Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 26 October 1934 — Page 4

Page Four

- DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT Published WR a THE Every Eve- Vgy DECATI It ning Except DEMOCRAT Sunday by tCL CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Peat Office as Second Class Matter. J. H. Heller ... President A. R. Holthouse, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies I .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrierls.oo One month, by mail .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail3.oo One year, at office3.oo Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere 53.50 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. A glorious day for a happy birthday. Hear John A. M. Adair at. the court house tonight. Little Gloria Vanderbilt prefers the company of her aunt to that of her mother and the court may decide in her favor. No wonder there are so many broken romances in the lives of the extremely wealthy. Frank N Bellgrano. Jr., young banker of San Francisco is the new national commander of the American Legiop. He looks like a man of energy and ability and will no doubt give leadership to the post he holds. The New Deal parade will be one of the features in connection ' with the Democratic rally to be held here Monday afternoon when Sjiermau Minton, candidate for Chi ted States senator speaks at the court house Join the crowd. The man who bought the sh year i lease on the Meyer-Kiser bank! building in Indianapolis for 505.30, stands in line to make a! handspme profit some day-. The I bnildiiig is one of the most modern structures in Washington street and cost about a million dollars to build. It will no doubt be rented to advantage and ten years from now the lease will bring a big. price- I Government can't do everything ia bringing about recovery. President Roosevelt in his talk to the bankers indicated the way, in Rooseveltian style as follows. "The thne is ripe for an alliance of all forces intent upon the business of recovery. In such an alliance will be found business and banking, agriculture anti industry, and labor and capital. What an all-American team that is.’ Let's all do our part, it's been done in Decatur. President Roosevelt's speech to the bankers was one of the greatest ever made by an American pbesident. Mr. Roosevelt clearly proved his ability of leadership and Ms fine understanding of government and its purpose. He said, “Government by the necessity of things must be the leader, must be the judge of the conflicting interests of all groups in the community, including bankers. The government is the outward expression of the common life of all citizens." As the campaign advances, charges and countercharges are hurled with increasing intensity by opposing campaign orators. This is not always done with due regard to either their truthfulness or propriety. A limited amount of such billingsgate can be endured by a patient people and charged to practice hallowed by custom. The administrations —both national and state — offer proper subjects of criticism- Such criticism should

be welcomed. However, charges which are unsubstantiated and which directly reflect upon the integrity of the governor of the state j, should be accorded the contempt which they arouse. No one know-1 Ing Gov. McNutt will give them the! 1 slightest credence. — Indainapolis V News. , -- . High praise for the successful 1 efforts of the state administration in Indiana in keeping the public ! schools open full time and the ’ teachers paid In full during the last j school year has been voiced by j ) federal educational officials. They ' pointed out that the Hoosier stale I I had cared for the schools, through new tax forms, in such a manner! that federal aid actually wus re. fused tn January of last year. I While more than half of the states' were operatic their schools on a

part-time basis, leaving teachers j unpaid and appealing for more federal funds. Indiana stood as the l outstanding example of fine accomplishment. it was asserted De-1 partment statistics revealed that Hoosier public school teachers not only were paid but that salary cuts i were far less than in the majority! of states. Average salary of teachers In Indiana lu 1933 was given as f 1.291. In lowa, a state of aim-! liar resources, it dropped to 31,096. j it was pointed out. ANNIVERSARY OF THE PANIC: — Today is the fifth anniversary of the panic of 1929. Although the stock market had been greatly dis-I ordered the day before aud al > though the heaviest stock exchange ! declines and the largest sales ever recorded occurred five days later, the psychology of the occasion, the helpless liquidation, the commun-j ity's sudden realization of the truth! on Thursday, October 24. marked I that as the traditional “panic day.' j The crash had probably been more i violent, the shrinkage of values on the stock exchange more severe,' than had been witnessed in any i . financial panic for a century or. | mere. But the larger meaning of 1 the stock exchange collapse was i certainly not then understood. The fact which was immediately I recognized, that the scope of panic | reaction was closely proportioned to the extravagance of the preceding advance, occasioned general belief that the whole occurrence p

