Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 45, Decatur, Adams County, 21 February 1935 — Page 5

fl IJIESSE l" '■ikel VW’ lor 193) I' '" *> T»da> -J ____— f. Family's (Hniu t"^ 111 - 31®!;!"* MMHa and aßowlinj: l ) <‘> ;|Hbk i'c.tlur*' ' "I j ! I ine ( Ml -t (h.ipu r •’! _ IKK \-l hr. in Xr Coming! ■p . ’’ ■jnS'-immemllo Pitts ■;! '•?<• ! • rr

Bir These Savings I Helena Rubenstein Herbal Lavender Shaving Cleansing Cream $1.50 Cream'.: 35c Youthifying Tissue 1 pint Harmony Cream $2.00 Bay Rumsoc B t °o‘ lt H $2.00 59c ggwji ■ 23 c COTY’S It’s your party ... the Rexall Face Powder Birthday Sale... where you can save money on all your drug- Special Z2Qz» store needs! The wonderful bar- "JJz C gains offered below are just a few of the two Hundred or more real : values you can get at this sale. Cascade VellUHl Portfolio . I I Speciil .)Q p ii.'iii ini m •/L wt’Hii( win ,S Peppermint OQz* ' ( h'H-olate CmTISSSft. at— v:et * Cherries lb.*-* Ji. '"ft*“T’ *" tt ““ °“ “ F °™ ,TEMS - Fountain Syringe ouble-strength Antiseptic. ‘ stomach acids. Rexiilana is the honey-like i MJk of Magnesia neutralizes 1 cough syrup chat children like. Puretest ( <>D)|)lctP /*(! Aspirin brings quicker relief \/ 1 / ‘■extra SPECIAL FTS — rßoimmu NZ ,° ANT|SEPT| C A Absorbent Cotton KsENZO DENTAL CREME I I 1 ib ‘ OQp membe ’ o'the family will want this I gH ffia aid I l ental f rcme for cleaning It JlMlWtir -J Razor Blades 84c Value " Double Edge ® ~ IWWPWWOIII IWRRPWRRFWTWWM Guaranteed *?(.)/« lift /v 10 blades . fcft/V Bl Itri Guard against tlv infections that Tiring colds and _____ 5016 fbroat Spray these areas with Mi 31, the fea MnlFZft Double-Strength Antiseptic, using this efficient Milk of Magnesia atOmii!er ' '™d * Tooth Paste .... 25c BJgO Defender Atomizer 40™ bottle Sodium Perborate.. .-.9c :Mi 31 Ant ' SeptiC QQ C Regular Price ... 64c I Solution both for WW SPECIAL *l'Hj IftlllEftl j'rpj BOTH ForOe/C 18. J. SMITH DRUG CO. THE REXALL STORE

furnish the basis upon which quo- , tas will bo made to farmers participating in the control program. In every case, the AAA pointed I out. the allotment to each factory I district Is 90 per cent or more of the acreage planted in that district In 1933. Following are the adjusted allotments by states and factory districts: California: Amalgamated Sugar Co,, Clarksburg district, 10,000 acres: American Crystal Sugar Co., Oxnard district, 22.075; Holly Sugar Corporation. Santa Anu-Dyer district, 1,792; and Tracy-Alvarado district, 21,237: Alamitos Sugar Co.. Los Alamitos. 4,892; Sprecklea Sugar Co..’ Spreckles, 1X.6U2. and ! Manteca district, 35,170; Union I Sugar Co.. Betteravia, 6,159. Colorado: American Crystal Sugar Co.. Rocky Eord district, 22,081 acres; Great Western Sugar Co., Brighton dlstrlict. 11.253; Brush district. 9.824; Eaton district, 17,66*; Fort Lupton dlstrlict, 13.115; Fort Morgan, 13,857; Fort Collins, 14.152; Greeley. 15,316; Longmont. 15,115; Loveland, 11,916; Ovid. 12.731: Sterling. 13.883; Windsor. 11,596; Holly Sugar Corporation. Delta-Grand Junction district. 13.207; and Swink district. 12,929; National Sugar Manufacturing Co., Sugar City district, 5.800. Idaho: Amalgamated Sugar Co., Burley-Twin Falls district, 23.036 acres; Franklin County Sugar Co., Preston. 8.241; and the Utah-Idaho Sugar Co.. Upper Snake River valley, 37.960. Indiana: Central sugar Co.. Decatur. 10,557 acres. Iowa: American Crystal Sugar Co., Mason City. 16,824. Kansas: Garden City Co., Garden City. 13.702. acres. i Michigan: Great Lakes Sugar I Co.. Blissfield. 13,240; Isabella Sugar Co., Mt. Pleasant. 14.541; Lake Shore Sugar Co.; Holland. 4.607; Michigan Sugar Co., (all district*), 175,401; Monitor Sugar »'o., Bay City, 17.234; Northeastern Sugar } Co., Mt. Clements, 11.700; St. Louis Sugar Co.. St. Louis, 8,400; | Superior Sugar Refining Co., Menominee, 8,380; and the West Bay 1 City Sugar Co.. West Bay Citv. 8.-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1935.

