Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 4 November 1933 — Page 4
Page Four
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published mra THE Evory Evo DECATUR ■ing Except DEMOCRAT tutored at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. H. Heller. Pres, and Gen. Mgr. v. R. Holthouse Sec’y & Hus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller .— Vice-President Subscripticn Rates: Single copies $ .02 One week, by carrier 10 '•ne year, by carrier 5.00 .)ne month, by mall .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 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. 115 I.exington Avenue. New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The •ndiana League of Home Dailies.
You still have Monday for tax raying. Better get in before the Penalty is added. The first winter snows and winds usually come a day or so after election day and over the country that day is next Tuesday. So get ready for a six months period of coal heaving. The fans are watching the score hoards again today with a dozen big football games scheduled, several of the coutasts being between teams so far undefeated during the season. We look for the usual upsets. Byrn the leaves, but do it prior to four in the afternoon and be careful not to do it on asphalt or black top streets for that causes damage. This is the order of the mayor to be carried out by the police. If you have ever tried to distribute bills or circulars in some other town or city, you can realie more easily the injustice of permitting any one to scatter their annowicements over the front porches of Decatur without permit or license or fee. When the present dollar gets to he worth fifty cents, as many predict will occur within the next month or two, it won't be noticeable to most of us unless we can [lay the mortgage off with the new money. And the fellow who holds the paper may not like that so well The mayorality contest in New fork City goes humming along and while the straw vote continues to give LaGaurdia the best of it, the wise ones still express the guess that when the ballots are counted McKee will be the chief executive of America’s greatest city. Business here will be the best the next two months it has been for years. With a big pay roll in every plant, with road building, with the December payments for beets and with other things going to happen, the mercantile stores that advertise will an excellent trade. It’s time to get busy. Mr. Hearst seems to have supported Mr. Roosevelt as long as he can any president. This is nothing new. As soon as a new administration does something that he doesn’t agree with, away he goes a:id he stays away usually. He was the same in the Wilson. Harding, Coolidge and Hoover administra-
, 1 '.J,! L^..'.JT-W If you don’t have the ready cash to pay your taxes—see us. You can quickly get any amount up to S3OO and repay on terms to suit your convenience. Interest charged for Just the time you use the mopey. Full information without cost or obligation. Call, Write or Phone FBASKLIN SECUBITY CO Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decgtur, Ind.
tions, apparently believing that the province of a newspaper is to be always against .ho powers that he. The Red Cross drive will start [• a week from tomorrow and in this grand old county we should go over 1 100% and quickly. Those who work for these projects derive no '• special benefits or profits. They t do it because they desire to help humanity and its a tough old job. 2 Make it easier for them by being '• ready with your dollar. 0 5 0 Why not open the Thanksgiving ’ to Christmas trading period with J j a bang? A special two or three days of trading, with free attractions that will bring the people to your store so they can see that you have the best goods for the least money, to be found any where, should do a lot of good. It pays to < keep a community, a store and an individual atlve. The western governors who callc ed at the White House to discuss s agricultural problems, left there ' feeling very happy according to reI ports, but just what happened re'l mains a secret. President Roose- ■. velt has away of convincing those t J who call upon him and making ’ I them leave with a feeling of vic--1 . tory. That’s why he gets along l when others are having a tough I time keeping the crowd from ham- > I i mering. i1 . The boys and girls who missed i ’ attending the old fashioned circus . I under the big canvass during the . i summer months will have the opl portunity to get the same thril at ; the Indoor Circus to be given in i the high school gymnasium the as--1 ternoon and evening of the 11th, ■ I one week from today. The affair ;: is under auspices of the hifch ■, school athletic association and ■ * those who have witnessed the perI formance elsewhere declare it a i real entertainment. It comes out ’ of Peru, middle west headquarters ‘ j for the big shows. i i *" 1 r— 1 ■■■■ -1 Judge DeVoss in rendering his ’ decision of the famous Lunzz di- ; J vorce case, granted a decree to the ■ wife on the grounds of cruel treatment. Reviewing the evidence the judge said that no immoral acts 1 were proven as against either party but that he could imagine no excuse or defense for a husband striking his wife and which he said in this case had been clearly proven. The court seems to have arrived at his decision after careful consideration of the evidence, not overlooking the thirteen-year-old son and so disposed of a rather knotty, naughty problem. i . —o <> • Household Scrapbook l I —BY—ROBERTA LEE White Silk Blouses If white silk blouses are hung out • to dry they will turn yellow. Wrap them in towels until they are ironed. If they should become yellow, use a little whitening in tie rinse water. Frankfurters To make a frankfurter roll, parboil the sausages, open them and then spread with prepared mustard. Place a thin slice of pickle in each roll in bacon strips, and fasten with toothpicks, then broil. Baby's Rubber Sheet Do not throw away the old raini coat. The back can be cut out and made into an excellent sheet for baby’s crib. o A \nswers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed ! on Page Two. 1 Costa Rica. 2. Jefferson Davis. 3. Austin. v 4. Nathaniel Hawthorne. 5. Davison. 6. Rhode Hand. 7. Geneva. Switzerland. 8. Frank Murphy. 9. lowa. 10. Betting on one horse to win either first, second or third place. —o ARRIVALS John William is the name of the nine pound boy baby born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burkhart. Friday, November 3. Mrs. Burkhart was formerly Helen Stewart. Both mother and baby are getting along fine.
