Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 28, Decatur, Adams County, 1 February 1935 — Page 5
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footwear Savings 11)R SATURDAY k ta| arranged one table _ |Bro«n Sizes m Ladies tSy uaciuomg Straus, eHr MM,h - Blacks, fees. * Urs f-cr- $3.50 to jr & fc Al good styles. In a ® K ■lwirt to clear this ef offer your choice, Spring Footwear you with the spring’s newest creations in Mens and Ladies Footwear. New colors. V. e'U be glad to show you. Ladies $2.95 to $5.00 Mens $3 to $5 ICHOLS SHOE STORE ■ T' «WMHMmHEMnjMMMM I
May's Biggest Harness Buy ■oi CAN NOW AFFORD TO BUY TEAM HARNESS I AT THIS LOW PRICE. rßre Giving You A Big Saving In This Team Harness. !■ lls Quality And Low Cost Price On This Heavy Team ■Mess. jß }r l s Cut and Made Fuß Size. Linen Thread Used f Mghout. All Sewing Lock Stitched and Heavily Waxed. tl.t r . h Strap Work. MLmlk Large Bridles. ■tfi u vy ' ,lv Trai «s. /WO I ■h. Heavy 1 earn Lines. J*-- ■ ( .it From / jSmZI I picker steer Hides. ’.. 'W\ > Bxtra special .z ft w i I er Set. f vA M f WW PsSCHAFERfe P 2£WARE HOME FURNIS’HINCS j;
they •HMX > <1 over into Ohio and jidbbeti a nerlee of banka. Next 'they visited Michigan but obtaiuL,l only *4OO in a bank robbery. lOn the way home they decided to jstop and stick up an Ohio bank, a job that netted them *IO.OOO. "Prom then on we traced Dilling pt- buck and forth. Ho escaped a police trap In (lory lint we finally (aught up with him in Dayton. 0.. through a woman.. Ohio officials took him to Lima where his pals blasted him out ol ” w county jail.” _ F. 1). R. PLANS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONR j that 30 telegrams on any one sub|ject made him jump ‘half way I across the floor" when he was a congressman in more normal times. |Now they are arriving by the thousands. At the preceding congress legislation was pushed along through congress with comparative smoothness. Senators became reconciled to the fact most of the bills they were expected to pass came from downtown buyaus. Yesterday in senate that program met an unaccustomed shock. An administration bill tu liberalize various farm credit measures was up for consideration. Debate developed that only a few memhers of the banking committee participated In the hearing which gave it a favorable report. Some members heard of the measure for the first time when it appeared on the floor. Instead of acquiescing to such procedure they returned it to committee. Wrangling in the house over the Townsend plan and the bonus has its senate counterpart in disputes over the *4,800,000,000 work relief bill and monetary policies. The agitation created by World Court opponents. Townsend plan advocates, and veterans was augmented yesterday by the voice of ’ organized labor, speaking out vigorously for the 30-hour work week bill. The measure is opposed by the administration but the militant attitude of the American Feder-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1935.
Antarctica—World Playground of the Future? w A I - ■ linix ' I of the Antarctic where Sir | "*&■&' Douglas envisions the resort of the | W&BKjf’. r- I vf*' I ■ k i sU>ur*'—5 U>ur *'— J ■aum ’3r#*’****<“ w .JBih M—l iw BggjgZ**''' & m.t—.; -■ ■ Sir*Douglas Mawson, famous explorer, predicts and winter sports near the South Pole will be that the Antarctic, the lower tip of the world that pleasures everyone soon will have an opportunity one. visualizes as a batfen area of waste, ice bergs to enjoy. Besides its possibilities as a resort, he and polar bears, is the rgsort of tHe future. He 'also sees the Antarctic as a commercial center for believes that steamer cruises through the pack ice. : fur farming and perhaps gold mining
ation of Labor gives it a real' chance. Attacks on the NRA find the ad-1 ministration not yet ready to re-1 I veal its plans for continuation of : I some form of industrial regulation after the expiration date of | the national industrial recovery act i in June. o LABOR OPPOSES I CONTINUED FBOM PAGE ONE ■ bor. through William Green, its ; president, recently announced op- i \ [Kjsition to a renewal of the code. Automobile workers had with--1 drawn their support of the indus- ' try board. Green renewed his opposition to- • day, saying the new “highly obpecitionahle" code was “imposed on i labor.” He said he was not con--1 suited and did not know of any labor leaders who were.. He criti- ‘ i cized failure to hold public hearings on the cbd6 renewal. Renewal of the code was made) over the expressed opposition of