Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 268, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1933 — Page 5

IS EXPLAINS D WORK PAY n Wages To Be oups of Men Emil On Projects Its, Nov. 13.—(Special) uent of three minimum tkations tor workmen i highway oonatruction ie huahced in part with x funds and the setting sions for culvert conthese projects during nontha, was announced nes D, Adams, chirman . highway commission, ■ven construction profinanced in part witli ; funds were opened by ion on November 7. of the public works a 50-cent an hour minitor unskilled labor erarojects financed entireart with public works i the minimum hourly lied workmen is $1.20 'hese rates are higher the National Recovery rovides minimum rates an hour for unskilled s an hour for skilled ... .i < tn industry and the governkve worked out a grouping in ingliway j - works pro ■ an Bi<> i for gemi skill"! Adams reported. The Knsl* 1 ' l >r group to receive "•o Keut**i ".if includes all persons ■com*’ designated as common Rie CORT ■ Tojiight - Tomorrow ■ 'DK. BULL” ■ A |h ii i-lomhiiu coined) ■ drania as true as life itHMu—featuring I Will Rogers I Ad< til--( limedv and News. I 10c- 25c 1 -I AMS THEATRE light and Tuesday I “ONE MAN’S | JOURNEY” Iwi® Lionel Barrymore. Joel Dorothy Jordan. I Frances Dee, May Robson. |AB) ED—Thelma Todd and Kelly Comedy and ' Screen Souvenirs. 10-25 c Bflfc & THUR.—Gary Cooper in SUNDAY AFTERNOON." MBMING — Jean Harlow. Lee Bfracy in “BOMBSHELL" ‘W-IZ I I i have'nta thing ■o W£AiK ■ HEY C€RTA|NLY OIOA Beautiful joe — IpP’aj? ’ * ! Our work will make your holidays more enjoyable. ■ Eadies Dresses. Mens Suits Cleaned and Pressed. Phone 131 [DECATUR LAUNDRY

I laborers uh well as teamsters and I drivers of trucks of H* l0(lb lllld less capacity and also I ncludes I water boys, watchmen and guards The semi-skilled group will include helpers of skilled craftsmen I when it Is customary for such skll ed craftsmen to have helpers, and , operators of certain power equlpi ment. This group will receive u minimum wage of so cents an hour. Tlie skilled class to receive $1.20 an hour includes carpenters, wood form builders, cement finishers, j painters, glaziers, aheet-niotal workers, drill sharpeners and workers of similar classification. fti addition to other Mandard provisions of construction contracts awarded by the commission, the contracts on projects to be built in part witli public works funds carry requirements for winter construction of culverts whenever practicable.- This requirement has been added, Mr. Adams explained, to provide some employment on these projects during the winter months and at the same time to have as much preliminary work completed by spring as possible. With the culverts on a project constructed during the winter, the major construction work with a greatly increased qurnber of jobs can be started earlier in the spring. To make this winter culvert construction possible, the bids received by the commission contained specifications for both standard and winter construction. There are a number of culverts on the 56 miles of paving and grading work on which bids have been received. These projects are located in eight j counties, Lawrence, Jackson, Rip- ' ley, Tippecanoe, Adams, Cass, Ful-1 ton and Warrick. Construction of these projects will be taken from the unemployment relief lists of the counties in which the work is being done, the same plan as has been used on construction work financed with National Recovery funds. (MEMORIAL BY THE ADAMS COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION TO JOHN F. SNOW John F. Snow, the subject of this I memorial, was born at Portland, Indiana. June 17th, 1854. and died, at his residence in Decatur the sth day of November. 1933. He was educated in the public schools and at Ridgeville College and by the application of studious I habit throughout his long life. His public life covered a long period of teaching, fourteen years as Superintendent of Adams Coun- | ty Schools, trustee of Washington | Townsraip and as a practicing lawyer of the Adams County Bar. Many positions of trust and honor were given hint, and his stewardship in each was honest, intelligent and faithful. He is 'Adams County's Historian, his history of our county reveals his wide and accurate knowledge of the men and women and the events of our development. He was an honored member of our Bar and we mourn iii-i passing. Words are clumsy vehicles of thought iipthe appraisal of character and the portrayal of a human life. As we review the life of our departed friend we can say of John F. Snow that he was as true as stqel to his friends, a man of positive convictions, and one who clung to ths- utmost -simplicities of life. His mind was a veritable storehouse of information on a wide range of subjects: he loved good books n< xt to good friends and to converse with him was to learn some new fact or angle of thought. Mr. Snow was a man of high i ideals, his long experience in con ' nection with schools ir\ almost I every capacity, coupled with a nat- ! ural bent to study, made him an educator and a constant seeker as- ! ter knowledge. His history of our county will I perpetuate his memory through ing generations, it fes a moment 1 to his painstaking accuracy of habit made readable and interesting by tlie personality ot its author. His life lias been an inspiration to students and teachers who worked with him. I He was faithful to the members I of our Bar in his association as 1 partner and practitioner, and true to his clients. T e ties of earth that bound us to him are broken, but the mystic bonds of memory of and affection for liis worthful lite will ever remain. i Hie physical presence has gone from among us, but we hold in loving remembrance his equable du, position, unruffled by the mutations of a changing age. hu, git > ! Reminiscence and kindly philosophy and his constructive contribution . to the place and time >» " l " l . h lived: these are in imperishable memorial to our friend and brothel. Clark J. Lutz. Nathan C. Nelson C. L. Walters Committee TO ORGANIZE CORN GROWERS (CONTINL' ED f~ "''Anyone having suggestions as to the personnel of the committee from their township is asked to get in touch witih Cijjinty Agent A) chbold. who will appreciate haring the. suggestions. Pumpkin Seed Joined NRA Bowerbank. Me.-(U,R>-A pump-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1933.

