Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 280, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published MR A, THE Every Eve- Vgb? DECATUR sing Except DEMOCRAT ■•inday by CO. entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post 'Jffice as Second Class Matter. /. H. Heller.... Pres. and Gen. Mgr. R. Holthouse Sec’y At Rus. Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies $ .02 One week, by carrier—.lo One year, by carriers.oo One month, by mall .35 Three months, by 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 13.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc. 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Sparkling Crystal White sugar—the more of it you use, the better for every one. .. Let's make sugar week in Decatur 100 %perfect by putting Spark- • ling Crystal White in every home ■ in the county. Foreign trade for the United States was the largest in two years ■ during the month of October. That’s , a good barometer. - The boys of the civil works crew i received their first wages Saturday and will continue to do so during the next several months. That's ( the real way to cure the depression. . e i ■ ‘lt's not a day too early to start your Christmas shopping. TJie stares are filled with fine goods at low prices. Select your gifts now ( md have them laid away lor you. j ■Jet this worry off your mind. I » t The local high school basketball team is not getting away to such j a goffd start, hut perhaps that's ( better than winning all the early , games and then going stale about t tournament time as so frequently s happens. . . ... | The Red Cross drive uas been ( successful as far as it has gone, but . the enrollment of membership is | > only Ifbout half what it ought to be , for The first week. Let’s speed it , up. We need this organization and the larger the membership, the | more good can be accomplished. , i We doubt if any public move- ( ment ever inaugurated in these I lifted States has been more popular than the public work program. ( That brings a pay roll to each community and joy to millions of tarn-1 Hies. That's feeding the old turn-1 ace where it jieeds it. j They have decided that Mrs 1 Rheta Wynekoop of Chicago died of gunshot wounds and not from chloroform, which doesn’t seem as important to the average person a.s to who did it and why- The mother-in-law says she did, but it seems that the son may have had something to do with causing the old lady to take such drastic action. 1 — ■■ —.— ... i And so we start another week. Each is a chapter in itself these days, with fast changing plans and with one interesting affair after ' One Sure Way to End Coughs and Colds Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a new medical discovery with two fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Os all kn'pwn drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent rough* and colds and other forma of throat trouble*. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and • olds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, and j is excellent for building up the system gfter colds or flu. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion, (adv.) t

another, dual what each week will , bring, no one of course Is wise enough to predict, but we feel sure it will be filler! with many items of interest to those who keep posted by reading the daily newspaper. Subscribe now, It is promised that 4125.000,000 ' now frozen in Indiana banks and loan companies will be released January Ist by the Home Owner's Loan Corporation. This organization has been working the past sev-1 eral months and because of the numerous details, have been slowed up considerably. The distribution j of these millions should add to the impetus of the good times movement. The governor has appointed a | committee to draft regulation rules j for handling hard liquor, a job that ■ under any circumstances would be | important and just now doubly so when we enter upon the repeal period without fixed statutes that have teeth. However the personnel of the committee, so far as nam-' ed. are of the calibre to instill confidence in the public mind. They j have a tough problem but they will ■work it out. The experience of County Clerk Milton Werling in Chicago was as thrilling as those frequently depicted upon the screen. He has given his version and in due time will give his story in detail to the federal grand jury. For some time I the country has been flooded with I counterfeit currency and if his testimony aids the government officers to run down a desperate gang and break up a ten-year-old phony money plant. Irs efforts will have ; < been well worth while. —_ Evidence accumulates that a ( renaissance nears for American | railroads. Passenger coach fares j have been reduced, particularly in i ■ the West, to a level that is forcing 1 new reductions in motor bus rates. Experimental internal combustion cars and trains are being tested, i Some of these are designed for transcontinental service, are streamlined to reduce wind resistance, and should make a formidable bid for the class of travel that is ■ going in increasing volume to the airlines. Others are for shorter hauls and are capable of going between seventy and. ninety miles ' an hour without discomfort to the passengers. The motor bus may find difficulty in competing, either in speed or comfort, with such rail- ' road vehicles operating on their own uninterrupted rights of way. —Chicago Dally News. 0 Answers To Test Questions Below a.e the Answer* to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two. • • 1. Os the clock. 2. South America. 3. Crosier. 4. Mohawk. 5. With highest honors. 6. Government Printing Office, Washington. D. C. 7. October 27th. 8. Slave*) and malefactors of the lowest oruer. 9. It is applied to an instrumental composition of a lively piquant character. 10. Yes. » 1. Yes. but the power has not been exercised for more than a century. 2. Dutchess County. 3. Italian astronomer. 4. For the time being. 5. Pan. fl. Montana. 7. German philosopher. 8. No. 9. Archimedes. 10. As a result of the World War. —— o — t — Gospel Temple P. W. Barker, pastor Third and Monroe Streets The services at the Temple were well attended Sunday. Evangelist Carl Williams was with us Sunday evening and brought the message. The quartet from the Valley Church brought the message in song. The service* this week will be Thursday. Saturday and Sunday. Wo will have with uh in a few weeks three well 'known evangelists Welcome to all services. oStanley Thompson of Cralgvillo was a visitor in Decatur Saturday night.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1933.

