Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 130, Decatur, Adams County, 31 May 1934 — Page 5
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E < -. •& ff’ Wkr wL* aIFWR I k "Sw >- \WSlg4a?, i.- . JX‘>’’-OBP s*** 5 ***- BE^hm® S? ■ w MHB w >A I agija, ? ■ | .m JmE * W**|« I ■HHEkF EK ■ Isl t DEALER ADVrWHSEMf'NT -I 'KgMLw In the low-price motor car you get valve-in-head performance with anyg e ]j t |, crc ’ a n othing that even thing inferior to valve-in-head design. And the Im ‘BHiMB with Chevrolet s famous b-mile ride. same ining applies io inc risncr ikiv, u is; No other car at Chevrolet’s brakes, the steering. Chevrolet offers one seaony oi inc vital icaiuivo |>i I hdJKlm! without these features, it’s impos- difference—in the way the car feels, performs I |Me to equal Chevrolet’s ride! You can’t get and saves. One feature after another that puts results with anything less than a Chevrolet far ahead in value .. . farther ahead I genuine Knee-Action car. You can’t get six- every day in sales! eyHndef economy with more than six—nor can CHEVROLET MOTOR CO.,DETR(H T, MICHIGA I Compare Chevrolet's low dAivered prices and easy G. M. A. C. terms. A General Motors Value 'I 'MMMWMWT, |K p IK ‘tyff | --^ ? Ik B e r six Chevrolet Co. PHONE 170 .. ___, —
armament* demand solution. Overshadowing spectacular localized strike violence on the west coast, und In Toledo and Minneapolis are threats of steel and textile walkouts and a general strike of American longshoremen. New labor provisions in the steel code signed yesterday by President Roosevelt are aimed at preventing a steel strike next month. Textile workers are bitter against a 25 per cent production ent order issued by NRA. Their leaders will confer with Administrator Hugh S. Johnson tomorrow witn demands for wage readjustments to compensate for decreased employment. The NRA order seeks to avoid seasonal summer
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1931.
over production. Chaos in the oil Industry is preI dieted by Secretary of Interior ■ Harold L. Ickes unlesp further 1 regulatory legislation Is enacted 1 by congress. Louis R. Glavis, Ickes’ chief Investigator. Is in the I southwestern oil fields for a first • hand study of excessive produc- ■ tlon. " -■■ a— -- Nellie and Joe Still Working i GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (U.R) — The supposed oldest mule team in Ohio, Nellie and Joe, respectively - 30 and 31 years old. are worked • dally by their owner, Elza M. r Rupe, foraier county controlsr Sioner here.
PARK POPULAR FOR PICNICS — Many Picnickers Take Advantage of HannaNuttman Park ■» I iA large number of picnickers, I I bickers an I motorists took advant■ago of the opportunities offered by | the now Hanna Nutiman park to jlo cool off utiiler the and oe | some of the ’beautieu of nature on i Memorial Day. The [iark is fast gaining popularI ity as picnic grounds, and as one of I the show places in northern Indiana. Several otit-of-the-eity visitors who have stopped there have said that it can’t be compare 1 to any ; tract of bnd within a 2 o mile i ratlins for the amount of natural ’ scenery untouched by attempts of i cultivation. All the underbrush and dead J wood has been cleared out ny CWA i and state ERA workers. Some of j the barren parts will be planted !with grass seed furnished by the i state. I The partk now may be reached, by I three routes. The best known Is the drive extending from the Arch- i 1 bold Road on the East side of the , i bridge over Second Creek. Another ; way out and somewhat closer is the road which extendi frdm Thirteenth street from tho Homewood addition. The third way is the new I drive from etate road number 224 which begins east of the Catholic I cemetery. All the drives are now open. If ( the state ERA headquarters ap- | proves the project the city of Decatur will furnish stone or cinders I to pave the drives. State ER A funds , would be used un’ler this proposal i I to furnish the labor. 1 , | LOCAL PASTOR AT ASSEMBLY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the assembly adopted a resolution to condemn and subject to discipline members and followers of 1 tiie independent board for i’resbyj terian Foreign Missions. This ! : board was organized recently with- ’ I out consent of the general assent- ■ ; bly and is being led by Dr. Machen | of Philadelphia. It was directed I co “desist forthwith from exercisI ing any ecclesiastical or adminls- < j tratfve functions.’’ i The assembly assailed the pro- i I fit motive of the economic order i and put itself on record as favor- ‘ ing far reaching social changes. ’: It directed a barrage on militarism, especially military training inh