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By HARRISON CARROLL I Cato right. 1133 King Fvaturaa gynihutla Ing. ‘ HOLLYWOOD, .—Only a few hours after her arrival here, Sally Rand, whose fan dance I

i __ ! ■ f. sfc- 5 fl ■A. or 1 • A ■ 1V - . . ? Sally Rand

shocked Chicago ■nd New York officials, mixed in an argument with Paramount Studio heads. The Studio wants the actress to make two weeks of personal appearances in Northern California before she begins her picture. Sally says she has waved her fans for the last

time in a theater and doesn’t want to do the dance but once in a picture. “I realize we’ll have to capitalize on the publicity given the fan dance for a while," sne declares, “but, from now on, I want to concentrate as much as possible on Sally Rand, the actress." The slender, golden-haired dancer says that all the money she earned in Chicago and New York went to pay off lawyers and to fight the various charges brought against her. Like most other new players, . however, Sally is on the lookout for I a house in Beverly Hills. The gossips insist that Lila Lee and John McCormick are altarbound, else wty did he give her the star sapphire ring. If you can believe John, however, marriage is the farthest thing from his mind, even to a swell girl like Lila. “Sure I gave her the ring,” he said yesterday, “but it’s a dinner ring. I’ve had it in the strong box for a long time, and just decided to make Lila a little present.” Comes a telegram, too, from Sandra Shaw, in Phoenix. “No engagement. Definitely no marriage.” Well enough, but how about the canary diamond ring Gary picked up from the jeweler before he left? The dinner dance in honor of Marie Dressier's sixty-second birthday promises to be Hollywood's biggest testimonial. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer is remodeling the interior of I one of its jound stages for the oc-1 casion and, in anticipation of thou-1 sands of messages. Western Union' is running a direct wire to the' scene of the festivities. Had you heard, too. that the vet-1 o’-nn star will go to the South Seas 1 kin seed owned by Charles Clarke I has a right to echo the NRA slog- ] an, “We Do Our Part.” Planted

IT TAKES HEALTHY NERVES T °bronkS° N i crowded with danger for wboy champion at the fa- W ikes healthy nerves to stay nets are my smoke,” says ■. my nerves.” > &MKE jK* T X I V < l *t Mfer W ; f j < IF Z I < ?fc WMf l BhilOP BaSu t'v ft '' &&■ S “OUT ON THE RANCH I became devoted / aattr ,<i2Z3alialilfr * ' ’’’Wsg a,'x« to riding and smoking Camels. Even v# I"? "rZyroxy >■¥/•' v&< Z® ’s» though lam in the tenderfoot class <: . W ■a® * need healthy nerves. And Camels fsgffi&z jjirnman j|ss do not upset my nerves. That is im- R?®Sjfe ''^y 1 S:g xlz ' ' portant to a woman!” Ws^.. m IC< .«?».... tSieaclt/ B “ n ° a % f uliß z *C Eddie Woods, one of the “top hands” of the cowboy taste better. Most important of all, Camels do not "'-.r \ world, says: jangle my nerves, even when 1 light up one Camel Z - the hardest punishment for a man’s nerves that any body If you are nervous., .jumpy... inclined to “fly off tho ®r.--'-X' can imagine. To have nerves that can take it, 1 smoke handle". ..change to Camels. Your own nervesand taste afIORE FvH only Camels. I’ve tried them all, but Camels are my will confirm the fact that this milder cigarette, made I IT t 2 *” .» Bi smoke! They have a natural inildnes. id 1 like their from costlier tobaccos, is better for steady smoking. i tokn° w O COSTLIER TOBACCOS '■■••■• • ££| iß2»’ »3 * jUI 4M| #5 \ «S& Ksl " J k3*3<. %«J k S ■'& « “13 <r & * wl -A .fe wl »~y * BJ ’ Beynuld* Toba< ro romraaj

