Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 56, Decatur, Adams County, 5 March 1934 — Page 5
■ntfiving ■uses deaths ■ . \i iH cnnes Men In I’li'"*' ( ,ash ■T.: Tri , ■ Hr..:.. ia> * -.i-kloi. were' Jiip , , l-'k« ' iri.kE'l "l ,i|, ‘ s, "'*l MR,,. f 1 ' ' nee. of 1u ,7 ri.-i Ho lake. The | f l 'l |M. «.<■ Hi- I'ioi-lT.' <>f| FI’HIV ~f |R.:, ■ .I AH i IHfH ill Vs" >nnes. M Escape Injury 1 M,. .IIP) T«ol mo - a|"d injury i M*«i er,lav " : 11 K,,1i111 mit hi- :• were , Kun.-: binding ul mu»a H-ovu by W. C prrsi.i. n: <T Hi- Aircraft. UjC .Vswm'i." "f ludianap-j hTtii. pu'-,;:-' 1 a.is William Til' plan- was damaged <.ii i ilm plane had! and ii.i i !!• 'I uuoilt •" ( » e: K ■ ■ >< k .i mud bob Hthe craft capsized. jj, — o Kder insull I OCT TOMORROW ■ffiM'ED FUOM PAGE ONE) I Marra »a> 'aid today to be ParK; a ' r’l!- : Catalonian, now Kat in Chicago. ■k us said o have written to
[THE KNOCK (that kills FRIENDSHIP]! YOU KNOW what she wints She is Mrs. Mooeh who runs over several tones a day to use your telephone You hate to hear her coming. don't you? It’s >r unne-.essary nuisance!’* the citizens telephone co.
RUNNING |PW|w | ! YOUR 111 HOME '' Managing a home is a business—one of the most exacting kinds of business. Good housewives are good "usniess managers. Women who run homes spend most ?. f the money that is spent every year in the I). S. I Here’s a packet of bulletins, prepared by our Washington Bureau that will help you now, as a New Year is j sl»ut to begin, to plan the running of your home, the | p xpenditure of your money, and the results you get. ' *" during the comirtg year. The titles are: I- Budgeting and Household I- Simple Plumbing Repairs i Accounts 5. Safety for the Household . t Household Measurements fi. Home Conveniences 5 - Home Laundering 7. Earning Extra Money ,f Hou want this packet of seven bulletins, fill out the | f *upon below and mail as directed: | ‘he packet of seven bulletins on HOME ECONOMICS. ' enclose herewith twenty cents in coin or postage stamps, ! rover return postage and handling costs: Name | ADDRESS » I ClT * STATE I To The Washington Bureau . 1322 New York Avenue I Washington, D. C. _ r| ■ MnTrlMMa3 Mmßsaan«aaf
tbe Spanish bisbop of L'rgdl offering 400.000 pesetas (154.400) to be tnado prince of Andorra Tbe An- ; dorran governing council potested i against the offer and said that it I did not want a Chicago monarch but would remain n republic. It had been reported that Samuel Instill, fugitive Clilcago utilities magnate, wag the man who sought to become prince. SAYS ESCAPE IS FANTASTIC j (CONTINUED FROM r,»GE ONE) After Dillinger's return from j Tucson, Ariz., in January, Coy ■ conferred with John Stage, capj tain of Chicago detectives. J "Stege told me at the time*that I the Lake county jail was no plac < for a man as desperate as Dilling- , er and that he should be taken to , Michigan City and kept in solitary confinement." "That was the first time we sup i gested tbe move to Sheriff Hol I ley." Asked if lie thought Mrs. Holley ■ were Io blame for Dillinger's | escape. Coy said: i "She is no more responsible I than the guards." j Coy added that liter the cm ape I Saturday morning, considerable I pressure was brought to hear on .McNutt to call out the national i guard. The governor felt, how- ; ever, thnt the guards would be of I no use since Dillinger was known i to have left tne state. RATE HEARING SET TOMORROW i . | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 1 pany. and charged that rates could I lie reduced as much as 50 per cent and stiil allow a fair return Two separate appraisals and and- ; its have been made of the SIOOjDOO,000 utility. One was made bv the i commission during the adnrinistra- | tlon of Gov. Harry G. Leslie. Dis- ' satisfied patrons of the utility ordered another and only recently it was completed. Total cost of the appraisals and audits has approximated 175.000. i One of the major issues to be pre- ' sented at the hearing will be whether rates charged by the utility shall be based on valuation of the used and useful equipment and 1 property in any particular comi munity or whether a per centage I of all the property of the system I can be used in the rate determin- ■ ation. Officials of the utility have promoted another legal battle if the commission rules against them, and j orders a cut in rates. At the last [hearing officials told members of the Public Service Commission they I would carry the fight to the U. S. j supreme court. Members of the city administrations of South Bend. Elkhart ami Mishawaka, along with many citizens of the three cities, arc expect ed to attend the hearing. Mayor William I’. Krau of Elkhart, and Vernon Freed and Iren S. Romig. South Bend city attorneys, will repl resent those cities. officials of Hie three cities have indicated they will not ask a spe citle rate reduction, but will depend on the commission to cut the rates to the appraisal and audit fi-ures. Climntng P Pewter ts » ioft met*' .end onir very fin* wwireri, nch a* fine whiting, rouge or fine rottenstone j mired with oil, should be nMd for el *a wing It - - — - . T"“ —
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MOND \Y, MARCH 5, 1931.
