM porting the kidnaping to police, Schildhauer’s body was found on a lonely road in Cicero. Stege believes passions and jealousies roused by the Bohemian life I of the couple may prove the motive ;in the slaying. Two men were brought before ' Mrs. Schildhauer as she underwent questioning in the Marquette police station. The first was Carl Bradberry, former sheriff s deputy, with whom she took a trip to Memphis. Mrs Schildhauer readily admitted intimacies which Bradberry had revealed. But when Warren Green- , wood, to whom she had engagIcd before she married Schildhauer I faced her with a similar story her temper flared and she shouted "Liar.” Miss Charlotte Holland, 24. The same age as Mrs. Schildhauer— I told in the widow's presence of finding Bradberry and Mrs. Schildjhauer in pajamas on returning from a dance she attended with Schildjhauer. The widow countered by saying
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1933.
Cosmic Rays Remain Mystery As Savants Battle to a Draw ♦ * * * * * Clash in Theories of Distinguished Physicists, Both Nobel Prize Winners, High Spot of Scientists’ Convention. ' WK." ' w HItLiKAMXJ yo ...I.XWW ■. weeeer-■ -m, w Wi 1 ■ - I k lL> l ' M| w« leH — 4Sk—n . '!!£. ' Dr Arthur H- Compton No sooner have we come to recognize relativity, the theory of Professor Albert Einstein, as a scientific principle in no way related to political patronage, than the world is again knocked dizzy with the riddle of the cosmic rays. What are they? Well, if you can answer that question, there's a plush-lined niche waiting for you in the Hall of Fame. Two of the world’s foremost authorities on physics couldn’t agree on the subject recently and the battle of their conflicting theories provided the high spot at the convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The savants are Dr. Robert A Millikan, president of the California Institute of Technology, and Dr. Arthur H. Compton, of the University of Chicago, who is an erstwhile pupil of Dr. Millikan. Both are Nobel prize winners for physics. Dr. Millikan holds that the cosmic rays are super-vibrant light rays, or photons, discharged during creation of matter in the universe. These rays, says the savant, are the most penetrating form of rays, more than 10,000 times more vibrant than the X-Rays. Dr. Compton, on the other hand, contends that the cosmic rays are not rays but speedy electrons, originating in the stars, or hundreds of miles outside the stratospheric envelope, and entering the earth’s atmosphere in a steady stream Dr Compton only recently returned from a survey that took him 50,000 miles to study the rays on the high mountains of five continents. As no one else in the world knows nearly as much about the elusive rays as the opposing scientists, the debate must be called a draw for want of a competent referee.
Miss Holland was "running around ; unclothed” at the time. Miss Hol-’ land said Schildhauer was only a casual acquaintance and other witj nesses corroborated her statement. I Mrs Schildhauer said her hus- | band had encouraged her in her 'affair with Bradberry so that his attentions might Ire left free for Miss Holland. She said that when she left the apartment on the eve -' ing of the pajama incident she went i to a hotel where she stayed with ’ Bradberry for 10 days. One fact new to police want brought out. Mrs. Schildhauer said | that on the afternoon preceding her’ husband's d ath she kept an appointment with Bradberry, mealing him briefly in the county building where he was employed as a deputy.| She denied flatly Stege’s question, as to whether Bradberry was one of the men whom she saw kidnap her hushamd. Police started a hunt for a nickel plated revolver which a maid in l the Schildhauer home reported she hid seen in a bureau drawer. They also engag’d a force of 25 unem-l ployed men to hunt in the vicinity where Schildhauer's body was' found in a belief that killers might have tossed away th weapon nearby. ... LEGISLATURE SETTLES DOWN TO STUDY BILLS CONTINUED EHOM PAGKt ONE due'd in the house this morning, f’i'p o-onf’Hive Job' 1 I*' I,’van pemocrat of Terre Haute, an- i nouneed he had obtained 51 signatures op ha I ill providing foi re-' peal of the Wright law. It will; probably lie introduced tomorrow. 