to make her forthcoming picture “Mrs. Van Kleek”? Not all gold mines are phoneys. John Miljan and his brother have been developing a claim up above Mojave in the real rock district. They've just received an offer to sell it for $40,000, still retaining 20 per cent interest in the profits. QUICK GLIMPSES The funniest thing about the fisticuffs between Peter Arno and Drexel Biddle Steel is that the two parties had the whole Embassy Club to themselves after the fight and remained to scowl at each other for 45 minutes.,.. Now that young Gary Evans Crosby is old enough to be left with a nurse, Dixie Lee has plans to return to the screen. . , , You should see the long, shiny car Bruce Cabot ijave to Adrienne Ames for a wedding present. . . . Alice White and Cy Bartlett, whe have been missing from the late spots since that trouble over John Warburton, were dancing at the Beverly Wilshire. The gossips have been calling Gwen Heller (Mrs. Jack Warner’s niece) and Mary Brian rivals for the attention of Dick Powell. Tableau, then, when Dick and Mar, walked into the Clover Club the other evening and found Gwen and Leonard Goldstein already there. The girls met and laughed the stories off. . . . Damon Runyon can’t write them fast enough these days. Samuel Goldwyn has just offered the sports ace $20,000 for an original for Eddie Cantor. . . . Buddy Rogers is in town for five days. . . . Back from Honolulu. The Bill Gargans were entertaining at the King’s Club the other evening. . . .

John Bright i there too with Chandler Sprague. . . . Eleanore Hunt and Dr. Frank Nolan are slated to be the I next air-elopers. Swellest new home in Hollywood is owned not by a $5,000 a week star but by Phil Berg, the agent and his wife, Leila Hya ms. Bill Haines did the decorating and

I — J Buddy Rogers

had to take plenty of bows for it at , the Berg housewarming Sunday. All Hollywood there with Pat, from it he Colony Club, borrowed to do j the pouring. DID YOU KNOW: That Preston Foster used to work 1 in vaudeville with Fritzi Scheff? the l ast summer, this solitary seed grew a vine which-produced 14 pumpkins. t. f

FISH WILL BE GIVEN NEEDY I Conservation Department: Plans Netting of Eish In Nearby Lakes Indlsnapolis,* Nov. 13 (Special) —Between ten and twelve tons of] fish will be placed on tlie menu 1 of families in seven northern Ind > lanu cities who are dependent on . public relief as a result of arrange-1 ments completed by Virgil M. Sim-, I nions, commissioner of the Depart-' ment of Conservation. The fish are to be taken from northern Indiana 1 lakes by workers on the relief lists and will be distributed through the I local relief agencies. The netting of the fish will be ' directed by Milton Wysong. a rep- ' resentative of the Fish and Game 1 division of the Department of Conservation. and will come from Lake ( James, Clear Lake, Tippe- i canoe, Little Tippecanoe Lake,: Lake Waby and Indiana Village' lakes. They will be distributed in Goshen, Kendallville, Angola. Fort , Wayne, Elkhart, South Bend. The fish to be netted is the Cis-, co, a member of the Salmonidae fa- | mily which resembles the white fish and will average between two and three pounds in weight. These ; ! fish are never caught on a hook ’ I and line. The netting will take I ' place during the three or four day j “run' which takes place during the | I breeding season. Arrangements > 1 have been made by the Fish and ’ I Game division for the preservation ■ I of all eggs taken from the fish j | caught and these eggs will lie re- ! placed in the lakes to insyre the' J propagation of this variety of fish. ■ The fish will be a welcome addi- ■ j tion to Lie food supply of the re- | lief agencies in tlie surrounding j : cities and enthusiastic co-operation i is being given the Department of I ! Conservation in the plans tor nett- ( ing the fish for this purpose. o ELEVEN DEATHS OVER WEEK END (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ! j pita! of injuries suffered several (days ago. Mrs. Callie Lady. 52,; a pedestrian, was killed install ly : by an automobile. Floyd M. Wray, 46. chief engl-1 ■ neer of the William Ross sani-1 ( tarium at Lafayette, was’ killad when his automobile skidded in l o ' a lamp post there. ' Icy pavement also was blamed ' .for a ollision in which Charles 'A. Hatch, 45, was killed at Elk-i

