Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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OVER MILLION FANS ATTEND Huge Crowds Expected At Football (James This Afternoon New York. Oct. 21 (UP) — More than a million fans were expected at football games throughout the country today as competitiuu reached the thrill stage, particularly among the major elevens. Gridiron powers collided in the biggest early season batch of significant confer- I ence and intersectional clashes in years. The big game of the day—That battle between the midwestern Titans, Michigan and Ohio State, at An ilrbor. promised to attract the laigest crowd, al»out 87,000 fans. This encounter was heavy with sig- i nlficance because the winner is ex-; pected to wind up the season as Big Ten champion. Michigan was a slight favorite. At Cleveland the day’s most im- i portant intersectional clash between Bob Zuppke's powerful Illinois eleven and the light, speedy army team was expected to draw more than 40.000 spectators. Illinois was favored. The most important game in the East, between Princeton and Columbia. both ambitious for a trip to the Pasadena Hose Bowl, figured to attract about 50.000 fans to : Princeton. N. J., Because of its wealth of reserves, Princeton was I favored. Front coast to coast, other less important encounters among major .
ROOP S RESTAURANT South Second st. CHICKEN DINNERS Sunday and Wednesday. 25 cents. ADAMS THEATRE SUN., MON., TUE. 10-25 c Arthur Somers Roche’s “PENTHOUSE” with Warner Baxter, Myrna Lov, Chas. Butterworth. Phillips Holmes. Mae Clarke. TONITE-TLYING DEVILS” with Bruce Cabot. Arl in e Judge, Eric Linden. Ralph Cliff Edwards. 10-1 15c. — — ■ - ■ ■■ Ashbaucher’s MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING - LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739
“THERE IS A NEW SMOKE SONG IN THE SKY” THE CIGAR fgggf 5c “ New Deal ” 5c The “Reconstruction” size. — A NEW OLD FASHIONED CIGAR YOU’LL LIKE Contains the CREAM of the FINEST Domestic Tobacco Grown. Connecticut Shade Wrapper. Havana Seed Binder and Domestic Filler. Hand Made By Home Folks (No Machine Work) Hand Work Makes More Jobs
! teams showed advance ticket sales for crowds ranging from 5,000 to 3ii,000. in the New York Metropol!- : tan area alone about 70.000 was estimated as the probable attendance tor three games, and 30,000 were expe ted at New Haven to see Yale I tangle with Brown. In addition to the lllionis-Army game, two other contests stood out. Pittsburgh was favored to invade Minnesota successfully, and Notre Dame was expected to trample Car- ' negle Tech. Os the races for sectional championships. other important Big Ten melees pitted Purdue against ChiI cage; Wisconsin against lowa, and Indiana against Northwestern. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Duquesne. 14: Detroit U.. 0. Temple. 13; West Virginia. 7. Indiana Teachers, 30; Central Normal, 6. Valparaiso. 20; Bai! State. 0. Dayton. 13; Findlay. 12. Georgia. 13; Mercer. 12. o CHAS. MAKLEY IDENTIFIED AS ONE OF BANDITS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) three numbers on the license i i plate. From Kokomo the gang con-i tinned south on 31 toward Indian-! apolis. Sixteen state police were assigned to this district this morning to j i assist local officers in the,search. It was feared that the gang is! i planning a bank holdup or some ■ other spectacular crime and was I arming itself accordingly. —o RECOGNITION OF SOVIET RUSSIA APPEARS CLOSE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tic. in contrast to their usual re-1 serve. Popular sentiment was ap-1 ' parent everywhere. In streets., I street cars and in shops —wherever t | the ordinary people gathered, the | | prospect of recognition was the i only topic for talk. The news dominated the front I page of newspapers and evoked i comment throughout the country. ; Officials said that Maxim Litvin- 1 off, brilliant foreign minister, would ; leave within a very few days for• Washington to conduct the nego-1 tiations. , I Russia, by agreeing to negotiate l ' outstanding problems with the I United States before formal recog-1 I nition, has made a concession that , marks a new stage in its foreign , policy, it was emphasized. Heretofore, fearing rebuffs that i ' would dim its prestige, the Rus- , i sian government has insisted that I formal recognition by world pow-! I ers precede negotiations on claims. l trade, propaganda activities and I other problems. o School Yearbook Winners Listed Franklin. Ind., Oct. 21—(UP) — i First places in the annual yearbook i contest of the Indiana high school i I press association were awarded last i night to South Side of Fort Wayne, • j Marion, Auburn and Knightstown. I Foothall. Sunday, 2:30-p.m. Huntington vs. Decatur,