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By HARRISON CARROLL Copyright. 1934, King Features Syndicate, Ina. HOLLYWOOD, Calif. . . — 1 One of the funny mishaps of the week was the stocking hunt that the Hal Roach importation front Den--1 mark, little Lilian Ellis, made Sunda y afternoon I on Wilshire ' Boulevard. 1 She arrived in Hollywood with M jSjmg I runs in her i stockings an d sji spares locked in M “a® trunks that were left be- tjr W hind. So she made the rounds Ig&feA of the exclusive shopping district. rattling 'j and knocking at 1 the doors of the mßwMs’mWMwiw closed shops until a patrolman Lilian investigated. Ellis It took a long time and much broken English for the officer to discover that the girl from Copenhagen wasn't breaking in. merely thought that American shopkeepers slept on the floor above the store as thev do in Denmark. „ . Lilian is now going to English school for dear old Hal Roach studios. One of the surprising things about the examination given prospects for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer s screen training school is that beauty is not at the head of the requirements, is not even listed in the dozen tests applied by the studio before it decides whether the applicant is potential star material. Oliver Hinsdell, the dramatic coach of the school, has a list of questions ho puts before the candidate is taken on. Sitting down with this list before you, you may take your own examination to decide if you have a chance in Hollywood. Here is the Hinsdell quiz: Have you had experience" This to test the acquired poise which comes from meeting people whether behind footlights or a shop counter. Do you like people? This is a necessity to give an inside into all types of character. Have you a photographic mind? Meaning, can you remember what strangers look like, what a group of people are wearing, how a room , looked? I Can you imitate? How far did you go with your I schooling? Wide reading, hiogI raphy preferred, and acquaintance With the cultural arts helps a lot. j Hava you any physical disability? 1
Canadian Quintuplets Pose for First Picture With Their Mother j m \'r '■ -q I - z * • i ' ■ V' " _ . " Eiv’j’ baby girls, born to Mrs. Ovilia Dionne, 26-year-old wife of a French-Canadian farmer, pose for their first picture with their m ’ in a farm shuck near the village of Corbeil, in northein Ontario, Canada, where they were born. The quintuplets together weigh but 1 • pounds 6 < unces at birth. The Dionnes have five other children, the eldest being seven years old. 0
secondary st ’tools and colleges. | An cutstand'u.; work of the assembly was its approve! of plans for union with United Presbyterians; | who withdrew from the church, three centuries ago in Scotland.| If given assent, the union will be-1 come final in 1936 and will involve 1,121 United Presbyterian congregations with 242,996 members. The meeting of the assembly next year will be held at Cincinnati, Ohio. The assembly sent the following telegram to President Roose-' velt: The General Assembly of | the Presbyterian Church in the i U. S. A. in session in Cleveland, respectfully send to you, the' President of the United States, I our greetings and gratefully and | enthusiastically congratulate you upon your courageous leadership in declaring an embargo on sales of munitions destined for guay apd Bolivia, and we assure; you of our whole-hearted support in yonr expressed high hopes that, your noble action may contribute to the re-establishment of peace between those countries.’’ TOKEN PAYMENT OFFERED U. S. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j debt issue, and the responsibility j of making a definite statement re-1 garding default, entirely to the president. It was drafted carefully so that a new case would be presented. The token payment offered is to ■ lie larger -in the diplomatic sense.