I the NRA labor advisory lioard, of which Green is chairman, which 'said it preferred "no code at all” to continuation without elimination | of the objectionable “merit” clause, ilt likewise demanded reorganiza- | lion of the labor boards. Leo C. Wolman, former NRA ad i visory board chairman, named to i i head the automobile board when ; ' the president set it up in March. I 11834, drew criticism from the A.; :F. of L. because of the board's i I handling of disputes. It claimed I the board had been unfair to labor. In renewing the code the presi- | dent called on industry members to comply with settlements ar- ' ranged by the Wolman board. Its I provisions and requirements were
' confirmed and continued.” Automobile manufacturers coni tended elections held by the labor board show the A. F. of L. speaks 1 only for a small percentage of the workers. Elections are scheduled for several more plants. o TO CRACK DOWN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ing more taxes, a portion of which ■ will go to provide adequate relief for other indigents,” he said. The government, it was reported, i contemplates the mustering of 1,000 unemployed men to carry on tax drives in metropolitan areas. "fore than 100 of the “white collar” workers have been assigned to E. C. Yellowley, supervisor of the alcohol tax division here, to check up on liquor sellers. The others will be sent out to collect miscellaneous taxes handled by the J income tax division. The investigators, conducting a , block-by-block canvas, will receive (824 a week—paid from FERA | 'funds—and will draw pay while at- , tending a school where they learn j bow Uncle Sam finds out who's "chiseling” on him. On thetir “graduation day” they will receive shiny badges designating them as deputy collectors of internal revenue.. o BIRTHDAY BALL | CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ■telegraph company for tl.is service. The four flower girls under the direction of Miss Ruth Macklin sold $25 worth of roses at the ball which cost the committee $12.50. The detailed report of the committee minus the funds raised from
Testifies in Husband's Defense '*■' WWPS * tv I - J jEsSF J Mrs. Anna Hauptmann Standing by her husband in his hour of need, Mr- Anna H, •I'tmann takes the witness stand at Flemington, N. J., to testify for the defense in the trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, charged with the j i murder of the Lindbergh baby.
the birthday messages is: Receipts Sale of tickets $ 88.00 I Flowers 25.00 Check room 55.70 Cash at d00r.... 65.50 Total receipts $184.20 Disbursements i Orchestra $ 60.00 Flowers 12.50 Tickets 4.50 Decorations „ 4.53 Floor show 6.00 Check room (help) 3.00 Total disbursements $ 90.53 Total net $ 93.67 This net was divided as follows: $27.20 to the national committee for research work: $63,444 to the local committee for Adams county victims of infantile paralysis and $3.01 to the 1934 committee. o Drunkenness Definition Fails To Save Culprit Harwich, Mass., —(UP) — Drunkenema is “a state of inebriation when a man can no longer see,” defined James Gomes, charged with the offense. Gcmes related this to the court when he tried to explain that ho could see and hence they couldn't charge him with drunkeness. Judge Robert A. Welsh asked him, "How did the police happen to catch you?” “1 didn’t see them” he replied. “Guilty,” announced the court, "sls fine.” o ■ IVANTED— Good, clean, big Rags, suitable for cleaning machinery. Will pay 4c lb. Decatur Daily Democrat
'EXPECT HIGHER PRICE FOR HOGS Washington Bureau Pre-, diets Higher Prices i During 1935 Washington, Feb. 1. — Higher hog prices are in prospect during most of this year, says the bureau of agricultural economics in its January report on world hog and pork prospects. The bureau has reported a reduction of 48 per cent In the 1934 fall pig crop compared with that of 1933 and says that a substantial I decrease in the number of sows to farrow in the spring of 1935 is also indicated. In Germany there were three per cent fewer hogs last Decern-! her compared with December, 1933 and in Denmark a decrease of 19 I per cent has been reported for the : same period. It is expected, however, that the decrease in Danish production will be checked this year since the number of bred■ sows has been increased. Exports of pork and lard from ' the United States during the last i half of 1934 were smaller than in ' the same period of 1933. The I bureau says “It is probable that ' exports of pork and lard this year I will be the smallest in many years.’’ o Woman’s Gioves Lead to Wife’s Suit For Divorce Cincinnati — (UP)— If Mrs. Elsie! Bobs hadn’t pressed her husband's ’ suit, she might never have filed I suit for divorce from Otto Bobe. In the course of her pressing, she found a pair of women’s gloves in his pocket, according to her petition. He demanded them and she hid them, Mrs. Bobe aays. And so he gave her a good “shaking" pack- 1 ed his clothes, left and hasn’t returned to her or their children, she charges in her petition. o Tide Changed Address, Washington Judge Told Washington, —(UP) — Anthony! K. Hudson appeared in Traffic before Judge Isaac Hitt as the man “without an addreees.” He was b oked on the charges of speeding and failure to change address on driving permit. Judge Hitt asked: "Don’t you live 1
AGAIN in 1934, the insistent demand you can buy! They are big—rugged—for Chevrolet products has made dependable trucks. They are powered Chevrolet the world's largest builder of by six-cylinder valve-in-head engines trucks as well as of passenger cars. And which use very little gas and oil. Buy now Chevrolet offers still greater values one of these Chevrolet Trucks aud you —the highest quality Chevrolet Trucks buy fine, dependable, economical haulever built and the lowest-priced trucks age service— at the world's lowest price! CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN Compare Chevrolet's loti delivered prices and easy C.M.A.C. terms. A General Motors Value , ’ /A , ..- -yj; r; Xi l> i Half-Ton Pick-up, $465 Stake, $660 (112'Wheelbase) < l3l Wheelbase! 1 " i" M bib - a_~- fk —Me , t , j -"S!—I, —1 I-I p. »,, , , rT _ II -r—»—CT-w e-T Half-Ton Pick-up with Canopy, $495 (Ilf Wheelbase) Wi ’ / -if ’*-^J*/*l , /4-TonH ig hßack, (157“ Wheelbase) ‘l’/s-Ton Chassis, $465 / (131" Wheelbase) 4 l r* c 'l‘A-Ton Stake, $720 . /( . [I (157* Wheelbase) i z jlhc i' M'A-Ton Chassis and Cab, $605 *Wi-Ton Platform, $630 (157" Wheelbase) (131* Wheelbase) About aroint pricn of cnmmrrria! cam f. o. h. at Hint. Mich. Special equipment extra, *l)ual uheeU and firm $29 extra, f'neen subieclto change without notice. Thompson Chevrolet Co. THIRD STREET PHONE 170
iat Water and 13th Street,*?’’ Hudson, who lives on a houseboat replied: "Well, whan the tide U in I do, but when the tide is out ( live i further away." j Judge Hitt ordered that charge dismissed, but fined 'Hudson *5 for I speeding. I ______. j, ._ 'Solid Spade Handle Fails to Get the Bid Geraldine, Mont. —-(UP) —Thin "perfect card hand" story is going to be different. Mrs. K. M. Porter picked up her bridge hind the ctli'er evening. It contained 13 epades. Just to be different. Mrs. Porter failed to faint. Not satisfied with that perform ance ,ehe went on to make seven no trump, doubled and vulnerable. Her partner hid her into no- trump I and had a powerful enough hand j to make i
Picture Entertainment During FEBRUARY February has just 28 days—but each day will be a joyous one for our patrons. During February it will be our privilege to bring to our screen for your entertainment the finest of pictures — and WHAT PICTURES—WHAT STARS—one great picture after another—all for your entertainment and pleasure. We list some of what you may expect • ' during the next few weeks. “THE MIGHTY BARNUM’—Wallace Beery “SECRET BRlDE”—Barbara Stanwyck “HELLDORADO”—Richard Arlen "SWEET ADELINE”—Irene Dunne “THE LAST GENTLEMAN”—Geo. Arliss “BRIGHT EYES”—Shirley Temple “RIGHT TO LIVE”—Geo. Brent. Josephine Hutischen “BORDER TOWN”—Paul Muni, Bette Davis “W HITE PARADE"—Loretta Young. Remember! To really enjoy this wonderful group of pictures you must hear them through our Martin Full Tone Sound System — the finest in sound production. CORT Theater J "Only the Finest is Screen Entertainment” " u » •* -m , • xMwrwn
Raise 80 Bushels of Wheat, Get $23,577 Miles City, Mont, -w-(ltp)— CUHter County’# "not-rulHing” wheat indim- , try came pretty expieiMlve to the govertinr-ut tblij yeur, final checkUps shewed today. The total county production was 8i) buahela — wherom the governI! ment paid *33,577 for 85 per cent of ' the wheat thad win not rai.M-d in Custer County this you'. Drough conditions combined with the AAA crop reduction program to result in the lowest wheat crop in the county's farming history. Fire Alarm Broke Up Party Naugatuck, Conn., —(UP)—The • first public card party of the Naugatuck illoee. Hook and Ladder At.<sociiitiou wasaauccess until 9:40 p. m. At that time an alarm came In and all the men were forced to leave. —J ...J
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