Who’s Afraid of the Big, Brown Bear? Wbu ok //u xIWKR: -’- * IL fjMw ’ <!’ 'W ’ oF oE * it-6 625 Feacwrx \ J •*< iv. '«■> tv.u.n r f<<. >tJ I — I ■■■■ - ■ MIWgZ ————
WARDEN KUNKEL IS CRITICIZED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) former belief that guns used by the escaped prisoners were dropped from an airplane piloted by confederates. He said that a Michigan City woman told him an airplane flew over the prison the night before the break and that she saw a trap door at the bottom of the plane open and beams of light coming through. Claudy said he believed that a santinel was waiting on top the prison roof to receive the weapons . o MUSSOLINI TO OUTLINE PLAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) surance, inland communications.' sea and air transport, the arts and professions. Mussolini has been working for years on the plan. As early as October. 1931. when other world statesmen were viewing the economic situation as fundamentally sound. Mussolini said in a speech at Naples: “Something has snapped in the capitalistic system." The motivating idea of his plan.! as it is understood he will say in
Wants Million For Health Lost in Jungle / i \ We / ■'« %_ w*> y. / il / / 9h£tf I ’* -• * I * • ?*** Hr / i /|f / •Z < Jr Edwi. E> 0 O T1 * ji < mmhF f> <■ m 1 * WftMi;. * Br ,<iH ■> * z.J PifeflWK. ■&•• ♦ '• * *wSr • gate 3L V.3PB » 7 ■ ■ ■ . ' t .• /v> » I I i 'X' '& \' s **' * ■ - • :• / £ t J X/>/- MByK* **■' / MBT* y PZ> wjjh Z** 7F J -I_\ -”,‘ K ’MW*' i MjN) ui Trader Hoeut Charging that her health and career were ruined as the result of negligence on the part of its agenta, Edwina Booth, “White Goddess” of the film Trader Horn,” is suing the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation for $14)00,000 damages. The actress asserts that while enroute to Africa she was compelled to expose her almost nude body to scorching tropic sun to acquire the coating of sun tan in keeping with her role of wild jungle girl. And during the actual filming of the picture was directed to run through sharp jungle weeds and grasses that inflicted painful injuries on her bare flesh. Since her return from Africa, Miss Booth has suffered from a mysterious tropical disease that, so far, has baffled Western medical science.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER I. 1933.
. —.l. ■■■■■■ ■ IIH I II ■■ - .1— ■■ ■■ SII ■■ nil ,1 "j ; I his speech next week, is that the modern industrial system cannot j remain bound to feudal or individ-1 ualistic conceptions based on the! political and economic doctrines 1 ' of the 18th century. o : ' ] Church Bell to Ring Again Monroe, La. — (U.R) —After three 1 decades of silence, a silver-tongued bell in the belfry of the First Pres-; ': byterian church here again calls j ' worshipers to services. The bell.' 1 used in a former edifice, was mis- 1 : ' placed when the new church was 1 I constructed. • - 1 o — More Playgrounds For City New Orleans. — (U.R) —Ninety-five' additional public playgrounds will I be made available to school chil l dren through financial aid from the j National Emergency Relief Ad-, ministration. Unemployed athletes] and physical directors will be in 1 1 charge of the recreation centers. o Regular Weighing Planned MONTREAL <U.R>—Weighing as all school children at regular in-: tervals as a means of preventing! disease and keeping track of ■ health conditions will shortly be undertaken by the Catholic School Commission here. o Sam Barger of Kirkland town- j ! ship was a business visitor here ' 1 today. '
- - - ---1 -rr «■»■■■ - mJ Best Livestock To Compete At Chicago — Chicago. Nov. 4 — (Special) — i Every state and province on the North American continent where live stock production is important will send exhibits to the 1933 InI ternational Live Stock Exposition j which will be held at the Chicago Stock Yards December 2 to 9. | Special train loads of pure bred beef cattle, horses, sheep and swine ! will be arriving here the last of | this month from Canada, the east- ] ern states, the southwest, and ' from Canada, the eastern states, | the southwest, and from the west as far as the Pacific slope states. ' They are coming to contest the in--1 ternational championships of the I live stock show year which are deI t ided each year at the Chicago exI position. o 300,000 To Learn About Teeth lowa City. lowa — (UP) —More than 300,000 lowa school children will receive instruction on proper care of the teeth through the extension activities of the college of dentistry at the University of lowa, Dr. Charles L. Drain announced. ! The total number of corrections b likely' will reach 115,000, he said. - 0 Get the Habit — Trade at Home