Will Tennis Queens Forsake Simon Pures? - » ' " . «■ v' B IK< W i *1 i PaF m Bi \ ****' t // Hri.n Wih. " " I — ~~ g||. d ■ Frrd Perry 'I N
Although Mrs. Helen Wills Moody, regarded as the world's greatest woman tennis player, denies she intends going over to commercial tennis, rumor persists that she will do so at the close of the 1934 season,
Meet a Musing Mermaid j ft i wt’’ mm - < \ w i — — Marma’d® are usually depicted combing their hair or luring unwary sailors to destruction, hut this modern water siren just sits and muses in the sun. The maid is Betsy Barton, daughter of Bruce Barton, noted I writer-philosopher. She's shown at a nool in Phoenix. Aril.
ROOSEVELT IN STRONG SPEECH AT CONFERENCE (CONTINUED FROM PAop ONB> 1 that the general attitude w ever a* man for Uiui.-vlt the devil take the hindmost.” "It vat, because of this situation in March, 1933, was so serious all along the line that remedies had to be applied to every phase ot the illness.” he said. • • The objective was. as yon know, to apply these remedies in the American way and not to < opy those which are being tried in other countries which do not live under the same form of democratic government as ours. ; -I am always a little amu ■«•»!
New King Enters His Capital « ’ * -J®*® 'l& A. < vBXk .dEsTrwk j * i ST S w «■ Ji IH W ts W<' w i B W' * I < Is WBS * it 15 & ■**> jps King Leopold 111 of Belgium raises his hand in salute to his subjects as I h?' enters Brussels on the t raditional ride after Ins coronation. The entrance of the monarch to his capital city is emblematic of the kings ' ■. answer to the people that he come to their aid.
r rva rerry ■ during which she hopes to settle that old score with Helen Jacobs. The latter, too, it is said, will begin to cash in on her skill in 1935. Fred Perry, English star, is another who plana to go •■pro.”
' and perhaps at times a little sad dened and I think the American ocbple feel the same way— by those few writers and speakers, who proclaim tearfully either that we are now committed to Communism and collectivism or that we have adopted Fascism and dictatorship. ‘‘The real truth of the matter is that fur a number of years in 1 our country the machinery ot de mocracy had tailed to function. ' Throtigh inertia on the part of leaders and on the part ot the , people themselves the operations of novcrninent had fallen into the hands of special groups, some of them vociferously h d by people who undertook to obtain special i advantages for special classes and others led by ;i handful of —
individuate wno lielieve in their superhuman ability to retain in, I their own hands the entire business and financial control over| the economic and social structure of the nation." , The President then complimented the overwhelming majority of the component parts of Industry in adhering to the administration's program. char(;e woman WITH SLAYING I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' the muscle to lift it in the furnace." j Mrs. fileaeon. when arrested at i the home of friends here last night, i was not told of her son's statement. I later, when questioned by sheriff O. : P. Snodgrass, she said. “I’d hate to 1 have to call him a liar.” Marvin First said he had killed I 7ls father in an argument over liquor. He later revealed he shot him ! because he was overbearing, and that and his mother could not I get along with him. o — House Passes Bill Backing Bond Notes , Washington March ’. —(UP) — The house today passed a bill ex[tending for one year government ' liond backing for federal reserve j notes. The act. authorizing the ; backing, expired today and the leadlersiifp drove through for immediate passage, although the measure, i i>atvse 1 by the senate cannot be signed by the president until Mon day.
