Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 118, Decatur, Adams County, 18 May 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur, lnd„ Post Office as Second Class Matter. 3. H. Heller . .Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Sec’v & 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 .36 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.76 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 kitown on Application. National Adver. Representative BCHEERER, Inc. ilo Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. The dentists are holding their .state convention in Indianapolis this week but it is a foregone conclusion they will not go off the gold i ■standard. . One writer has figured it out that prosperity is when we buy things we can't afford and periods of depression are when we have to pay up. President Roosevelt is proving himself an outstandipg world flg'nre f well as a national leader i and his trank and fair and honest "pica to the world for peace is find- i -ing much approval. Plan your summer vacation. Per-

haps you think you can't afford it -hut tfrere arc ways to do it now for much less than ever and a few days rest will put you in shape to ’-keep up the fight. New Jersey has joined the other! states which hare voted and favors repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. This is the fifth state to v u and so far it has been decidedly a victory for those who oppose the amendment. . Wyoming mav be small in population and is forty-seventh in the ■ list, but its vote in the repeal elec-1 tion counts just as much as does j that of New York which is fifty-! five times larger in population and 1 voting strength. —.—.—. _ Some one seems to be making j quite a stir over the supposed pol-! lution of the St. Mary’s river bnt • it looks like clear water compared to that in the rivers of the central part of the state. Apparently the investigation has been going on under cover the past five years. Well we are glad its out in the ; open now. As a result of a conference be- j t ween Governor McNutt and the j state highway commissioners, it is ! reported there is a rift between the chief executive and that important department. We hope that's not true and don't believe it is for every one concerned has but one desire and that is to render the greatest service to the people of the state. It should be made clear that to v>. @ for the re.peal of tue Eighteenth Amendment, you must vote for ratification of the twenty-first amendment which is the issue. Os course by the same token if you favor retaining the amendment you must vote, against ratification. To make ii clear, if (or repeal, vote in the first column and if against it, vote in the second column. Election day is June 6th. Mr. Hitler of Germany agreed with the statements made by President Koosevelt which ought to make it unanimous. His speech addressed to the world yesterday was not as fiery as many expected and lie no doubt realises that conditions wert! getting so serious that any thing might touch off a wild fuse. Surely the rulers of the world will not force war now when we are just beginning to get over the last one.

The Long Arm of the New Cop * * * . m .. ■■■— ■ M m

i Numerous citizens have urged the installation of the central heating plant and if it is a good thing 11 hat can be operated at a profit to jth*> city, certainly this would be a' (good time to secure the necessary! ; labor for its installation. The com-. | mittee is at work on the proposi- [ j tion and will have a recommendation one way or another before I l«Dg. "-S msmsSm i The readers of any newspaper resemble a community composed .of individuals whose tastes, habits ; ,nd buying power are similar, says jNewsdom. Too often, in reaching this community, an advertiser will incur a considerable loss of money ! by advertising in the wrong paper, i By using more than one paper, the i merchant hopes that he may catch a few straggling buyers. He may. j but the duplication of effort and I' the added expense is hardly worth I the trouble. To do a maximum | business in a community it is ! necessary for the merchant to proI mote his wares in such away that ! his show window—the newspaper j advertisement — reaches evetyome ,in the field from which he hopes to obtain business. By selecting jthe paper best suited for his merchandise and by concentrating his advertisements in this paper there

|is no doubt that the results would i he more effective than the present I arbitrary method of using two or more papers when one will do the I trick. It may mean an increase in j advertising expenditure for this, one paper, but the money saved by | cutting out the dead media will ! more than offset this increase. o 4 —- -4 i Household Scrapbook I i | -By— ROBERTA LEE 4 ♦ Hems After making a Ir rh that one Is ; particularly anxious will not show. I place a Turkish towel over the Ironj ing board and iron on the right side I | of the hem. It will be practically invisible. Egg Substitute One teaspoonful of gelatine dis- | solved in hot milk is a good substitute for two eggs when maktr.g 1 puddings or cake. Floors i! When waxing and polishing j ; floors always be sure that the rubbI ing is done with the grain of the i j wood. o Old Tree Still Yields Sap North Jay. Me. —(UP)—A maple tree atop Sunshine Hill near her* was first upped by George Davenport more than a century ago and has yielded sap since that time. 1