I hart. Arthur Vaughn, 26. wnn killed | Instan'.ly at Evansville when tlie , ( automobile in which lie wus riding 1 crashed into a ditch. | Joseph Karlovich, 17, East Chii cage, was killed at Whiting while thumbing a ride. . A( HIEVENEMT PROGRAM TO BE HELD SATURDAY j (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j i.ongenherger. Decatur: leaders, Miss Betty 1 FTlalnger and Miss Allee Jane Arch--1 bold. | 'Girls who completed: Alice Jane j Archbold, Loena and Vera Bauer, i Gladys Doan. Melba Kraft, Eula ( Myers, Katherine Kohls, Madeline Spahr, Genevieve Light, Pauline Light and Elizabeth Reed. Washington township: leaders, Mrs. Mabelle Myers, Mrs. Win. 1 Hoffman, Mrs. Chas. Teeple, Mrs. Faye Smith Knapp, Mrs. Roy Leh- : man. and Miss Grace Coffee. Girls who completed: Esther | Baumgartner. Elva Boring, Irene : Boring, Juanita Bowman, Lavon ' Deßolt. Samantha Drake, Gynitli | Hill, Rosemary Huffman. Audrey I Johnson, Helen Krick. Betty Krugb, I i.aVeru Meyer, Wilma and Ruby ■ Miller, Onnollee Millisor, Clara ! Morgan. Martha Myers, Margaret and Violet Ritter, Marcella Rupert. .Monica Schmitt, Irene Sell, Jessib i Smith, Leona Smith, Margaret | .Smith, Mary Smith, Maxine Smith. I {Martha Summers, Helen Williams, | ’ Hilda Williams, Lula Wolfe, i’aul- ' ine Tumbleson, iris Hebble and An- , mibel Rupert. Jefferson township: leaders, Miss 1 Helen Kenney. | Girls who completed: Faye Tumbleson, Catherine Mosser, Helen ' lueiclien, Deloria Dailey, Mary i Bruiner, Alice R. Dailey, Margaret i Brumer, Kathleen Kenney, Melba I Smitley, and Ruth lueiclien. St. Marys township: Mrs. Nellie I Jackson. Miss Doris Shifferly, Mrs.' i Leland Ray and Mrs. Chas. Schenck. Girls who completed: Juanita I Hilton, Boneta Miller. Betty Rob(insqn, Marjorie Chronister, Mary F. ■ Koos. Mildred Shifferly, Etliel I Bunner, Mary Catherine Tope, Rosanna Rauch, Glenda Rauch. Violet' .Breedlove. Florine Bunner. May and’ i Faye Manlier, Patricia Chronister, i I Myrle Stevens, Vivian Riley, Ger ! j aldine Ray, Betty Burkhart, Betty! ; Clark, Florence Pynchon, and Neva! , Riley. Blue Creek: leaders, Misses Heli en and Glennys Roop. Girls who completed: Lucile and , Virginia Parrish, Neliwyn Brookhart, Pauline Carver, Wanda Neadstine. Marjorie Sipe, Mary Rift. 'Betty Jane White, Boneta Myer. Alice Myer, Betty Sprunger. 1 French tow-nship: leader, Miss'