INDO-VIN ENDS MANY FORMS OF HEALTH TROUBLE

New Medicine Mixes With Sufferers’ Foods and Goes i To Very Source of Com- ■ mon Ailments; A “Bless- ! ing” to Those Afflicted With Stomach Trouble. Weak Kidneys, Nervousness and General Rundown Conditions. Men and women in ail walks of life ar* visiting the Hoitliouae Drug J*tore here in Decatur. to learn of the new, scientific medicine, called I Indo-Vin. which mixes with the sufferers' own food and is helping peop- i le in this vicinity who had NEVER! BEEN really helped before by ANY medicine. How It Acts Taken shortly after meals, IndoVin works with the food in one’s stomtttcl.. thus throwing off the poisons that foster stomach troubles and permitting the liver and kidneys to function properly. It contains a combination of 22 medicinal extracts from natural plants found in no other known formula. By helping Nature it is vastly more effective than previously known medicines and g >- » es to the very source of common ailments It has astounded druggist l ' and public alike here in Decatur and hundreds claim it has been a l>lessi ing" to their health. Actual Cases: •‘One of the first cases for which , Indo-Vin was used was kidney tr ouble—getting up frequently at nights. ? The man who took it came ba. k the third day and said he had slept alt f through the previous night. We learned afterward that he nad been ■ doctoring over ten years for his trouble. In another case a man was “ crippled with rheumatism and deranged kidney* He hadn t left the s vicinity of his home for two years. . He completed a feu’ weeks’ treat--1 ment with Indo-Vin and said he I walked a distance of nearly a trtile. * This, of course, was three weeks . after he completed the treatment. J Thus, it was determined that IndoR vin should do wonders for neuritis. and one lady who had tried nearly rt everything for thfe* affliction said that five bottles of Indo-Vin had f completely ended every ache and pain She had prevfoutfly Uken 1 mineral baths, electric treatments and medicine upon medicine without

—*- - «• i was merely a stock market affair. I It waa understood at once that the heavy penalty had been invited by the madness of nation-wide specie lation, the recklessness of “corn- ' pany promotion,’’ the rise of brok- ! era’ loans from 34.400,000.000 in 1928 to $8,500,000,000 in October, 1929. But It entered the heads of very few men. even of those with a background of experience, that the stock exchange crisis was to be the forerunner of an almost equally unprecedented reaction in commodity prices, business profits and i national prosperity. — New York Times. ——o ♦ ft Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the Tact Questions printed on Page Two.

i 1. Local post misters in certain towns and cities. 1 2. English philosopher. 3. The Italian anarchist Santo- > Caserio. 4. South Dakota. 5. Johannes Gutenberg. 6. British India. 7. Examination of a boiy to d ter- ! mine the cause of death. 8. Sulgrave Manor. 9. Madame Roland on her way to the guillotine. Nov. 9. 1793. It). Greek mathematician. astranoI mer, and .philosopher, o Household Scrapbook —by— ROBERTA LEE ♦ * Black Stockings (Black stockings will not lose j their color and have that greenish I tinge if a teaspoon of strong vinegar is placed in the last rinse water. Tough Fowl If.one suspects the fowl of being tough add a pinch of baking soda to the water. Combs When purchasing o -comb always select one with blunt teeth A c mb with eharp teeth breaks and tears the hair. Hot Water Bottles Wash the hot water bottle every l two months with water, to which a little ammonia or sod>i ha; b“eu I added, and it will last mu h longer. * TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File Oct 26 - Germans and Allies are in a fierce and bloody deadlock. Hon. J-ohn C. Moran speaks on political issues to large crowd at the court house. Miss Irene Garard is a stenographer at the Erwin law offices. Drug stores agree to close at 8 P. M. each evening except Satur-

s> Prp * G. H. MOSBY Originator of Indo-Vin ■ ■ relief. All of these are actual ases < and ran be verified. ’’Another woman was treated with - Indo-Vin for stoma< h trouble. She i said in five j ears ah* had spent sev- - era! thousand dollars trying to re- - gain her health. She had been in sj bed three days out of five, but short 1 ly after ehe started with Indo-Vin she could eat heartly of many things she hadn’t dared to eat before. Her food agreed with her and she continued with Indo-Vin about six weeks. She < ame bark and said she i felt ten years younger, and her appearance certainly showed it. One .' lady stated the medicine did her _ more good than two years of spe< iHI , dieting: the took Indo-Vin for ' nervousness and general rundown ~ i condition.” . J When Indo-Vin is taken into the human system, ea« te of its natural extracts has a certain duty to per- * form on the functionary organs < stomach, liver, kidneys and howels) ‘ and the cleansing and invigorating 2 of these organs is what brings such , amazing relief and new feeling of a health. . While It is being introduced in Decatur every suffering person can .' take this medicine at the small cost v of only a few cents a day, for it is not expensive. d J ludo-% in is now being sold here in Decatur at The Holfhotise Drug Mor» s and by all Rood druggists iu the it| nearby town*.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1931.