EXPERTS BEGIN MUSKRAT WAR Berkeley, Cal. (U.R) — War on ' muskrats to save the entire levee I system of the Sacramento River s and Its tributaries from destruc- ’’ tion has been declared by Univer--1 sity of California experts. Muskrats, cokinlled on a farm In p I Mud Luke. Shasta County, threatl' en invasion past barriers which bar their access to lower Pit River, I Sacramento feeder. r | In April of 1831, 800 muskrats ■ I were planted In a fenced enclosure 8 |in the swampy Mud I-ake district. 8 . Before long they appeared outside • the fence, and now have spread in i great numbers up and down the • stream. i ' Dikes and levees, as well as irri- ■ gating canal banks, have l*>en 1 honeycombed, greatly weakening the structures. State and Federal I hunters have killed thousands of i jhe rodents, but have been unable I to check their advance. Called into the campaign. T. I. ' Storer. Zoology Professor at the ; University of California, has rec- ' i ommended construction of a series I of barriers in rocky, narrow stream i gorges, • o EMPLOYMENT IN INDIANA GAINS I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ■ about 12 per cent above a year ago. "Newspaper advertising was 2 per cent above a month ago and l 3.1 per cent above a year ago. ” The review explained that threefourths of employes worked on lull j time schedules during September.; I Ingot output in the Calumet district • declined to 40 per cent capacity i during the secund week of Septem-' ber and then gained to 49 per cent , capacity during the second week j i of October. o AL SMITH IS GUEST AT FAIR | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I .He was suffering from a slight ■ cold, it was explained. Smith’s engagement to attend a I luncheon at the administration I ; building and a formal dinner at; the Federal building this evening were not changed, however. He remained in his hotel be- • tween the engagements, preferr- ■ ing to await more favorable weath- ? er before visiting the fair. Retain Gibson As Pirate Manager j Pittsburgh, Oct. 21 —(UP) — The Pittsburgh National League basei ball Club announced today it had I retained George Gibson as manager , for the 1934 season. The contract is ' for one year, club officials annotinc- ■ ed. Other terms were not divulged. Ohio State Senator Found Shot To Death Youngstown. Ohio. Oct. 21 —(UP) I —The body of State Senator George H. Roberts, a bullet wound through I the heart, was found by a neighbor today in his home at M Donald, near here. Police are investigating. PYROIL News Bulletin Get your car ready for winter! Car owners recognize the hatI ards of cold weather driving when • motors must, nm a considerable | time after starting before cold or i frozen oils warm up and circulate. | This is regarded as the most dangerous period in the operation of a motor, when more harm can be done in a few moments than in many hours of the hardest driving. Car owners welcome the assured motor protection that Pyroil provides, for a Pvroil treated motor is rendered self lubricating to a degree that removes the danger of damage during the cold start. Pvroil fastens itself to the engine bearings and stays there. The Pyroiled engine starts quick- ! ly and easily In the coldest weather. without excessive choking and | Pyroil in your crank case will reI dure your oil bill one-half and ! vour easoline consumption from 5 to 25%. , , , Thousands of the largest distrij butors of automobiles now condiI )nn »)’ new cars with Pyroil beI fore delivery as an added safety I feature during the breaking in I period. Read the following Western Union wire cent from the Indian- ' apolis Speedway by Wilbur Shaw driver of the Mallory Special No. 17. “Can not give Pyroil credit due it—for it certainly enabled me to finish the 500 mile race here without any oil pressure. ’With 52 laps to go, or 130 miles, my oil ' nressure dropped to zero, and fini isMing the race in second place i without oil. I know I ran absoI lu’ely dry at a speed of over 100 miles an hour. On tearing down mv motor I found ft in perfect j condition. Thanks to the safety I feature developed bv Pyroil. WILBUR SHAW” Add Pyroil to your oil and gas | today. 2 ounces to the quart of oil lln crank case, and 1 oz. to 5 gal. !ot gas. The cost is negligible, j Sold and Distributed by J. D. , Raker. Decatur, Ind. A card or letter will bring particulars. Address, 127 N. 3rd st.. 1 %The Tavern. Advt.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1933.