Delores Neuhauser. Girls who completed: Betty Augusburger, Bertellne Beer. MilI dred Beer, Justino Liechty. Marjorie Llechty, Janet Soldner, Mary Elizabeth Steiner, and Carol, Mary Ann and Vera Wulliman. Kirkland, leaders: Misses Bern Ha .Hoffman and Doris Johnson. Girls who compiled: Juanita Cable, Mary Fuhrman, Rachal Helmrich, Bernice Cable, Miriam Hoff man, Marjorie Dilling. Edna Smith, I Hazel Yake. Irene Fasnaugh, Alice ; I Reinhard. Pollyanna Lehman. Aldine Buitemeler, Dannabelle and Mary Elizabeth Arnold, and Dorothy Werlinfc. Wabash township: leaders, Mrs. Tom Rhoades and Mrs. Gilbert Hirachy. Girls who completed: Elnore Hlrschy, Clara Farlow, Louise Sommer. Helen Hlrschy, Helen Jean Stanley, Bernice Mathys, Pauline Yohs. Martha Speicher, Avellne Robinson, Beatrice Mathys, Ida Sammers, Marilynn Augsburger, Esther Burke, and Pauline Llechty. Root township: leader, Mrs. Mary Rodenbeck. Girls who completed: Dixie Louise Harvey, Mary Louise Babbitt, Martha Jane Kreps. lona Louise Schnepp and Violet Brown. The newest club organization in tlie county is the Garden Club, headed by Rev. Frank Engle and Mr. Merwin Hostetler. The members are: Charles Barnhouse, Edi- ! son Beihold, Junior Beihold, Frank- | lin Franz. Robert Franz. Wm. Fritz- | inger, Robert Gerke, Teddy HoI brock, Donald Hoile. Fred Kunkel, j Mervin McCoy, Edward Merlca, Glenn Meric.a. Richard Moses, Louis Schuller, Everett Singleton, Earl Sheets, Arthur Poling, Robert Maloney, Marion Jackson. Hob Fuhrman. Herald Hitchcock. Junior Drake. Richard Jackson, Dale Fuhrman. and David Wynn. Mrs. Marianne Clem was the i county club leader and assisted the 1 county agent in putting this club I year over in a big way. o HITLER GIVEN VOTE APPROVAL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Plebiscite: 43,439,046 voted. For withdrawal: 40.588,804 (93.5 per. 'eent); against withdrawal: 2,100.-] I 181 (4.8 per cent): spoiled bal-I j lots: 750,061 (1.7 per cent). Reichstag: 42,975,009 voted. For I Nazi candidates. 39,626.647 <92.8 'per cent); spoiled ballots: 3,348.-I 362 (7.2 per cent). Ninety-seven per cent of the electorate voted. The largest former voce in a , j German general election was 39 u - : ( 300,000 last March, and Nazi campaign managers had not expected that more than 42,000.000 would ’ 1 vote yes' erday. ' As a result tlie overwhelming

Page Five

support, Hitler was expected to effect an early meeting of Hie now Nazi reichatc<., The relchHtug'H chief task was to draft a new constittrtion sounding Its doom as u really parliamentary body and make it largely an advisory and somewhat decorative body. Now. Germans prod ioted, the success of Hitler's experiment in government and mass psychology depended on his ability to bring . about steady, if necessarily slow economic recovery and to develop u peaceable Internal! tonal policy. The immediate preoccupation of the nation witli its own situation, ’though the international situation precipitated the election, was reflected in the victory statemen' of Paul Joseph Goebbels, minister of propaganda and manager of the campaign: “The election and plebiscite have opened new vist as in domestic as well as foreign policy.”Hitler, when the final returns were in, said: “German citizens! For 15 years I have trustingly fought for your future, impelled by an indett ructable confidence in the intrinsic worth of our nation. "Today I thank tlie millions of German citizens from the boKtom of my heart for the unprecedented demonstration of our true love of peace and our determination to uphold our honor and our eternal right to equality with other nations. "Thus strengthened, my collaborators and I are ready to proceed to fulfill our duties witli unbroken courage.” Indian State Popular Boston. — (U.R) -Few statues in this country attract as much attention as Cyrus E. Dallin's famous work, “The Appeal to the Great Spirit,” which for years has stood on the lawn in front of the Boston Museum ot Fine Arts. More post cards and photographs of this statue—ot an Indian astride a pony, with his arms outstretched and his face uplifted—are sold than of any scene or building or statue in Boston. . Old Communion Set Used Cambridge, Mass,— (U.R) —Comi innnion silver given by King Wil- , liam and Queen Mary of England to King's Chapel. Boston, in 1694, was used at the Christ Church in ! Cambridge when the church recent- | ly observed its 174th anniversary. Constipated 30 Years Aided By Old Remedy “For thirty years I had constipal tion. Souring food from stomach choked me. Since taking Adlerika ' I am a new person. Constipation jis a thiug of the past.”—Alic>Burns. B. J. Smith Drug Co.