Old Car Good Enough? Say, just ride in a '34 YOU’LL chage your mind about holding on to the old car the very first time you get behind the wheel of a Nineteen Thirty-four. Are these new jobs smooth and smart and comfortable? And can they “travel”.’ Even if you aren’t going to buy at present, you should read the automobile advertisements appearing in this newspaper. It’s an excellent way to keep up to date on what the spring salons are showing. There are important developments in styling and engineering--interesting features pictured and described — w h i c h contribute io new riding case, new safety, beauty and c-c-o-n-o-m-y. Economy is an important point in these messages from leading automobile manufacturers.... Exceptional values, long life, unusual freedom from repairs, low fuel and oil consumption! Economy is the reason they advertise in this newspaper, for here they can reach you and many other logical and intelligent car buyers at a minimum cost per person. Read the advertisements in this newspaper as an economy measure. They save time, energy, money . . . and even now are pointing out that owning a luxurious, up-to-the-minute motor car is often more economical than maintaining an old one. ■
MANY RABBITS ARE RELEASED Department of ConscrvaI lion Will Liberate 1,800 In Indiana I - - Indianapolis. Mur. 5 - ,IXf!) It the department of conservation | fulfillts its plans, hunt-ers in many • counties in lhe state will not have to worry almut getting their share of the rabbits next winter. An order for 1.800 nibbits to be lib-r.it-d In 23 Indiana counties, he i been placed with a Kansas firm by the fish and game division of the department of conservation The move was taken after hunt ers in various sections of the stito reported a marked scarcity of tile animals during the hunting season which closed Jan. I°. The rabbits will be set free under the supervision of game wardens and local sportsmen and conservation dubs. Hunters are to aid gafne wardens in providing l toed and shelter for the rabbits; which‘arc of tbe same breed as | the Indiana cottontails. Counties in which the animals arc to be released are Adams, i Allen, Carroll. Delaware, Elkhart. I Gibson. Hendricks. Huntington. I Jennings. Knox. Lake, Igrporte. Madison. Marshall, Porter. Randolph. Spencer. Starke, St. Joseph. Sullivan, Vermillion. Wells and Whitley. It Is the plan of the state conservation department to release enough rabbits to stock not only the one county, but surrounding territory. Tells Mrs. I’inchot To Notify Husband — Washington March '—(UP) —If ; ■ Mrs. Gifford I’inchot has found that ■ labor has been forbidden to hold ■ meetings in many Pennsylvania 1 towns. NRA administrator Hugh S. Johnson thinks the proper place for ■ I her to register a protest is with ; her own husband, the governor of I i the state. I Mrs. Pinchot, during NRA'S 1 : roundup of criticism, charged that industrialists prevented labor meet- [ ings, that sweatshops were flying the Blue Eagle and paying wages ■ : j as low as 6 cents per hour, and that j iN'H Ai was lax in enforcing codes and .' settling labor disputes. •I 0 j Chicago Doctor Falls To Death . | ■ | Chicago. Mar. !■ — (U.R) — Police I . today sought to determine win th- 1 ■ er Dr. Carl Nelson. 31, member of ■ a socially prominent family, jump- j <■<! or accidentally fell to his |
Are You A Carbohydrate Drunk? In other words, ure you overweight? To oat inordinately of ! breads, pastries or candies is truly going on n drunk “• a carbohy--1 drate drunk. An excess of sugars and starches becomes poison lo I the body, which, if it digests them, must store them as fat. Fat overi faxes the heart mid kidneys and shortens life. Ol esity Is a more dangerous condition than underweight, for the fat individual carries 1 a burden that gives him nothing tn return, while the one who Is i underweight lias at least lite greater freedom of action because of ! his ligblness. Our Washington Bureau has ready a bulletin on Weight reduc- ■ lion, prepared liy a physician, which gives directions tliHt if curefully followed, will bring desired results. If you are overweight and wish to reduce, till out the coupon I below and send for this bulletin: CLIP COUPON HMUS Dept. 275, Washington Bureau, DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C, J want a copy of the bulletin WEIGHT REDUCTION, mid enclose herewith five cents iu coin (carefully wrapped.) or postage stamps, to cover return postage and handling costs: NAME STREET & No ~y- - • CITY ... STATE - I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Deoatur, Ind.
death from the fifth floor window of the Presbyterian hospital. Nelson s body was found last night by a hospital ordcrlv who had been caring for him in the institution. Ho had been suffering from a nervous disorder for
LADIES NEW SPRING Princess Slips Beautiful New Adjustable Shoulder Strap Slips. Made of Lady Pepperell f- 4 - •'*4,] combined with Cellanise. \ Some Tailored yL J. ~C\\ Others Trimmed with I * / 'xN Imported Corded Lace. \ J i 49 inches long. Non-Pull i Non-Creep / \ Colors: Tea Rose, I White and Pink. I > Remember the ‘Slip’ |/ Makes the Dress. / |\’ Assorted Sizes 34 to 44. SPECIALLY | PRICED . . . a The Schafer Store HAKDWaRE and HOME FURNISHINGS ■ 11,11 F
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about a week. Nelson was the son of Mr. ami Mrs. Murray Nelson. His father is an attorney and his mother a former president of the Womans City Club He was married and had one son.