1. ith house and senate adjourned at noon until 10 a. m. toni-tr-, row. THREE INDIANA MEN SENTENCED TO LIFE TERMS CONTINUED FROM PAGfcJ ONE j to begin life sentences. Swift Michigatl justice ended j th'-ir < rjmimil (i rec st five days; after tltey had robbed the suial), bank upstate. ,|:nUii;ing. Ike ii*'ii leva., instilufioir lift'' TlMirUff? morning, they ipiiirltl.v scooped it|> approximately $3.01)0 in cadi anj' sc-ttttties ami fled from the villas” after slaving Billma'i S'aiw ivilice and city authori . ties of tint region began a con-; certed manhunt which ended; Saturday night when the four were surprised in a swamp near I
Walkerville. Robertson, who told * officials he was from Bloomington and Indianapolis, was wounded by I a farmer who discovered them tn ; a swamp. He will be arraigned ! upon lecovery. The three sentenced men ad- ' mitten prison sentences in Indiana ' and said the automobile used in the Kaleva robbery had been tak■en in an Indianapolis garage | holdup earlier in the week. Adi ditionally. they admitted Michi--1 gan robberies in Hart, Kalamazoo * and Cadillac. Ben*, num, according to police, ' confessed that he had fired the fatal shot into the body of Hillman when he feared the cashier * was going to sound the bank's i burglar alarm. 0 MAJOR BATTLE IS ANNOUNCED BY CHINESE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) , was believed to explain the launching of the offensive. The Japanese military efforts to Isolate the-defeuders of Jehol gives (Tang Yu-Lin the option of resisting invasion or emulating Gen. Ma IChan-Shan, th'* defender of the Nonni river in Manchuria and waging guerilla warfare indefinitely. The Japanese strategy appeared ito be to sweep southward to MunIchuria. turn westward ut the greai wall in a circling moveinent. and t ut .leh 1 off from China proper. THREE BANDITS STAGE HOLDUP CONTINUED FROM PAGI2 ONI. ♦ *»*««*♦ »»•«»•■ kind ever reported in C|ii< js >. said police who compared it to the old-fashioned stage coach i jbberies of eai ly western day... Victims of liie holdup were Charles J Young, wealthy Chicagoan. who lost diamond stud valued at $1.3611; Lionel Guess, Peoria, 111., attorney; Paul Simon. Chicago; Henry H. Kerr. Jr.. Soulli B<nd, Ind.; Wilmarlh Ickes. Chicago, and John J. McMunn, Chicago. Throe of the men were rviuuuug npui wugqiation OW'WWi 1 V ' i jr t a .4 • • r Going Up: it »'j sic mining Hie path that yiic see trivellng is uphill, men zOU mat Know you are progressing This Is the way a Liinoim Industrial l»i is tble to tell v.lieilier or not he is advancing in bi* chostf laid.
AWARD MEDALTO HABEGGER HERD Holstein Dairy Herd Owned By Berne Men Qualifies For Gold Medal I The high producing Holstein dairy, herd owned by [tan Habeg- ' ger and Sons, of Berne, was qualified for a gold medal which will be awarded by the Indiana State Dairy Association during the annual agricultural conference at Purdue university this week. Mr, Habegger wins this award by having a herd of over ten cows tested for butterfat by an official in the Adams County Dairy Heid Improvement Association and each matufe cow- in his herd having produced over 400 pounds of fat in one year. Not more than five or six herds in Indiana will quality for the gold medal. The registered Jersey herd owned by Sol Mosser of Geneva, qualifies for a bronze medal, each cow in the herd having produced over 300 pounds of fat. Out of the seven years in the association -Mr. Mosscr's herd has won six medals. The herd owned by Sam Williams also qualifies tor a bronze medal. The association bad the highest production this year it has ever had in its eight years of continuous testing. The cows produced an average of 365.1 pounds butterfat per cow valued at $117.18 with an average feed cost of $11.26 per cow for the year. The average production per cowin the dairy herd improvement associations of Indiana was 322.4 pounds fat per cow last year and the estimated average butterfat production for dairy cows in the en ire United States is less than 1200 pounds fat per year. Out of an average of 370 cows on j test, 30 cows were sold during the year for slaughter as they were low producers and proved to be losing money for the owners by being kept for dairy cows. The ten high herds in the Adams County Dairy Herd Improvement Association for the year were: Tel