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— FEAR DELIVERY OF CRIMINALS • BY GANGSTERS 1 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
• tempt will be made to free five ot seven men held in the Marion conn-1 | ty jail in connection with the fatal' Ishobting of an Indianapolis police! ! sergeant during a holdup here. Sheriff Buck Sumner of Marion ; county today asked county com ! missioners for an appropriation of $1,19)0 with which to construct a, ' steel plate cage in the prisoners ; runway at the jail. In this fortress he would station a man 24 , hours a day. I He also plans to ask the com-, i missioners for 25 additional dep-1 ' titles to serve at least 60 days. Al G. Feeney, head of the state! police department, will station six i men at the headquarters here for, 124-hour duty. They will be quart- 1 I ered either at the statehouse or in' < i a nearby hotel. Feeney said he would ask Gov. Paul V. McNutt for 24 more men
Milady’s New Fall Coiffures UK*. jMk IHlHWJpilllll Jr . J JZx A ■ Z I / UH 7 f i 'Lk yr [ j \Up / r— CZZZ— At last milady’s neck is getting a “break.” For seven years it has been j covered by the prevailing hair styles and, like milady’s ears, was in danger of being forgotten. New the moguls that dictate the creation j of coiffures have decreed an upward movement and the neck is revealed • | in all its pristine glory. The bob is still in favor, but is combed high on • the head. Curls are the thing, some flat, others pyramided. At the • recent convention of hairdressers and cosmetologists in New York the above styles were most popular. Strangely, platinum blondes were conspicuously absent this year, bright red being the favorite tint.
jßa H 1 K > ; ■ Judged By Results i I Decatur Democrat I Job Printing i I SELLS more. Gets more responses. Causes more favorable comment. Letter- < heads, brochures, leaflets. y, \ broadsides, hand-bills, all 1 ' produce more results when K /L-' printed by us. ’’) Get Our Slant lAIZ On Your Job .... ; |
Ito be kept on the force permanently. He also will ask for funds Ito provide his men with bullet proof vests. o SAMUEL INSULL IN COURT TODAY
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I I his attorneys. He was accompanied by James Calapothakis. former dir- ' i ector of the Government Press Bur- ; eau. a« interpreter. i A police officer interpreted In- ! sill’s answers as his interrogation ! began. Insull said he was born in Eng- ! land, that he formerly resided at I j Chicago, and tha. he came from 1 Paris intending to reside permani ently here. He gave his age as 73 Chief Justice Panygirakis com- ' municated to him the United States , 1 demand was extraditiou. Then . state’s attorney Antonios Rigana- | tos began his statement. He seemed ( •whausted by his long tedious preparation of the case. ,
FILES ACTION IN ANNULLMENT (CONTINUED FROM PAGK_ lev has not treated her a» a wife j and pointed out the difference in ■ tbelr ar««. When questioned about her action. Mr* Lindley tearfully replied : "I do not care to discuss It. Please don’t say any more about j It than you have to." Lindley said thi» filing of the action came like a bombaheU to him. •1 do not know of any reason ( why th« action should have been . filed.” he said. —— President Given Honorary Degree Washington College Chestertown. I Md . Oct. 21 (UP)— President Roosevelt today predicted National i Economic recovery in a shorter . time than "the five or ten year plans of dictatorship.” | The president spoke of historic , , eived the honorary degree of Doc-; Washington College where he re- ' tor of I.aws 0 77^' i Lay Cornerstone Os Huge New Distillery Peoria. 111.. Oct. 21—<U.R>-Peoria > today celebrated the laying of the cornerstone of the world’s largest , distillery, being built by Hiram I Walker & Sons. City officiaLs and other dignitarI ies Including Rep. John J. O’Connor, New York, participated in the | ceremony. The plant when running j at full capacity will pay $121,000 a day in federal taxes on a potential capacity of 110.000 gallons a day. First unit of the plant will be tn operation by Nov. 1 afid the main distillery by Jan. 1. The plant will have an annual payroll of $1,000,000 and a daily capacity of 20,000 bushels of grain. i 0 ' Indianapolis Salesman Is Killed In Wreck Chicago. Oct. 21.— (U.R) — Peter Mondane was questioned by police today in connection with an automobile accident late last night in which Joseph Katifer. an Indianapolis salesman, was killed. Kaufer was struck by a car owned by Mondane when he tried to hail a taxi during a rainstorm last night. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