i ♦ ♦ Answers To Tesi Questions Below are the Answers to ths Test Questions Printed on Page Two. « « i 1. California. 2. General Kirby Smith. 3. Siberia. 4. 1012. 5. Portuguese. 6. Mercury. 7. A bivalve mollusk. 8. Toga. 9. George Bernard Shaw. 10. Great Britain. o * “twenty years - * AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File ♦ ♦ Baccrlaureate services at M. E. Church. Rev. L. C. Hrssert delivers : sermon. Mr. a d Mrs. Peter Kirsih and children, and Mrs. Fred Mut sc tiler , and daughter, mytored to Marion j where they will be the guests of the John Kirseh family. Fr d Mutschler and Albert buy Jacob Myers’ interest in the | Monroe St. Butehershop. Fifty friends surprise Samuel Durbin on his forty-ninth birthday anniversary. Dr. McKeeman and family, and Win. Reiter and family of Fort Waywe vlsjt at C. E. Hocker home. Mr. and Mrs. John NiblKk, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Suttles. and Mr. and Mrs. Berton Niblick motored to

BEAUTY THAT fn WASH AWAY w wm Walls painted with LOWE ducing many beam ful rauldBEOTHERS MELLO-GLOSS color effects, such as Sponge can be cleaned easily and re* Imprinting, Scumbling and peatedly without harming Tiffany— any one of which the finish in any way. That's adds charm to the home, one of the reasons why this Come in and let us show you semi-gloss wall finish is ao the many beautiful colors popular with borne owners, obtainable. We will also M E L L O • give you LOWE GLOSS.can- r/%Pwr BROTHERS be used in one boob on Home color or in pro* ' Decoration. Holtbouse Drug Co

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1933.

Bluffton to attend the High School Musical. Celeste Wemhoff a d Mary Colchin are visiting at Piqua, Ohio. Mrs. A. M. lAnker ami daughter, Veronica, visit in Fort Wayne. Jenny Wren® Club enjoys picnic ! party in woods. Vera Eady wins contest prize. Card of Thanks We wish in this manner to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to the neighbors and friends who sent floral offerings, the minister -for his consoling words, the singers, and all those who so kindly assisted us during the illness and death of our son and trot her. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shady and family. HOW SHE LOST 29 POUNDS IN 3 MONTHS I I am using: our Kruschen Salts to j reduce and I’ve used a bottle and a j half and dieted some and lost 29 pounds in 3 months. I feel so much hotter and intend to keep on taking: the Halts as I was almost 50 pounds overweight.” Mrs. Thelma Gravely Roseville, Calif. (Jan. 11, 1933). To lose fat and at* the same time gain In physical attractiveness and feel spirited and y ulhfu! take one half teaspoonful of Kruschen in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morn in sr. A jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but a trifle at Holthouse Drug Store or any drugstore in the world but be sure and get Kruschen Salts the SAFE way to reduce wide hips, prominent front and double chin and again fee! the j ».v of living:—money

A Golden Opportunity! How Often Have You Heard 1 “OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS Mt. AT YOUR DOOR BUT ONCE” i ;?A MOW The Schafer Store is Knocking at ftiMi IpMMBg Your Door with a True Statement **' and if you act at once it will mean money ; Weeks ago when we heard of the first nH rumors of merchandise advancing in j' ' y price our buyers went in to the markets and bought thousands of dollars worth s ~ of New. Fine Quality Merchandise at the Lowest Prices in years. We Have Not Advanced One Single Item In This Big Store EVERYTHING IS MARKED AT OUR REGULAR LOW MARK-UP. v During Remainder of This Month We Are Going to Sell Everything in our Store at Depression Low Prices NOT ONE ITEM HAS BEEN ADVANCED OR MARKed up. We cannot replace this merchandise at the price we are selling it for now. Nobody can evade the issue, Prices Are Advancing And \\ ill C ontinue To Do So. Every line of merchandise is advancing, and w hen we buy more merchandise in the future we will be forced to sell the same article for more money. This store appreciates its hundreds of splendid customers and we want them to take advantage of prices right now w hich arc the lowest in years. This “Golden Opportunity Sale” includes everything in our store such as Furniture, Stoves, Rugs, Dry Goods, China. Glassware, Hardware, Harness, Washing Machines, Farm Machinery, cte. WWmumut—i iu M.-M+vmmm jil.ffT it : *;•. * '" r l &c . x.-. j We absorb the sales tax. BUI BEFORE ITS TOO LATE ~ The SCHAFER STORE HARDWARE AND HOME FURNISHINGS