Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 241, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1934 — Page 5
K PROJECT JniNCENNES! fl lief To >W ■ i n< l oct. 1". <U.R>— K’oncl.cs <>r a group of 20 ■ project sponsored by local ■and the trden.l governKero prepare today to move ■ note' s m Sunset Court. ■ untllits. at! or insecure ■ pre to lie moved from ■ a cluster ot squatter ■ , long the Waitart river at ■, „ ( tl ,e new George Kogers ■national memorial. ■ no.. I' providing better ■ l|ir the families, the project ■ted to serve as a new ex■t m social work and will K bv Pear! City which Ktalscaplng ot the area now beauty of the Clark mem. ■ completed. Sunset Court ■nstst ot a model village ot ■ k houses, tanged on three ■r a landscaped quadrangle, ■t bv 35" B|M- S,X ■ | 1OI1S( . K will contain three ■each and the remaining II Haw two rooms. ■rooms will be 12 by 15 feet ■ a wide porch will cover ■ This Too Good • Your Cough? xnulsi' in mm lie a l»et ter help than ' red. It combine- -even helps inone. i mad,- for quick relief, for safety, d coughs often yield to lesser No one ran tell. No ana knows factor will do most for any cer- i »ugh. So careful people, more and ; are using Creomulaion for ar» that starts. cost is a little more than a single But vour druggist is authorised to ntre it, soil costsnotbingifit fails s ing you qui' k relief. Coughs are r signals, l or safety’s sake, deal dttau m the best wav known, (adv.)
Schafer’s A ANNIVERSARY BLANKET ■■■■ SALE t r w It’s no wonder so many our customers and friends -JZi are buying blankets now even tho it is warm. During this big sale we are selling blankets as low or lower than last year price. Now is the time to prepare for winter. If you do not have the ready cash use our liberal Lay A Way Plan. We do not change one penny extra if you lay them away until you need them. 89c Single Cotton Blankets .... 49c ea. $2.39 72x84 Cotton Doubles .$1.49 pr. $2.59 66x80 Part Wool Doubles $1.84 pr. $2.95 70x80 Part Wool Doubles $2.18 pr. $3.75 72x84 Part Wool Doubles $2.68 pr. $4.75 72x90 Part Wool Doubles $3.49 pr. 72x99 White Sheet Blanket $1.29 ea. $5.95 72x84 PART WOOL whi i e They I Beautiful New DOUBLE BLANKETS Last m n l y N K^Ts n I* I,' 1 ,' beautiful large heavy warm or nr affy blanket is guaranteed to connot less than 25'X wool. Pair I HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
“Prince" Mike Turns to Stage J ;; 1 * "gu«»t" in jail J . The “prince* M, /■"- ? ; ' ■ ¥ ■E7* 4t f / ■ m W /Wr H jfiFWW 1 ■ £7 jOp - ■7 s E 'wO * i * (5 ’J TC - BSSO ■’f*' fit A Wfc W®»a JHB;. if* Ready for a llroll kjijp Harry Gerguson, known on Broadway as “Prince” Michael Romanoff, finally has found a niche for himself along the Great White Way. The “prince”, whom the federal government sought to deport last year, and who has been posing as a foreign aristocrat, is said to be considering >an offer to act the role of a society imposter in a play due for presentation in New York City soon.
the front ot each house and each home will have a modern sanitary unit. „ Water will be drawn from six drilled wells along the sides ot the quadrangle. A Salvation Army chapel will be built on one side of the court, serv-1 ing as a comnfunity center as well ! as a house of worship. Special care will be given chil-i dren in the court and all their , work and play activities will be i supervised by social workers. Rental on homes will be nominal. . probably one dollar per year, spon- | sors of the project say. Only re-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT) WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1934.
