Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 13 August 1934 — Page 5
■Sechanges I III 60OK LIST r“ n ’,un.«l Today K*’"' lIV Mip.H int.-ndent ; K" 4 .-■■■.t;il .naw i " ia,le ” y i ■»< ~.,,1,. arithmetic ;; However ■<; ..re written tor two ■ "' lf gra< l" S 11 retain the old one* ■** tnr.l lift!' •"’ ,l -“-'enth K: fining with the .935 a HI he re.plae.Ml gI, !'■ piif' lta-sed at a MX" , : . L .' . s hooks are, K"?. ~w th.’ -tor" lleal ' the '! !f”ienee oh the! '""tiey ie then re- I K. . hy companies. , h„ok- ho not have | K ~ s-ohM .’on.i'-on- All that to ., in that they ran he rec-: *.4 the ones as.si l*st year. their pri..’ H liUst • v '' ars are brought in ate "UhfldKwl*. ■ ’ ' I ,Ptail ■ rrn’s W'h*"*’' 48 cento; K ', :£ ,a vie • a ’ Ath grade K,, < relit.-. •' aange »;!• cents; KZmdc Hitlrtn-tr. retail 51’ K«cbange t. cents; fifth: K r ■ ’ ’ ,l ’ n '- s - <-V | KL, t - ~ ■■ ’ ”'ll grade I retail 7.7 r ents, ex-1 KL a <?->>■ grad” lit-, retail. ' ‘ nt 1 -, exchange ■ ttittj.' ami grade litera ' K reUil vi ■ V liatige 69 Kit book fat is: ■ First Grade and Study first ReadKami i’rmier . embined $ .58 Kr and Baker Primer .50 i Pencil No. 2. .05 Kter Sei' "'’th •*» ■ Second Grade Kv and Study Second Read- ■ H. Kier «r IWr Se. end Reader .58 Kethiag 1,0 32 ; ■ Third Grade KniOl’d K ' a,l ‘ rs -"’.‘i : English Book I . .68 ’ Kaon .The Health Game .65 1 Ktai 4 I’ra.'i.’e ArithineHbr KfUnd History Stories (IndKu Edition» .65 I Kall Speller. ' miplete. . .48 Ktlwn's First Lesson in I ■elling Tablet iSame as last Keari - B Fourth Grade Ky Fourth Re.nl. r . .67 EngUsh. Book I .. .68 ■tali Spiller templet.’ .18 Kvt-Vpton Arithmetic. ■M i ■ding Tablet (same as last ■ « M Essentials of Geog■phy 1.26 ■time 4 Health. Book 1. . .65 ■tai and Founders . .S 3 I H Fifth Grade ■ely Fifth Reader 67 ' ■Olll Speller. Complete 48 j ■r English. Book II . .. .72 I ■tan *• Practice Arithtne- ■. Book II 51 ' ■ t JI Geography. Book 1 . 1.26 i ■ien- 4 Health. Book 1 . .65 ■ Early Ancestors 85 ■limy Tablet (Same as last ■ear i feting Book . _ A .„ Sixth Grade ply Reader . .67 Kill Speller. Complete .48 F English. Book II 72 Wer-Upton Arithmetic, Book 11 .. x , 4 M. Geography 1.76 ; piology 4 Hygiene. Book 2 .91 X Founding of America .. .87 “ ,!S£ Tablet (Same as last mH liting Book i iiiiiiiiiX Seventh Graefe terature for 7th Grade S 2
New Deal West Virginia Issue J ! IR 1 j w Ijß ■•* I ” F * ; f JMI - J ihwM» 0 ‘ «.«' 'fc g&lui-. ~ '*s*<!> *Bf*§l* .*■ - y• • ■ w . Henry D. Hatfield Ru.h D. Holt by a powerful West Virginia labor vote, 29-year-old Rush &>!t, shown at right above, is the Democratic nominee for United I t ' e, , ifßl “ or ln ej t Virginia, opposing Senator Henry D. HatI Th. eft ’ renorainated b y Fepublicans at the August primaries. | —t New Deal is a clear-cut issue for the November election.