■ • WHHK r i j .. I ■BMHH "BUT YOU ARE ASKINS FOR A MIRACLE!" SAID DODGE ENGINEERS mSk WWII "THEN GIVE ME ONE!" WALTER P. CHRYSLER REPLIED - .. VHr : -j j g : I I 7 ‘ wwo ”*°°. ——- ii. jnimm .lijiii— S fIMkMA * 'iMH i - ££ AND SO THE NEW DODGE WAS BORN A “Miracle Car” if there ever was one!-*595 ™ Only the combined creative genius of Walter P. Chrysler and the Dodge Organization could have built this big New Dodge Six at such a price NO ONE had dared dream of it before! Even lars more than the lowest-priced automobiles. gears are quiet in every speed, including reDodge engineersthought Mr. Chrysler was Wait till you drive it! You’ve never known verse. Springs can’t squeak-they’re special asking for a miracle. anything like id Speed ...go .. . getaway! "Oiljte” springs with covers. The New Dodge Six must embody every Push h»r to 60—70 —UP Smooth all the way. And what a relief you feel tn the super, feature for which Dodge cars are famous ... No vibration. That's the result of Floating safety of the New Dodge Six. with its MonoFloating Power engine mountings... Hydrau- Power engine mountings. piece steel body No wood, no glue, no joints lie Biekes .. . steal bodies . Relurt There’s nn rattling, no qoise. The toloosen. DupUle safely plaieglass wiudehield Double-drop bridge-type frame - non-giare, shatterproof. New . Free wheehng every- "Airwheel” tires and low center thing... not a thing omitted ... <<< A W 1 WCwPRk fP < * of gravity. And hydraulic brakes many new. startling improve- | A A with centnfuse drums. Clients added — ana sell tor as •? mF /ow as $595! yOU want t 0 sce real VALUE ’ 't'i. □ * * .. .. . . then sce this new Dodge Six They said it couldn t be w W - done —BUT —IT WAS DONE! wB ,rna ® lne ,hc tbnil ° f makln « yours for so little more then Only the comlili.ed genius of . , ... . „ „ aMSHB ” --W.werg’llw,W-'Jg, ~y ou d pay for one of the lowest Walter P. Chryslct and the great '■’TKW —■* 22TMt'’ y ™k;W _. . .. WIL ’WML HF. " rLJt-A.’ priced cars. Dodge organization seeming miracle possible. A c • so big—so roomy and comfortable. Dodge Six Coupe f 595.... Coupe with Rumble Seat f 640.... Salon Brougham with such luxurious appoint- f 660. .. . 4 door Sedan (shown above) (670. . . . Convertible Coupe (695 tnenls! Yet costing only a few dol- Prices f. o. b. factory, Detroit. All closed models wired for Transitone Radio. *iiDODGE I • WITH FLOATING POWER Costs so little more than the lowest-priced cars MTROIT
I fer Paxson, 515.5; Dan Habegger, 454.3; Chas, Grandlienard, 438.1; Sol Mosser, 436.3; Sam Williams, 410; Ralph Henry, 402.5; D. D. I Schwartz, 393.1; David F. Mazelin, 1'387.8; Peter D. Schwartz, 387.5; | Harris and Morrow, 380.5. The ten high cows in the association are , | owned by Sol Mosser, 701.7; Teller Paxson, 646.3; Harris and Morrow, 627.6, Sol Mosser, 627.6; Telfer Paxsen, 623.7; Dale Moses, 593; Chas. Grandienard, 570.1; Peter D. , Schwartz, 565.8; Telfer Paxson, . 550.2; Halph Henry, 540.2. Merwin Miller is the tester in i Adams county. I SCHOOL PUPILS WILL GIVE PLAY ' CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE I friend Viola Ellsworth 1 Mrs. Emory Scott, society i friend Evelyn Adams . Briggs, the butler i Harold Zimmerman • Lucia Russell, their daughter Catherine Jackson Dudley Russell, their son Lewis Beery . Richard Russell, a financier r Wendel Smith ■ Elizabeth Russell (Bess), Richard's ) daughter from the west Catherine Murphy George Garrison, Lucia’s admirer Bob Brodbeck > Ethel Ashley, young society girl \ Bernice Pickford t Lucille Christy, young society . gir1..... Ruby Ladd ~ Flora Farnum, Dudley’s ’ j inamorata Lois Sovine 0 — — ‘ McNUTT URGES LEGISLATORS TO ECONOMIZE t 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE * | tor the same period total $9,315,1 | OUO. Without proper remedial ac--1 tion on your part, the estimated 1 j minimum deficit will be $3,416,I 424. 1 i "The current budget, which was ’ I adopted by the 77th general assem‘i bly, and the budget for the next > biennium, must be balanced and the credit of Indiana preserved." He advocated three methods of > accomplishing this purpose: 11. Drastic limitation of Specific and deficiency appropriations as