strictions are that tenants sign i contract to submT< to supervision of san /ary conditions and con- ' tribute to upkeep of the lawns and Howers. Brick tor all the buildings was supplied by the Clark memorial I commission. Other building mater- ' ' ials were purchased by the Vin- | cennes township relief committee, a semi-official charity body, and .the work was paid for with federal i funds. | Grounds for the project were j provided by the city. Ge* the Habit — Trode at Homa
ARREST TWO ON THEFT CHARGES (CONTINUED FROM FAGE ONE) officer Erman Johnson assisting Sheriff Johnson. Sheriff Johnson stated farmers estimated that more than SI,OOO of wheat, oata, corn and other grains had been stolen from farmers. The sheriff and Roy Schaffer, sheriff if Van Wert county have been working on the case for sometime. The theft (,< the wheat from the Myers' farm was traced through a Herne elevator. The men sold the wheat and divided the money, a little more than SSO. The mon had a large trailer, 9 feet long, 41 Inches wide and SB inches high to haul the grain. It was booked to an auto. A Van Wert woman was a companion of the men when they visited the Myers farm. She has not been arrested, it is believed the men had other accomplices and Investigation is being made by officials. HUGE PROFITS ARE REPORTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ence has been introduced showed that Halsey, Stuart and tomp-rny sold 152,000 shares of Instill utilities and 152,000 shares of Western securities to “d rpa" for $3,500,000. Both companies were Insull utility subsidiaries. Clarence T. Macneille, secretarytreasurer of the "corps” and one of the 17 defendants In the mail fraud trial, ordered the write-up so that the new organisation's books showed a valuation of |30,000000 the government charged. Halsey. Stuart and Company bought stock heavily, it was shown, •rnd the price of a unit offer of one share of preferred and one share of common stock in the new “Corps” fluctuated from a low of S7S to as high as $100.75 in st ck transactions. o PLrYN STUDY OF INDIANA CRIME (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) teered to work in the organization are: Austin Stultz and Mrs. Fred Church, Fort Wayne; Donald El- | liott, Bennett Bobbitt and Cteon I Ellis, Muncie; Milo Feightner, Huntington; John N. Dyer, Vin[cennes; Prof. J. J. Robinson, IndiI ana University; Dr. Charles Beane, Albion; H. C. Jones, Shelbyville; Dr. A. R. Strickler, president ot I Evansville college apd George Sigg. Evansville; Clay Phillips. Henry Perry, W. W. Barhin and Gouls F. I Keifer, Terre Haute, and Mrs. Oliver Starr, Seth Little. Judge Frank Sheehan, Russell Ballard, Nelson Bech. and Mrs. Luella Cox, all ot Lake county. o LABOR MEETING AWAITS REPORT I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) submitted the problem to the floor for open dTScussion. The second test is expected to he more intense. It involves the proposal to organize all employes of a given industry into a single union as opposed to separate orOOOR CHILD /and mt school ■ » By Dr ALDEN G IRELAND I D«-grr#r. fbjntJ and Hrdth fdattn** Nre Dr part wt as ftUn hiincMf School Lunch Important According to a few skeptics, the j old fashioned school lunch eaten I from a paper bag anywhere in the I building or on the grounds is good i enough. On that bas * s 3 dime novel W thriller is good literU ature and the child is justified in hiding * n the attic or the barn to do his read--ng. As a matter of fact, we don’t bel lieve that. Whatever may be our I ! own pleasant memories of the seI cretly read thrillers of our childhood days, we prefer as parents to have our children like good literature. And we do our best to pro- , vide attractive libraries at school and in the community and at least | a shelf or a reading nook in our homes. From food comes the child’s i growth, energy, and strength. He works, studies, and plays on what he eats. On that score alone his nutrition deserves our closest attenI ion. The school lunch is one of three daily meals and therefore becomes significant, as a source of nourishment. For the child’s sake we can’t afford to think of it as merely a “stop gap,” while td* child is away from borne. It isn't just a picnic, any more than going to school can be regarded as a party. The school lunch shrieks its importance. It calls for planning. It demands an attractive place, and the food question deserves just as much serious consideration as any part of the child's school life. 'Next week Dr. Ireland will write about “Learning at Luncheon.”