Militia in Last 18 Months Sets Duty Record
Militia in Last 18 Months Sets Duty Record 39V k L Ki .L’ Guardsmen during the Toledo strike. E| ’▼ Of* < *• X ' a I Iks mBMi ’* W fcl 4 ? v *• 'E *** V' 4 ShLir ICvIL Xwfes E? ■V . <«iOaWWd SfflhiiWTOmMft I'lWm i wair : M Oklahoma’s ’’boys” waiting ftjH - Youthful militia machine gunners in Minneapolis. gate crasher*. - idBB Gen. George ■ jl Bd&g IA E. Leach rmBHMMB * fax’ J I s k Waff* * r A few of the 5,000 California guardtmen '
America’s,National Guard 186,000 strong, drawn from the 48 states has become a force ready for •ny emergency, declares Maj. Gen. George E. Leach, chief of the U. S. bureau controlling its federal setup. Last year, the corps received more than $35,000,000 in funds to carry on its military
| McCall Speller, Complete 18 I i Problem & Practice Arithmetic, Book 3 57 Our English Book 3 86 ! B. * M. Geography, Book 2 1.76 ' Elementary American History 1.18 I , Farm Projects it Problems 1.26 i Elementary Home economics 1.19 Physiology Ah Hygiene, Book 2 .91 i Spelling Tablet (Same as last year, — I Citizenship Through Problems Eighth Grade Literature Sth Grade SB 1 McCall Speller, Complete .18 ! Strayer-Upton Arithmetic, Book 3 75 I Our English, Book 3 . .S 6 •‘Physiology it Hygiene, Book 2 .91 . Elementary American History 1.48 I Farm Projects and Problems 1.26 , Elementary Home Economics 1.19 'citizenship Through Problems 1.44 I Spelling Tablet (Same as last , year) ( l Writing Book DEATH CLAIMS EMMA ECKROTE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock at the Waldo Eckrote home, j 73? Mercer avenue, and at 2 okilock ’at the First Evangelical Chuffch. i Rev. M. W. Sundermann will offi- ' ciate. Burial will be made in the , Decatur cemetery. The body will be removed to the Eckrote home Tuesday afternoon from the S. E. Black funeral home, and may be viewed, after 7 o'clock Tuesday night. PARTY REACHES ADMIRAL BYRD ■ (CONTINUED FROM. PAGE ONE) miles away a light Byrd had put out on a pole atop his shack as a signal. He himself was on top of the hut. level with the snow, to greet the three rescuers, and he said as soon as they approached:
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1934.
- -w ——F »wr Sgy g 4 training. Army officials reported that the had seen more active emergency service duringthe past 18 months, than in an average 15-yt>ar period. Recent strikes and political movps have accounted for the numeroua Umaa martial law has been invoked.
Mrs. Roosevelt Greets Elliott ! y * * F* iMSWW *' su v4A' ‘‘ v < iK I . S ' ' ■ Bl r *. L W -i The first picture of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt with her son Elliott and his wife, is shown above. The president's wife met her son and 1 1 daughter-in-law in Chicago, where they are shown above, at the railway station.