They want only normal, healthy folk for pictures Do you have t it or are you after easy money? How is your voice? While you answer that one, Director Hinsdell fists it for timbre and Hepburn qualities. Are you alert to what goes on around you? You have to know the latest dope to stay in the parade. | Can you stand hard work? This is very important. Can you concentrate? You’ll need it to learn lines on the set while they change set-ups. i Do you possess an imaginative mind? Oliver Hinsdell doesn’t expect a perfect score on the quiz, but you’ve | got to answer the majority of the questions correctly to get a chance, i Some of the girls who gave the right answers to these questions are Mary Carlisle, Irene Hervey, I Martha Sleeper, Shirley Ross, Ruth Channing, Muriel Evans and Jean Howard. — Those trick break-away autos you see in RKO-Radio comedies are all built by a man named Will Wrecker. He has one car, held together by ! pins, which can be completely wrecked, engine and all, and be assembled again in running condition in 15 minutes. The D. A.’s office here is checking on a man who has been making I inquiries as to _________ i whether Mae West can raise Kayfe: JF ’4 enough cash to Sep® « pay a $50,000 premium on an annuity policy, IwjK figuring the r e ’ 'X might be some J. connection be- aKt tween this and ag’tKSP' : .j3| i the ’phone and tJkL - letter threats Mac has been t receiving. “ Any one curlous about it may 7.. 7 learn here that Mae couldn’t Mae raise more than Went purse money should her life depend on it. She never cashes her check. Her investment advisors, Murray Ellman, Murray Fed and James Timmony, turn her salary into non- j negotiable insurance 1 policies and bonds, keeping out only enough for I current bills and Mae’s “mad money.” DID YOU KNOW— That Nigel Bruce, in the “Treasure Island” east, is directly de- ; scended from Sir Robert Bruce and will inherit a baronetcy in a few iyears? 1
ins the amount will not be great 'I han the tok m payment made last December, which was $7,500,000 i paid in silver. Tho payment would i clear Britain of a default charge j pending arc-funding conference ! v. hich it asked. MANY PERSONS ARE VISTLMS OVER HOLIDAYS (CONTINUED FROM >»AGE ONE) privates, Byron Newcomb and i Martin McCready. Twelve persons were injured in ihe fail of a Cleveland to Newark plane of United Airways. The 1 pilot was attempting a forced i landing in a fog. Roger Chew. 20, of Mansfie’. 1. ■ ()., and L. W. Kuhn. 20, Shelby, O„ died in the wreck of their i plane at the Mansfield municipal airport. Harry Russell. 86-year-I old pilot, was critically injured. ('apt. Edward J. P. Weatherdon. chief pilot American Airlines, was killed and Pilot Edwin Preston of the same line critically hurt when their plane crashed near Hodkins. 111. Three drownings and a fatal ! automobile accident occurred in ! Minnesota. Gerhard Mueller, 21, ’ .Madison. Minn., drowned at Big j Stone Lake. Alfred C. Blanchard, I 21, Minneapolis, drowned at Wolfaid Lake. John Miadenorf, 15, Wilmot, drowned in Rock River, llrnh’y Peters, ■ 30. Minneapolis, ■ died when his automobile overturned on a curve.
UNITY APPEAL BY PRESIDENT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) purposes on the part of the overwhelming majority. These groups arc those who seek to stir up political animosity or to build politi<al advantage by the distortion of facts; those who. by declining to follow the, rules of the game, ‘ seek to gain an unfair avantage ■ over those who live up to the rules, and those few who still, because they have never been willing to take, an interest in I their fellow Americans, dwell inside of their own narrow spheres and still represent the selfishness of sectionalism which has no i (place in our national life.” SCHOOL CLOSES FRIDAY, JUNE 8 ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) [ of gra. iuatas is 95. • \ reunion for the alumni is held ! each year at the Kirkland high .school. The annual meeting will be held this year on Friday evening. June 1 at the Kirkland school. A pot-luck supper will be served at 7 o'clock and each person is requested to bring his own table service. All graluates are urged to be present. The school this year was 19 teachers and leaders, all tout six of whom are graduates of the Bible .school an 1 most of them are members of the winter Training school. Rev. H. H. Mec.kstroth joined the faculty in 1930. Ont of the school lias grown a leadership training school under the direction of Rev. Eigar Johnston, as dean. DOLLAR WHEAT IS REACHED AT GRAIN MARKET (CONTINUED FROM FACE ONE) state.- was put into effect. The farmers will receive from $4 to S2O each for the cattle, a half million of which are in such condition that they will be slaughtered and burled. The rest either |i CORNS ' F* Will remove your K’ll I corn with one packfl I a 9® or money back. J. Smith Drug Co. -