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Household Scrapbook I — BY—ROBERT A_ LEEj Tobacco Smoke ■ls a room seems very stuffy, and reeks of tobavco smoke, place a bowl of cold water in a secluded spot somewhere in the room. It will soon help clear the atmosphere. Sweet Milk. When the milk is beginning to I turn, add enough carbonate of soda to cover a dime for each phit of I milk, and boil. This will make the i milk sweet and will preserve it. Use of Peroxide Where peroxide has been list'd on garment, wait until the peroxide is , washed out and the stain dried befor ironing it. If this is not done, it is liable to leave a rust stain. o TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Demosrat Fils Miss Bertha Bogner and Edward Gruber take nuptial vows. Miss Frances Dugan is visitingVassar classmates in Chicago. Twenty years ago today was; Thanksgiving Day. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Walters and ; family are guests of Mr. and Mrs. i Harry Christen in Fort Wayne. Chris Eivher is a business visitor I here. Mrs. Eli Meyer anil daughter,) Gladys, are visiting in Fort Wayne. I

At Inquest on "Operating Table Murder Victim .-7. ' . X /IMg < B Bit *»~ n I UK i V- * j K vtr* /jS V /KF j9w 4 Hsk - xs. ; i

j A scene at the inquest into the weird operating table murder of Mrs. Rheta Gardner Wynekoop in the : Chicagodrome of her mother-in-law, Dr. Alice Wynekoop. Left to right, listening to evidence, are Miss Enid Hennessey, school teacher occupant of the Wynekoop home; Dr. Catherine Wynekoop, sister-in-law of the victim; Dr. Alice Wynekoop, mother-in- *

I Mrs. Millard Cowan is in Grand | Rapa ids visiting her daughter and | i son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dein- [ i nger. Miss Glennys Mangold is the! guest of Miss Vera Reinhardt in Portland. Mrs. Henry Lichtensteiger and daughters, Marie and Genevieve are ! visiting Mrs. Clarence Baxter in I Fort Wayne. i Mr. and Mrs. Cy Uhl and family of Toledo are visiting Mr. and Mrs. . i B. J. Terveer. STOCK WORKERS GO ON STRIKE j (CONTINUED FHUM PAGE ONE) I * ••♦♦♦♦♦ eluded the Amalgamated Meat Cut-: ’ters and Butchers union, an Amer : ican Federation of Labor affiliate i as is the stin k handlers group. Nearly 6,000 men in all are atJected by the strike order. Quick action was being taken by | unkm stockyard officials to solve | the tangle. Receipts today were heavy. Sixteen thousnad cattle. I 40,000 hogs and 17.000 sheep arriv--1 ed. Emergency workers recruited j largely from clerical states were I able to unload only a few hundred j cattle. Representatives of Armour A- Co., i Swift A Co., anil the Cudahy Pack- J I ing Co., the “big three" packers at I the yards, viewed the strike with I apprehension. They announced' j supplies on band were so large that even a continued strike would have I little effect on their business. I Objective of the strikers is are I turn of wages to the 1929 scale. • • F V*9 f f

insert, ourame n. vwuncj, ui | center, a recent picture of Mrs. Rheta Wynekoop, and I left, Earle Wynekoop, victim’s husband, shown after his arrest. Police assert the “solution of the mystery i lias between mother and son," both of whom are held for further questioning. !

Union leaders said their members were working for Jl6 a week. They asked an 8-bour day with a 8125 to $l5O monthly minimum pay. -o TWO KIDNAPERS AKE KILLED BY MOB OF 5,000 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | for reinforcements. But they were j : too late. A boy. not more than I : 16, climbed to the top of a shed j and shouted in a slirill voice, ■ "Come on fellows. Let's go get I ’em.” This was the leader the mob had been awaiting. > Tlie surge of men and boys and a few women carried to the bar-1 i riers Sheriff Emig's men had erected. They were swept aside. ' Tear bombs were hurled. The mob retreated, eyes smarting. Bricks, stones and other missiles rained I on tile jail. Windows were broken and the lights extinguished. A group rushed up with a length of oil well casing. Willing hands seized it and battered the big steel doors. They collapsed and the molt surged in. Emig and his officers hurled tear bombs until the supply was exhausted. Off!Special s(k* TURKEY or CHICKEN THANKSGIVING DINNER at BOM FAS RESTAURANT Call 294 for reservations. w it « «• w r» •

cers refused to shoot but swung shillalehs and used their fists. Emig and Deputy Howard Buffington were felled and trampled. The others, overwhelmed by superior numbers, retreated, helpless. Sheriff Hurt | San Jose. Calif.. Not). 27 —<U.R>— i Sheriff William Emig was danger- ! ously injured last night by the | mob’ that lynched the slayers ot

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-r | Brooke Hart. 22. It was revealed ■ today. The sheriff was struck in the i ■. buck of the head by a brick. ’ X-Rays were to be taken later to i day to determine the extent of his | Injuries. Witnesses said Emlg was hurt while helping a deputy protect ■ Tony Serpa, 23, a prisoner, from the mob. The mob, it was said - - -

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