DRIVE IS MADE ON DIPHTHERIA Indiana Citizens Combine In Statewide Drive Against Disease Indianapolis, Nov. 4. (Special) | — Parents, teachers, physicians, scientists, nurses and phblic health officials of Indiana have <001511114! in a statewide drive against diphtheria a drive whose objective is I to do away with tnis disease which every mouther dreads and which takes the lives ot more than 150 Hoosier children each year. "As difficult as all this may seem if every person will do his part, scientific medicine will make diphtheria us rare iuside our borders as leprosy, ’’ says the bulletin issued today by the Bureau of Pub licity of the Indiana State Medical Association in connection with the diphtheria prevention campaign. The movement to do away with this disease is well under way, preliminary arrangements for this campaign already having been outlined at a recent meeting of the t Indiana Health Council, a group | representing outstanding welfare 1 and medical organizations ot the | state which serves in an advisory 1 capacity to the State Department I of Public Health. Among the: groups who will cooperate in this I campaign to immunize children of j school and pre-school age against, the disease will be the Indiana | Congress of Parents and Teachers.' the American Legion. Indiana State i Nusses’ Association, the Indiana | Tuberculosis Association, Indiana | State Department of Public Health, Indiana University School of Medicine, and the Indiana State Dental Association. "No child in Indiana need ever have diphtheria,” continues the j state medical cssociation bulletin.. "Although a campaign to down 1 diphtheria years ago would have;
DECATUR SATURDAY, Nov. 11 HIGH SCHOOL GYM Twice Daily 2:30 P. M. 8:00 P. M. Benefit of High School Athletic Ass'n. of D. H. S. Featuring the World Renowned HODGINI FAMILY of Bareback Riders with "JOE" the Riding Comedian. Matinee Prices C hildren. 15c; Adults. 35c Night: All tickets 35c at night. No Tax No Reserved Seats.
Peace - Os - Mind At $1.45 Per Gallon NOW EVERY ONE CAN AFFORD A PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE Don’t spend the winter worrying about whether or not jour anti-freeze has evaporated. Don’t run the risk of a t freeze-up. Fill up now with G.*P.A. and know you’re sale. One filling of G.P.A. lasts all winter. No refillings required. The first cost is the last cost. It won’t evaporate. i rzkrWith G.P.A. you get real peace-of-mind. And at 1 I iPAf R the lowest price in G. P. A. history. Prices re- g duced again this year. It’s the Anti-Freeze Bargain of 1933. $1.45 per gallon. WHY WAIT, FILL UP NOW WITH G.P.A. Won’t Evaporate .. Fill Up Now for the Winter .. Causes No Leakage.. Stops Rusting and Corrosion .. M 1,1 • Clog or Gum . . 1933’s Biggest Anti-Freeze Bargain. The Schafer Store HARDWARE AND HOME FURNISHINGS
Probed for Lindbergh I O -Ji ~ JH / AM <■ I; I ’■ *I I ' ’ * . ?-• IM ■— ' Under Federal investigation for possible connection with case, John Gorch, said to be wanted for criminal s-tivities I is shown in Boston police station after his arre-t r. a Inset. Miss Evelyn Klintaszewska. of Springfield Vt. who with Gorch. Gorch, police say. was in Hopewell \ J n os the Lindbergh baby was kidnaped. —— _■
! been as unsuccessful as an attempt ( 1 to check the tide of the ocean, so 1 rapid and so sure have been the' I strides of scientific medicine that 1 | it is nothing less than criminal for | a child to be allowed to contract ! diphtheria these days when medi-1 cal science has found away to j render every child immune against i diphtheria. This way is simple and 1 I entirely safe in the hands of a
|_„ ■ - — 5„. I llf I CKXVkWWW I < ' n ‘ x a !,ik '* iort / HfS years ago mmßbh MB i —when a serious accident, an acute illness» fj 3 some grave emergency arose to menace la y \ health of a loved one, relief could be had * ! ! 'J V after a long agonizing wait for the arrival d rj the family physician. Today a ste to the W f, X phone, a call for telephone No. 500 and in alee J moments the luxurious ambu ance from the ’J Black Funeral Home is at your dcor. In a mat fi ter of minutes the sufferer is in a modem h» / w pital where all of the skill of modern heai q y V science waits to minister. This friendly service fj is free for the asking. J. X The ideal of service of the Black Funeral X Home is to render to the community a type of service over and above mere money values 6\ S. E. BLACK MRS. BLACK CLARENCE WEBER MMBKyiiMillW'BHiM lll iiii^iilh'ii HiHITitiJI WHMii I WT r
"If ex• '.d in n. ■ til1 the state.'' SI — ■ Not Machine Made H | Machines : e ts | every essem siimers - S.iv -n.-lc-n