well as statutory appropriations not budgeted. 2. Reduction or elimination of certain budget appropriations by , the consolidation or elimination of various activities. 3. Retention in the general fund of some of the revenue nowcredited to specific funds or the adoption of new sources of revenue, capable of producing im mediate returns. Father Introduced The governor’s father, John C. McNutt, 69, Martinsville, was introduced to the legislators by Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend. He spoke briefly. Members of the legislature gave their Democratic leader a standing ovation when his message was completed. Both houses reconvened (o take up their regular order of business as soon as McNutt finished. oCHICAGO LISTS PUBLIC ENEMIES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE of Capone. A number of these appeared on the original public enemy list. Several represent ‘“new blood" in the underworld —figures who have arisen with the break-up of Capone monopoly of the city's liquor txaffic. No. 2 on the list is William (Three-Fingered Jack) White, also 1 a Capone lieutenant who has turned his hand to labor racketeering, operating largely through outlaw (unions. No. 3 is William (Klondike) O'Donnell, west side beer i magnate. No. 4 is “Machine Gun” 1 Jack McGurn. one of Capone’s most j efficient gunmen. No. 5 is Frank 'Nitti, business agent of the old ! Capone organization, wounded by I police in a recent raid on a downI town syndicate headquarters. Among the others many have . long been familiar in the Chicago I gangs. There is Joe Saltis. sup- .' posedly retired beer "baron,” Edward (Spike) O'Donnell, Danny /Stanton, George (Bugs) Moran, . long-time enemy of Capone whose t adherents were virtually wiped out Din the famous St. Valentine's Day ■ massacre, Phil ‘ D'Andre, Capone's fj personal bodyguard, Michael (Bubs) ; Quinlan, Dan McCeoghegan, Lawrence (Dago) Mangano, Leo Moni goven, James (Fur) Sammons,
Page Five
! Tony (Mops) Volpe, James Bel caistro, “king of the bombers, f Tony, Rocco and Nicholas de Gia ' zio, Roger and Thomas Touhy, Mari tin (Sonny) Quirk, Vincent McErlane, and others whose names havo 1 figured less in the constant battie • | tor illicit underworld profits. ,' o SPAIN IN FIGHT AGAINST REBELS i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE If the reports of monarchist and ’ I anarchist cooperation were true, ■ | the young Republican governmeni faced the most serious oppositi .n ‘I of its career. Sporadic outbreaks - continued in widely separated parts >! of the country, while authorities I used troops, civil guards, and pa- ; lice to quell the disturbances. i Most of the trouble was in the Mediterranean ports of Valencia and Barcelona, the latter long a center of industrial unrest. Offi- ' ciala charged government enemies sought a reign of terror preliminary to a general railroad strike January 15. o Issues Statement , i Paris, Jan. 10 -—(U.R)— Former . j Premier Pierre Laval intimated ! strongly to the United to- ■ day that Secretary of State 1 \ Stimson and (Secretary of TreaiI | ury Mills were correct in staling ! the question of debt revision or ’ annulment did not arise during his conversations with President Hoover in the United States. Laval placed the start of debt differences between France and the United States at tlte Lausanne reparations conference, which, he I I insisted, neither he nor President ; Hoover foresaw. Tlte form r premier believed France should not pay the defaulted Decembci ■ debt instalment to the Uni.e 1 1 States, or any other debt annui■i ties, until Germany resumes li j reparations payments to Fran< e He made it clear, however, tlri'. , he was not entering into into - : national debate on war debts. ; o Checking Mildew ' ’ Mildew can be checked by b, j Ing over books spirits ot wins or a few drops °r ati essentia’ o!( ■I such as oil of clo.ps, wirn h • soft cloth.