"Hello, fellows. Come on down and get warm. I have some hot ) soup for you.” Poulter after a brief examina-1 ' tion reported that though Byrd i was weak there were no signs of. •scurvy which develops through ’ insufficiently balanced diet. Byrd reported that the temper-1 ' ature at his shack reached as low ' as 80 degrees below zero, believed I , a record for Antarctica. o — Chances Take Another Chance New Comerstown, Mar-j ried life is a "chance." Freeman Chance, 42, and Lila Chance, 37, j took the chance several years ago. I Later they were divorced. Now j they have returned home after, getting another marriage license at Wheeling. W. Va., have decided 1 to take the chance again. Church Stone Hallows Rite — Cleveland- (UP) —A fragment of stone from St. Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh. Scotland, was deposited bt n ath the JVilliamson chancel of the Chur h of the Covenant when the 50th anniversary of the Second Presbyterian Church, here was celebrated. Mias Elizabeth Dalrymple Gourlay donated the relics, from the'church of her childhood. o— r Thousands at German Fete I'.kron. 0., —(UP) —A parade of members of Akron. O’a German colony, attired in historical costumes representing the different territories of their fatherland, was a high spot of the Germany Day celebration held near Copley. O. Thousand of Germans from all northern Ohio gathered for the aiffair. Four large singing societies, sang folk songs individually and in a massed chorus. o Get the Habit — Trade at Home
SPORTSMAN IS SLAIN IN HOME (CONTINUED FROM PAGF ONE) been threatened with bodily ha-m I unless he sold only a certain | brand of ale at his night club, it 1 was understood that Siegel, a fear- . less 200 pounder, had had a fist 1 fight with tlie matters of the threat. Siegel began his ring career 20 i years ago as an amateur. Overi seas, during the war. he won the welterweight championship of the 82d division. o Used Boat On Main Street Robinson. III.— tU.R) —Heavy rains stopped traffic here, but it did not ; stop Ned Hippensteel from going ! down the street. He got out his ! beat an dpaddled down one of the main thoroughfares. — Adds to Tennis Courts Austin. Tex.—(U.R) —A network of approximately 60 tennis courts will be ready for University of Texas players with the completion next fall of 20 new concrete courts on an intramural field. Tennis Coach D. A. Pennick has supplied tennis with many nationally known stars during his regime here. 0 State Given Old Flag Design Austin, Tex. —(UP)—rin original water color design once proposed for the flag of the old Southern Confederacy has 'been acquired by Wrenn Library, University of Texas. from Madame De Clouet of Lafayette, La. The design was made by S. M. Knight of New Orleans. It was one of many submitted to the committee on the. selection of a national flag in May 1861 More than 120 of those designs have been preserved in the Library of Con,
Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months Sunday, August 19 Jbiudeman rminlon, Henry Bloemker farm, Preibl* township. Dellinger family reusfos, Sunset Park. (Salem M. E. Chureh Home Coming, church. Blue Creek township. Weldy family fourth annual reunion, at the home <rf Mr. and Mrs. Elton Ruprfght, three miles north and miles west <rf Preble. Hackman - Kortenbnr families, Lake Side Park, Fort Wayne. Nineteenth annual reunion of LelniensteU-Martin families, Mrs. George Martin home, 1!4 miles south of Peterson. Brentlinger reunion, Legion -Memorial Park, Decatur. The Crist reunion will be held Fort Wayne. Saringer Brandy»berry rr-unfon, J. N. Burtthead home 1% miles went of Monroe. McGill reunion, Sunset Park, near Decatur, rain or shine. Butler family reunion, Sunset Park, Deratur. Smith reunion, Sunset park, rain or shine. Sunday August 2# Fifteenth annual Davfwon reunion, Clem Gibson home, 1 mile west of Kingsland. Seventh annual Johnson family reunion. Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Hakes reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Droll family reunion, Sunset Park. Schnepp and Manley reunion, Sunday, September 2 ißhinger family reunion. Sunset Park, east of Deeatur. Urick reunion. Sunset Part. Sunset Park, rain or shine. Kelly reunion, Laird grove, south of Convoy, Ohio. Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 3 Sixteenth annual Starter reunion Legion Memorial Park. Decatur. Lenhart reunion, Sunset park, Decatur. Harper family reunion. Sunset Park. Sunday, September 9 Bowman family reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. o SEVEN KILLED IN ACCIDENTS OVER WEEKEND (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) killed when hi rode his motorcycle out of a yard into the path of an automobile on state road 24. in Goodland. Passengers in the automobile, Donald Butler, 24, Columbus. Harry Bailey, 25. Indianapolis, and Clifford Gillette. 26. members of an orchestra en route to Sooth Bend were unhurt. One lineman was killed and ancther was injured seriously when a Peru city light department truck overturned. Clifford Arthur.
Italian Princess Pawn in Hapsburg Restoration?