Speaks Here Tonight B Li r A '•) 7 ' ■ w <■•••• 9 • '*■ r ' W ▼/ ■ John A. M. Adair, formerly of Portland and a former Congressman frost the old Eighth district, will speak at the court house at 8 o'clock tonight. The public is invited to hear him. C. J. Lun will preside at the meeting.

days until April Ist. Johnny Ruaseli lofts a finger in! the engine at the city water iplant. Eugene Runyon ill with grippe. Mrs. Fred Engle and children re 1 turn from u two weeks visit at i Rockford. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Clayaon Carrol! I home from wedding trip through j east. L. C. Waring returns from a moose hunt iu Brunswick, Canada, i Mrs. Alice Walsh of Fort Wayne is visiting here. Mrs. J. S. Bowers and son. Wil-j Ham. enjoying a day at Rome City.! Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE Q. What is the correct way f r a I man to spealk to a girl whom he | meets on the street? ■ A. The man should wait for the 1 girl to speak first, then he should bow sligh’ly, raising his hat at th same time, using th hand farthest from the girl. q. When giving a dinner, or ett-| tertainment of any kind, in tie's! home, should one invite a person! who has never called? A. No. Q. Is it Incorrect to say. ‘‘After, having read the book"? A. The word after is redundant: omit it. Say. “Having read the l book."

‘Burton's’ Quality Inner Spring MATTRESS Vv* * ’.*F \ Vr *, <4 |j g W tt A Regular §25.00 Value : $15.00 :j HE A VIL Y PADDED WITH NEW t! CLEAN COTION — Securely Tufted. Beautiful Extra Strong Art Ticking Patterns. r A Very Little Down — A Little Each Month will buy one of these Innerspring • Mattresses. Furniture Dept. 2nd Floor. “ HARDWARE ftod HOME FURNISHINGS

i/ncts _ J ill C MARLEX saysi BY CHARLEY o2ANT Some folks git a lot o' credit ' i who really need a lot o' cash. i ’Taint long after a feller lets ' 1 up until he's let out. And after a feller gives in it's | a lot harder t' carry on. — Careers are easy t’ plan and | : dern hard t’ build. — It never pays t* git mooney | ! over money. — Yep. a feller sure has t' watch 1 his step when he skips. o 1 f | CARD OF THANKS In this manner we desire to ex- | ;iress our thanks and appreciation I to our many friends and neighliors 'for their expressions of sympathy, I tloral offerings and assistance rend, jered us during the sickness and death of our father, William Brien- • er. The Brienar Children. I Get the Habit — Trade a*. Home

ISLIGTH CHANCE 1 OF EARLY CASH BONUS PAYMENT (CONTINUED FROM FAt.K ONR> I The house consequently passed I the Patman bonus bill overwhelmingly in deference to the demands of veteran voters. When tile measure reached the senate, pressure from the White House was brought to bear. The bill languished n a pigeon hole of the finance committee until the lust hectic days of the session. Then it was brought to the floor and defeated. leaders knew that Mr. Roosevelt's veto hung over their heads This year the bonus Is not nearly so important a political issue. With elections over and legislt | rs safely in tlielr seats for another term, there ate expected to be fewer bonus votes merely for the sake of political expediency. Convention Ends Miami. Fla.. Oct. 26- (UP) — American Legion members returned to their home today, confident the government soon would pay off an adjusted compensation certifications 10 years in advance of expiration. The ia-gionnaires voted 957 to 183 for immediate payment at the concluding session of their annual convention yesterday. T!:e vote was considered an order to the Legton’s Washington lobby to work for fulfillment of the organ- ■ ization's will. Frank N. Belgrano, Jr., San Francisco barker, and new national commander, pledged himself to carry oat convention mandates.