Supreme Court Re-Convenes in New Building ' ASF ■ >■ j I hl HP". ~zl ; 'I Br.ndei, - Hu(h« 'llujl'r! "in i, lI * $ —HI IH'WW ■ *’ ■ P M „ n Cardoio ■ 1 — ■ " ~ — r JU F a ■ v if L T uL i ' 11 > ML ■ -4ah J|. "la '■ ca til x ‘io x m ■mT Wk ■MlfJu ML Ml Mcßeynolds Van Devanter Butler Roberts Stone Housed in a new building, above, recently com- portant among the various cases up for considers* plcted at the capital, the United States supreme tion are those involving the constitutionality of court has re-convencd to consider appeals for President Roosevelt’s National Recovery act Chief | rulings on numerous constitutional questions. Im- justice of the court is Charles E. Hughes. *
ganlzations ot the craftsmen in the industry. With only three more days remaining under the original convention schedule, leaders were anxious to dispose of the controversy between the horizontal and vertical type unions and also to clear the decks of two other outstanding dis-putes—-John L. Lewis' proposal to enlarge the executive council from 11 to 2K members and the schism in tlie building trades department. Both were ready for submission to the delegates when the opporI tunity is presented. o THINK HIGHER PRICE LEVELS ARE NECESSARY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9yE) ! havf brought the total value of the country’s assets slightly above the total of the liabilities. It was pointed out that the President never has set the 1926 average level as the administration's arbitrary price goal. He feels that for some commodities 1926 prices were satisfactory but that does not apply to all. In the case of farm commodities for instance, the 1909-14 average has
THE I WILD DUCK HAS NO HOME ■ HAVE you ever felt a sudden leaping of the heart when ducks come rushing through the wrack of a northeast storm? ... or a strange yearning at the sound of their babbling high against the Autumn moon? Moving southward ... moving to new feeding grounds ... free in the vast spaces that stretch from the Arctic to the Equatorial Zone! But the wild duck has no home. And your instinctive feeling at the sound of his rushing movement is not a desire to follow him away as it is to bag him ... to bring him to pot, as the keen hunger of autumn days warns you the time has come to prepare for Winter. The wild duck is not so free as man. Hunted from marshland and bay, he is driven from one precarious resting place to another, forever on the move, forever in danger. In Autumn the instinct of man is to dig in. It is primitive instinct, for the chief enemies of man are the forces of nature. He survives only because he is foresighted. He has the ability and the means to look ahead and prepare for storms. Instead of being forced forth to search the world for the things we need, the world brings us its best offerings. Advertisements provide civilization’s most popular and effective means of presenting the world’s best products to you at most reasonable cost. I'lH 1
i i been set as the goal under the, AAA ait. | The President is especially interested in preventing great fluctuations in prices over a period of years. Some commodities have varied from 500 and even up I to 1,000 per cent in the last 14 years. The President feels that such fluctuations make it very difficult to plan for the future, and he hopes to be able to keep fluctuations within reasonable limits when the stili-to-be-deter-rnined price goal is reached. HARTFORD CITY HEARS MINTON (CONTINUED FROM PAGF ONE) j en, said “attempts of the stand pat-1 ters to drag the constitution of the j United States into the present > poitical campaign is silly to those I who have read the documept itsself.” An appeal to rebuke “McNuttism in Indiana” was made in an address by James M. Tucker. Salem attorney, state chairman of the Indiana young Republicans club, at Princeton. "No governor ever entered the statehouse with a greater oppor-
[ tunity to serve the needs of the I people of our slate, yet 1 hoi>e no I governor ever leaves the statehouse with a record of betrayal ot trust comparable with that of Governor McNutt,” Tucker declared. Raymond 8. Springer. Connersville, Republican candidate for governor in 1932. charged that the state is “going into the red at the rate of a dollar a minute,” in an address at Farmland. “The state is spending more than it is collecting and the struggling taxpayers are unable to pay their taxes on their homes and farms,” Springer said. 0 DICKINSON AND RICHBERG TALK ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | versity with his answer to Dick in | I son's statement that relief adminis- j trators are whispering to benetici-1 aries: “don't shoot Santa Claus in I November.” “I am glad to hear." he said, facing the senator, “that the Republican party is going through one election, at least, without bribing the voters.” Dickinson Is cnairman of the Republican senatorial campaign committee.
Page Five
THOUSANDS HEAR SECY. WALLACE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) may be forthcoming at the next session of congress was dropped when the secretary pointed out the need for a new and more powerful credit organization to "protect the consumer from drought and the farmer from surplus.” President Roosevelt, Secretary Wallace said of the nation's chief executive, knows a vast deal more about agriculture than Is commonly believed. Mistakes have been made in the corn-hog control program in various Instances, Wallace admitted, but said it was amazing now few errors have occurred considering Its magniture. Richard Gallatas Is Under Arrest Washington, Oct. W -'(UP)— Arrest of Richard T. Gallatas, "hunted for more than a year f r alleged complicity in the Kansas City Union station massacre was announced today by the justice department. 'Gallatas was seized by federal agents in New Orleans September 22, the department said. IHe was taken to Kansas City and will be arraigned t< day, on a charge of conspiracy to deliver an escaped federal prisoner. The attempt to deliver the prisoner, Frank Nash, resulted in assissination of four law enforcement officers in Kansas City on June 17, 1933.
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