Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 20, Decatur, Adams County, 23 January 1935 — Page 5

BILL ®E DEFEATED » ' LtjJjiu! I iu'iVnts A fron Tax Hosliiu-d | T r [ '* "" ■ ml " ,na IH MW MS% ii"X-> U ' ~ in i >' PiM - ir.i* " mln-'V.-i w RJKK w ■ Didavits to W ._■ • :l e mincsprojpor jpettrr Health See Df.ffl Frohnapfel Licensed mm' praetor and ■Naturopath Phone® 104 So. 3rd 6t. Unlr ~ I —*** Service SBtay Laboratory ** vjmm Ta M'pholsterinß. repair 9 of fflHturc and overstuff- •/ cd A- Custom huilt ■ turn*- and mattresses. 'J jßß u ' e Ha logger.

> .HUB ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■•■■■■■ jl February i I M ... SMALLEST MONTH IN DAYS > WGGEST MONTH ■ ML . . in PICTURES l W hat GREAT SHOWS we’re brinjrinj? you in February! It's a Month oi HoliI dav" ... SI. Valentine's Day. Lincoln's anil Washington’s Birthdays . . . and we • are celebrating with a line-up of SMASH ■ ATTRACTIONS . . . the like of which ■ you’ve NEVER SEEN BEFORE! ■ JUST CAST YOUR EYE OVER THIS ■ LIST OF SWELL PICTURES! ■ You can smack vour lips in anticipation of a FEAST of DELICIOUS ENTER- ■ TAINMENT! Watch for Them . v Wait ■ for Them . . . and be sure to see K\ ERY ■ ONE at The ADA VIS THEATER! ■ BAND PLAYS ON” — with Robert Young.* tuart Erwin. Betty Furness. Ted Healy. * SAKING ALL OTHERS ’-with CLARK GABLE ■ [)AN CRAWFORD. 808 MONTGOMERY. ■ PRESIDENT VANISHES”—A Picture that you m HOI!DON’T Miss! m LITTLE MINISTER”-with Katherine Hepburn. LIVES OF A BENGAL LANCER*—with Gary coper. Franchot Tone, Dick Cromwell, Katherie Burke. HOUR LATE”—with Joe Morrison, Helen ■ weivetrees, Conrad Nagel. Arline Judge. ■ SILVER STREAK”—with Sally Blanc. Chas. c t«rrcft. Bardie Albright, Win. Farnum. ■ JNESDAY’S CHILI)” —with Edward Arnold. m aren Morley, Frankie Thomas. m iRAPHY OF A BACHELOR GlßL”—with ANN AKDLNG and 808 MONTGOMERY. ' VVintry Winds Blow, Don’t Let It Bother You! ■ ADAMS THEATER IS AS WARM AS TOAST! ■ and Snow, Sleet and Blizzard on the OUTSIDE g ut INSIDE The ADAMS It’s as Cozy and Com- g le as your own Living Room! OUR Heating _ M ot^ern there is .. . and We Don't it let these Cold Winter Nights keep you from * ng the Wonderful Delights of Talking Pictures. ■ l <irm. Richly Lighted, Home-like Atmosphere of ■ t'DAMH makes your show-going a double plea- g • • and the Great Line-up of Pictures for Febru- g so OUTSTANDING, You Can’t Afford to Miss - fit One! " ADAMS THEATER \ I g Iggngiiißiggigggggg

■ ' ' J I pIP :F«W Jld Ir i

Some idea of what the bathing girls will be wearing—and, ahem, leaving off—on the beaches next summer might be gained from this layout, showing the latest styles in beach attire. Left, Miss Irene Colman, erstwhile film beauty, clad in her-

daces poisons fumes an dduut. The operators, le.; by Haivev Cartwright, Terrd Haute, secretary of the Indiana coal operators' association, opposed the bill on the contention it, would necessitate larger ehifts and lose of tonnage, increase coal prices and force many small shafts to close. They soid blasts fired properly are not dangerous. COMMITTEES TO CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE be guaranteed a parity price for the 1934 crop. The parity price is based on the average of the sale price of sugar between the years 1010 and 1914. The difference between. the parity price and the amount received from the proceeds of a sales tax levied on ntanufa - turers. After the training school here