SAY NEW DEAL LOSING CASTE [CONTINUED FROM FAnB ONE) to will the Republican senate seats now occupied by Cutting. N M.. Fi ss. 0.. Hatfield, W. Va.. Kean, N. J.. I’atterson. Mo. and Goidsl>orough. Md. Senator Henrik Shipstead, farmer.labor. Minn., is a possible casualty. If Democrats can pick up four seats they will possess the coveted two-third majority alCC C ( OLDS D u M w FEVER Liquid-Tablet* firwt «la> HEADACHES *>alvr-N<»«e Hnijis is: 3B ntisntCM

CORN yoirchokiß Standard Quality. 1 lb. 4 oz. No. 2 Can I • |! TOMATOES ° CASS I —— tomato juice \ /Hfll 1 IN EAI I LL Country Club. Pure, Rich — 24 oz. Can t/V I Country Club— Choice —. ■ Slices in heavy,vr.p DCAO ££ 2 1 lb. 1 I OZ. |1 n ■ LflO Sweet — Tender £ CANS fcVvfl No. 2' 2 Cans 41 C 1 11 — JEWEL COFFEE 91 z. I t DI?I) Smooth and Fragrant 2«L(. 417 IT 9* I K* *bi BREAD 24 iz. Twin Sliced Q lAItK ■ ipEP J?’" LO.F Devils I ;< < ereal, ! kg. Country Club — Oven Fresh i| 12c SOAP P&G - G (iian “ iars 25c| FRUIT COCKTAIL 2 25<* nnn OA.I Country Club—Diced choice quality fruits H It OvC TWINKLE— Gelatin Insert A Pkgs. 1 Q 21 lb - Sack Six Fruit Flaxors and Unflavored. 4 XtJ U Tested Quality COCOA 17 f FLOUR 81C Full Rich Flavor. 2 lb. Box AI V- Avindale Quality for all Baking 24 Pound Sack CH IPSO QQ/» PLUMS 27C I 2 Large Packages . DOC Fine Quality in Syrup. 2 Can: «• IVORY SOAP ’ r ~ SALMON 25C BAR OC Alaska Pink. 2 Cans *■ SEMINOLE TUNA FISH 25C Bathroom Tissue— 4 Rolls MtlC Van Camps. 2 Cans ** J DeiiciousAPPLES = 22c CELERY 1 SWEET POTATOES 19C Home Grown. 3 Stalks . AW, Virginia Jerseys. 6 lbs. HEAD LETTUCE 1 POTATOES 95C California Icebergs . 2 heads AlzV S. No. 1, sand grown. 98 lb. Bag ENDIVE IKp CABBAGE 49C Home Grown, well bleached. 2 lbs. ADV, f. or Kraut, solid heads. 50 lb. Grapes 1 2 lbs 15j

1 though it would not be new deal control by that margin. Among! i the Democratic membership are i several senators whose support of administration policy Is uncertain. ! Senator Arthur Robinson, It. ! Ind., is in a close and uncertain ■ race against Sherman Minton, i Ik'tntxrat. Tlte only Democratic senator in trouble ia Joseph 0. O’i Mahoney who was named last ■ session to a Wyoming vacancy.

Specials for Satori Bulk Lard 2 lbs.for2.itH M Meaty Boiling Beef ... 3 Ihs. for ’ieff ' 5 Fresh Ground Hamberger Small Lean Pork ( hops 25c IbH > s Tender Swiss Steak |; ( .Ji«: Tender Beef Steak .. ISc, 2 H Fresh Beef or Pork Hearts .. Ulclhßi Fresh Pork Liver Lean Pork Shoulder Roast 18cdH (Pork Shoulder Steak .. ISc. 2 Ib.Xitl ' All Pork Sausoge, bulk, 18c, 2 Fresh Brains 2 lb. for 25c IJ Fresh Beef Liver 2 lb. for 25c | Good Meaty Beef RoastlscHiV Lftrcvp Rnlnfrna (For Sandwiches) •) ,)• S

11x11 IDS, ;.X'M Fresh Oysters 30c pint HI Boneless Fish .... 25c lb„ 2 lbs. 45c ■' Fresh Calf Liver 35c II) I Fresh Spare Ribs 15c lb H Tender Boneless Waffle Steak 25clb II Boneless Veal Paddies 28c lb II Small Breakfast Sausages ... 30c lb I Dressed Chickens < Rca, ‘° rFr > . .23clb|| 2 lb. box Soda Crackers 21k I! FREE PROMPT AND SANITARY DELIVER! II PHONES 95 and 9tt. II ■ « | lif g* ■II LJLXJZZ-«J=W I.

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