Mr ; | # | w m iL. / X— x j / / it ■' I Ki -I ‘ Vivi, A Mfll
Europe expects an early announcement of the engagement of Princess Marie, youngest daughter of the King and Queen of Italy, to Archduke Otto, claimant to the vacant throne of Austria. The marriage, if culminated, might insure Italian sup-
24. died in a hospital. Physicians raid Claude Robertson, 32, may recover. Two women were Injured critically at Kokomo when run down by an automobile while en route home from church. Miss Catherine McHale, 36. suffered a skull injury, a broken leg and possible internal injuries. Mrs. Adolph Bezy. 68. Charleroi, Pa., her rompanion, suffered a skull fracture and fracture of both legs. Six persons were injured in a collision at an Indianapolis intersection. None was believed ser- > lous. The victims included Zoe ’ Ann Miller. 6. Mrs. Lullua Miller. 49, and Lawrence Warrick. 49, all j of Dayton, O. SPANISH PRINCE DIES IN WRECK (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ing yesterday morning from Villach to Poertschareh when the crash occurred. Gonzalo was removed to the Villa Born at Portslehach, in Carinthia, the southern province of the Italian border, which was the center for heavy fighting in the recent Nazi revolt. The bicyclist for whom Gonzalo died was Baron Richard Neumann. He was said to have told police he was riding on the wrong side of the road. It was understood that the queen. Gonzalo's sisters, Beatrice and Maria Christina, were at the prince's bedside when he died. It was said that he died without medical attendance, because his in-
The Changeless Cycle SPRING is gone. Summer is fading. But their return is as inevitable as tomorrow’s dawn. Next year they will be back again. Then it will he the same changeless cycle. . . . Same April showers and hurst of May flowers. Same old lawn mowing. Same donning of warm-weather togs. Same craving of new summer furniture. Same exciting vacation planning. Same hundred and one needs and longings. t . tWhy not provide for such future certainties when the advantages are so much in your favor? Buying in August and September what you are going to need or want in June carries the wisdom of Solomon. Read the advertisements in this newspaper and see. Match lor the end-of-season sales. Compare the values with those of the season’s opening. Prices are lower because merchants would rather clear out surplus stocks at bargain prices than carry them over until next season. So—what’ll it be? ... For next summer’s lawn, a premium-quality mower at an ordinary-quality price. That long-desired rattan suite for the sun-porch. Some rustic furniture. Awnings. A new refrigerator at an irrestible price. Day by day, you’ll find them all in the advertisements in this newspaper. The raincoat which last Spring seemed a hit high. Two or thre linen suits at a genuine bargain-to he hung away for next summer’s torrid waves. A money-saving buy of summer underwear, pajamas, shirts, ties, knickers, sport shoes and stockings.
port in the planned restoration of the Hapsburg monarchy in Austria. Princess Marie is hera shown in her latest photo and as a child. She >• 19 and Archduke Otto recently celebrated hi». twentf-iecond birthday.
juries were so slight to a normal youth and the preesnee of hemophilia, from which his eldest broth-, er always has suffered, was not I suspected. A doctor was summon ; ed but he arrived too late. (£ o 1 ! FARLEY SPEAKS AT STAG PICNIC (CONTINUED FROM PA?? ' known". The picnic w« largely attended. In addition to the Moose, members | of the Decatur Elks and Adame I Post of the American Legion atI tended. A lunch was served at noon and sipeaking programs were broadcast through the ainplfying system.
Public Auction REAL ESTATE We will sell to the highest bidder without reserve. Sale on the premises, at 815 North sth st.. Decatur, Ind., on MONDAY, August 20th at 6:45 P. M. The following described real estate: Lot 66x132 ft; 8 room semimodern house. Excellent location. Can be made a very fine home with just a little expense. Don't fail to look this property over, then attend the sale. It goes to the highest bidder. TERMS—I-3 cash, 1-3 in 6 months, 1-3 in 9 months. .John and Edith E. Singleton, owners Sold by Roy S. Johnson, auct.
Page Five
Bantam Crows Like Rooster Jerome, Idaho.—(U.R)- Mrs. W. P. Box owns a 12-year-old bantam hen. Since ceasing to lay eggs two years ago, the hen greets the dawn each morning with rooster-like crows ami spends the rest of the day keeping a nest warm. , o Get the Hantt — Trade at Home DON'T SLEEP ON I-EKI’ SIDE—AFFECTS HEART If stomach GAS prevents sleeping on right side try Adlerika. One dose brings out poisons and relieves gas pressing on heart so you sleep soundly all night. B. J. Smith Drug Co.