iw $ . o*l iwb 1 i |i- f • ■ r A#/., • : • ’ ■t’ ’’ ' - rm - - • ‘ I * BHHBBRHHkL: 1' . ' THE above picture shows in detail the north-eastern view of the new S. E. Black Funeral Home, located at 222 West Adams street. A little more than seventeen years ago Mr. Black came to Decatur to become associated with Murry Scherer who was then engaged in the undertaking business n this city. At that time Mr. Scherer occupied a part of the building that was occupied by the Beavers and Atz furniture store. Seven years after coming to Decatur. Mr. Black purchased the business interests cf Mr. Scherer. In February of 1927, Mr. Black moved his business to 206 S. Second street and took as his associate Mr. Clarence Weber, also adding to his staff the e’s cient services of Mrs. E]lack, who since that time has given the firm invaluable assistance as lady attendant. Early this year Mr. Black purchased the beautiful Townsend residence, located 222 West Adams street, and bgean the work of remodeling it into what Is now one o f the finest funeral homes in Northern Indiana On July 17, Mr. Black and Mr. Weinopened their new funeral home to the public at which time thousands of people calleto pay their respects to the popular firm. Those who have availed themselves of the privilege of visiting the r •< Funs' Home have been charmed by the manifest good taste employed in r, -c.lel'ng the interior. Without sacrificing a single note of hominess it was made to conform to a of the needs of a modern funeral home. Entering from the north one passes from •” reception hall into the rooms that serve as a chapel. Leading from the chapel are the slumber rooms. From the slumber rooms one passes into the modernly equippe laboratory where any necessary derma-surgery is performed and the most mofle rll embalming methods are used. Also on the first floor are the suite of rooms used oy Mr. and Mrs. Black as their residence. The second floor is used exclusively for the display of burial caskets. All of the appointments of this beautiful, modern funeral home are offered to the people of Decatur and the surrounding community, free and without cost, as part o the service Mr. Black and Mr. Weber render to their patrons. Mr. and Mrs. Black and Mr. Weber again extend a cordial invitation to the public to visit and inspect the new Black Funeral Home.
Chicago Residents Flan Nudist Colony Valparaiso, Ind.. Oct. 21—(U.R) — ! Sager’s Lake, favorite spot of l ' Valparaiso University students for | ■ more than 80 years, lias been leas-1 cd to a group of wealthy Chicago ‘ people for a nudist colony The 135 acres of water and woods will be converted Into a I "Baek to Nature Club" ami the I lake has been renamed latke of I • tlie Woods. The old residence occupied by ■ I two generations of the Sager' | family will be remodeled into al j club house. It Is planned to construct a , ' high fence around the property to keep out the curious. Public
j ALL ABOUT NAMES I IUF b Hu i j Every name means some- ' ■ ? thing. Your given name, w : your surname, the names of ’ ■ I „ places and things. Our Washington Bureau has tom I , j interesting bulletins on the origins and meanings ot■ k names, and on tracing family history, that it willsofH S you in a single packet. The titles are: ■ 1. The Meanings of Given Names ■ 2. rhe Meanings of Surnames I 3. Indian Names and Their Meanings ■ 4. The Study of Genealogy ■ If you want this packet of bulletins, fill out thi !■ coupon below and mail as directed: 3 | I want the packet of four bulletins on NAMES, and enclwfl jt herewith ten cents in coin cr< postage stamps, to cover retun |l postage and handling costs: I NAME Il ADDRESS ■ 1 CITY STATE ,|| To The Washington Bureau | 1322 New York Avenue I | ashinpton ’ J I
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