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1935.

backless knit suit; right, Lorett Neubcrger, modeling a shorts outfit, fashioned after the bandana worn by natives in the Caribbean regions; below, Ethel Farrell showing her suit mad« of lace—no fooling. Oh, boy I

Wednesday the committee for the northern half of Adams county plans to begin the signing _f contracts in Decatur. The committee i:t Harry Essex' territory will meet both in Monroe and in tile Ohio townsht’s. PLAY BRIDGE AT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE , tweny-five cents collected for each name will be used in the same manlier as the admissions for the birthday ball—7o per cent will be used locally and 30 per cent will go to the national committee to be used for research. ANOTHER(OLD 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONI3 jbut both rivers have risen from I four to eight feet in the last few days, Armington said. One death was recorded from tlie cold yesterday when Gable Kreitzer. 73, was found frozen to Heath in a pig pen at his home near 1 Evansville. He was stricken with ; a heart attack. DEATH FOLLOWS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE j Clarksdale, Miss. Hundreds were marooned or homeless in that ; state, Louisiana and Arkansas after three days of rain and snow. The middlewest, coated with ice and snow, prepared for the second

Here's the world's outstanding air-cell radio! It’s a G-E Battery Operated Radio designed specially for homes without electricity. It’s sensitive and selective. And it’s economical. If you want proof that your radio dollar buys more j value than ever before, come in and listen to this new air-cell battery radio sensation. Come in TODAY. Imagine the thrills of listening in on London— Paris—Rome—Madrid, and other foreign cities, too. Tune in grim calls to police cars . . . aviation messages . . . amateur transmission. And your favorite American programs are received with brilliant life-like tone that will astonish you. m f r FOREIGN AND |||||| |!jj|jji!||, n domestic l JLJ!;| SI lllljji, PROGRAMS Modal C-70 ... Standard f rrrVpr’ \|| Pi and Short-Wav. Super- Fjj I heterodyne. Air-cell Bat- | .vl N G 'lUj UM| | tery operated. Dynamic i p, ~1 .(J [J (. Typo Speaker. V.ri.bl. . R!j[j A I Tone Control. Automatic i fj ~ ■>! BS&i Volume Control Square rj 1| «i ] V drain Two-rolta Tube.. J M C Hgin id :| 5 64.25 1 p' pi| GENERAL 1 ELECTRIC l| iil! Battery Operated SHORT-WAVE RADIO HARDWARE a*-/HO ME FURNISHINGS

severe drop In temperatures In a week. In Ht. Paul and Minneapolis, thermometers dropped to 29 below zero after climbing yesterday almost to zero. It was minus 38 in Devils Lake, N. D. A weather bureau bulletin warned shippers to protect perishable goods throughout the northwest to 35 degrees below zero. Chicago ex- , pected It) below by night. Forecasters said tlie oncoming cold probably would intensify a disturbance over tlie Atlantic coast states, where ships were delayed yesterday, motor roads buried and wire communications disrupted by an all-day snow. The same cold area kept in motion tlie 50-mile gale lashing the northern Pacific coast and pouring torrents of rain into deeply flooded valleys. Fires caused damage of $160,000 in Tulsa. Okla.; SIOO,OOO ill Fort Worth, and $20,000 in Passaic, N. J.. with much of the damage attributed to weather conditions hamper--1 ing firemen. o 2.CC-0 Reliefers Get Schooling New Bern, N. C. -(CP) More than 2.000 adult relief clients are receiving "cultural background from teachers furnished by the federal relief Administration, ( in 30 North Carolina counties, a report revealed here. Tlie 151 teachers present courses io diet, home budgeting. purchases, housekeeping, and academic subjects. Get the Habit — Trade at Home