| will lie butchered to provide food for the needy or sent to fresh j pastures. Simultaneously Gov. Henry Horner of Illinois declared a ’’state of emergency" because of the drought and expressed anxiety over the shortage of milk in metropolitan areas. Coining from a conference of governors, agricultural experts i and federal farm agents in St. Paul, E. W. Sheets, federal drought relief diiector, announced that purchase and slaughter of emaciated and diseased cattle would be started immediately in 1 several states. A surplus relief corporation is to be set up to purchase the cattle at from $i to S2O a head. Sheets estimated that the program would reduce cattle on northwestern farms 20 to 25 per ' cent. Gov. Horner appointed a state drought relief director and petitioned railroads for emergency rates for imputation of fodder for livestock. o Bluffton Man Takes Own Life Wednesday Bluffton, Ind., May 31.—(U.R) —Albert Huffman. SS. World War veteran, committed suicide by inhaling gas in his one-room apartment ’ here yesterday. A hose of a gas heater had been uncupled and the room was tilled with the fumes when he was found. The widow, two sons, Fred and ■Joe. and a daughter, Mrs. Wendell ' rjcui/1 T>> r! ■ O •< o tvzcl is’ olivtrit’zx
Reed, Indianapolis, survive. , Doctor Reports Quintuplets Fine * North Bay. Ont.. May 31. (U.R) ’' Tiie Dionne quintuplets were seen ; ! I today as a live-point major threat against the belief that plural births ‘ “run in the family.’’ 1 Neither side of the family could : claim twins except for one instance
UNDER-HOOD CAR RECORD > installed in a rust-proof : metal holder protected —jgf by a glassine cover. k E. i KI . < ..<•/ I ft When was your clutch bearing last lubricated? When j i was the oil in your crankcase changed? These are just two of the many things you have to remember —details I which we will relieve from your mind. Drive into o station today and let usinstalltheGoodyearbnder-ho card record system on your car. Our attendants v quickly check this record every time you drive into o station. Then you will be sure no important partsofyo ir car are neglected—neglect which causes repair bills. GOODYEAR Satisfaction I J SPECIALIZED W 1 lubrication Points Missed I t 111 We have the most modern equipment 111 available to lubricate your car. We use | the correct lubricant in right amounts at every point. Ask m '” t ■ our lubrication man about car> 1 RrJOr t * le different services in- ~ y/,' . .**“ yJMBjI eluded in our lubrication Job. / r *z’ S.- Your car needs it today. ■ jMiMB J _ . -Ay.) -.Mg? Road Service —Call 262 NBBEhbf 3rd & MADISON I I— I
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. four generations back and indlri” I ly. Dr. A. R. Dafoe, who attend the births of the five b»by gir. * said. A sister of Mrs. Oliva D a ne’s grandmother gave bir twins. The five cables conttnw gain strength today under « new names—Cecile, Yvonne, Emily and Annette. Offer of live cribs, made by Hotel " Sherman. Chicago, was among many offers ot assistance received by the log-cabin family, so amaz- ' ingly increased from six members K to IV In all medical history tlie quin- . triplets are declared to be the llrst " to survive. • DEATH CLAIMS ROBERT POLING (CONTINUED Fltnjt -FAGE ONE) brothers, Charles of Decatur and . John of Portland, and two siaiers, Mrs. Amanda Russel and Margaret «, Poling of Hicksville, Ohio, sur- - ! vive. One son is deceased. Funeral services will be 4j e lcl « Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the homo on Fornax street and burial will be made in the Decatur cemetery. Rev. U. 8. A. „ Bridge of the local Methodist * church will officiate, assisted by ' Rev. H. F. Zierer, pastor of the „ Epworth Methodist Episcopal ! Church of Dayton, Ohio. One Young Robber Is Badly Wounded
Scottsburg. Ind . May 31. —(U.P) — ' Two Louisville, Ky.. youths were held in jail here and a third was . taken to a Louisville hospital suf- * sering gunshot wounds after an al- «. leged attempt to roll a garage. Edward Smith, 21, was wunded J seriously about the head and face • by Ned Johnson, 19, brother of the owner of the garage. Young Johnson said he was awakened by burg- *' lars.