FIRE DAMAGES INDIANA TOWN Community Hall at Hazleton Is Totally Destroyed Ry Fire iHatleton, tnd., Jail. 2J— (t’fM--I PI re today destroyed the community hall here and threatened to wipe ! out the entire business section of | the town. Firemen front Vincennes and I other neighboring cities aided in ex-1 tinguiahing blazes at nturby structures. Damage was estimated at nearly SIO,OOO. The fire was discovered late last night ami had gained su h headway that no eff rt was made to save tho community hall, outstanding building in the town. Firemen were hampered by cold weather. Loss in the community hall blaze included a moving picture .projection machine belonging to the American Legion post, community state properties and several hundred folding chairs. Hazleton is a town of about 500 population in Gibson county, about midway between Vincennes and Princeton on U. S. Hoad 41. I* PREBLE NEWS * Juanita Sullivan left Wednesday for Fort Wayne, where she entered the St. Joe Nurses Training School. Mrs. Charlea Sulllv in and daughter Peggy and Mrs. Henry Decker accompanied Miss Juanita Sullivan to Fort Wayne Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Baumgartner and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Albert Werling and daughters Sunday. Mrs. Kate I.innemeier visited Mrs. Mary Werling Sunday. Mr. and Mns. John B dneke and daughter of Decatur visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Frauhiger and family. Ruta and Erni Mcßarnes visited Elizabeth and Mary Fuhrman Sunday. Mrs- Milton Hoffman and dangli-

/1 NO BEfViK , .)|j / IFEftRS NO M&N fgg l AM' \ &V.SO FEMRSyI S \UQ i . fMr ill ag* P ° Peye ,4| V| invites you to go along J» /k> on his new Adventure. Blow Me Down Popeye, the greatest comic strip performer in the world, is starting on his latest adventure. It promises to he even more thrilling than any before and one the entire family will enjoy. He is taking his old friends with him. Olive Oyl, Castor Oil, and without doubt his old friend \\ himpy. We know there is trouble ahead hut we think Popeye will overcome all obstacles in his own “he-man” way. • l»ut that remains to be seen. You'll w ant to accompany Popeye and you can by Renewing Your Subscription to the Daily Democrat within 9/ radius of 100 miles. j I RENEW TODAY

! Modernizing Transforms Theater ■ These “before-and-after” illustrations show til* improvement m exterior appearance brought about by modernizing the front of this theater in a Michigan city. Such improvement* to business properties are being carried out in various parts of the country as an outgrowth of tho Better Housing i rogram of the Federal Housing Administration.

ters Dorothy. Miriam and Berneta and sons Donald .and Leo visited Mre. Jame* Ernest and daughter j Catherine at Fort Wayne Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Koennian and , daughter called on Mrs. Mary Werling Saturday. Missee Irene, L rine and Erma Kirchner and Mrs. June Shackley spent Monday at Fort Wayne. Mrs. Richard Bogner and son Samuel of De tur visited Mrs. Edgar Zimmerman and daughter Onj alee and Mrs. Albert Shady and daughter Ethel Tuesday. The double quartet of Kirkland j High School namely, Harry and j Herman Wulliman, Paul Arnold, i D nald Hoffman and Junior Smitn, j Robert Kolter; Walter Zimmerman, t Thomas Adler sang at the Fort

W ayne Lions Club at Fort Wayne Tuesday evening. MONROE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Hendricks and daughters Louise and Mareem of Fort Wayne spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith. Mrs. Hendricks parent!!. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Meyers spent Sunday afternoon In Berne, the guests of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Hansel iFoler and son Odell spent the week-end with Miw. Foley’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coppesa. Mr. ind Mrs. McGee Hendricks visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim A. Hend-

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e ricks Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coppese and Mrs. Mary Tahler spent Sunday in Fort Wayne where they visited Mrs. Tabler’s daughter. Mrs. John Moore who is seriously ill. Elmo Stuckey of Fort Wayne s spent the week-end with his parents n Mr. and Mrs. Willi m Stuck} - . 1, Miss Lois Shepard of Bluffton i- visited Miss Ruth Baluier Sunday afternoon. it Mr. and Mrs. Eli Moser and fae mlly or Fort Wayne spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Emil Rhinchart. d Tlie Foreign Missionary Society h of the Methodist Episcopal church i. met at the home of Mrs. Jim A. Hendricks Wednesday afternoon, s Rev. Elbert S. Morford spent 1- Mcnday afternoon in Fort Wayne.