009. Minnesota: American Crystal I Sugar Co., Ea»t Grand Fork* dis-| 1 trict, 24,094 acres, and Chaska district. 16,591. Montana: Amalgamated Sugar Co.. Missoula, 10,714 acres; Great Western Sugar Co.. Billings, 28,524; Holly Sugar Corporation, Sidney. ’ 13,630; and Utah-Idaho Sugar Co., Chinook, 8 737. Nebraska: American Crystal Sugar Co., Grand island, 8.823 acres; Great Western Sugar <’o„ Bayard distret, 14,262; Gering. 13.- 1 166; Lyman. 7,404; Minatare, 11,- 1 692; Mitchell, 9,162; and Scotts- 1 bluff, 11,098. I Ohio: Great Lakes Sugar Co., 1 Fremont district, 8.963 acres, and 1 Findlay district. 7,873; Ohio Sugar 1 Co.. Ottawa. 9,293; and the Paulding Sugar Co.. Paulding. 12,395. Utah: Amalgamated Sugar Co.. Lewiston dlstrlict, 13,009 acres, and Ogden district, 7.813; Gunni- 1 son Sugar Co., Centerfield, 7.423;, ; Layton Sugar Co., laiyton. 7.276; 1 Utah-Idaho Sugar Co., Garland- 1 Brigham City, 12,615 acres; West 1 Jordan district, 6,989; and the 1 Spanish Fork-Spriugville district, 12.302. ' Wyoming: Great Western Sugar Co.. Lovell district, 9,167 acres* and j Wheatland district, 7.589; Holly Sugar Corporation, Sheridan district, 8,544; Torrington district, 22, 038; and Worland district, 9.590. Wisconsin: Rock County Sugar ( Co., Janesville. 6,189 acres; and Menominee Sugar Co., Green Bay, 18,416. Washington: Utali-liifflio Sugar Co., Bellingham, 4,405 acres. The AAA invited representatives of principal sugar beet growers organizations to a conference here Saturday to discuss procedure for making final adjustments in individual 1935 acreage allotments. o 8C9.000 Gallons of Whale Oil Vancouver. R. C (U.K) —British 'Columbia, the whale producing area of Canada, produced 809,000 gallons of whale oil and 340 tons of whale njeat during 1934. o Get the Habit — Trade at Home

COLLEGE YOUTH UNDERARREST Wabash College Student Held For “Kidnaping” Himself Indianapolis, Feb. 21. —(U.R) Permission for Allan Cressler Hornberger. Hammond, 21-ye*r-old honor student at Wabash college, to tell the federal grand jury of his plot to extort 850,000 from his father will be asked by his attorney. Walter Myers, Indianapolis, it was announced today. Myers described the plot as a "college prank.” Hornberger was arrested in the administration building at Wabash yesterday by federal men and brought to Indianapolis for arraignment. He was released on $2,500 bond on charges of using mails in an attempt to extort. A signed confession was presented at the hearing. It told how i Hornberger “kidnaped" himself and l sent two notes demanding $50.0001 from his father, L. L. Hornberger,! Hammond attorney. The confession follows: "I left Crawfordsville Sunday j evening, Jan. 6, on the 9:05 Indianapolis line. Ariving at Indianap- ■ oils, I bought stationery at a drug store near the Harrison hotel, went to the hotel and registered under the name of J. K. Linsley. 49<3 Eastlawn avenue, Chicago, 111. "There 1 wrote the first note and ; mailed it in the hotel mailchute . The next morning, Monday. I left the hotel, walked to the railroad station and took a Pennsylvania ■ train to Chicago, arriving there in tho late afternoon. I walked to - downtown Chicago, the loop, ate - somewhere and went to the La-' Salle hotel, registering under the name of Ekker. "I left the LaSalle hotel the next morning. Tuesday. I walked around downtown Chicago. I don't I know exactly where. 1 don’t know I I exactly how the afternoon and eve-' i ning were spent, except that 1 ate | 1 a noon and evening meal and went j Ito some Jpicture show. That eve- j i ning I wrote the second note on ■ Michigan boulevard, using some I building entrance as the back-; i ground for the piece of paper. I j had asked a young man earlier in I the evening to write the note for i me. 1 met him on Michigan boule-j 1 vard. He consented, and wrote as i il directed only the word ‘Thurs-i !daj'. then erased it and refused to I j got any farther, thjn left- It was i ia few hours after that I myself | 1 wrote it. “I wandered around Chicago, 11 don't know just where, but in the j . loop. A little after 3 o'clock Wed-1 i nesday morning I could stand it no longer and went to the Great Northern hotel, 'phoned the Chicago police first and then daddy. I I was taken to a Chicago police station, questioned and then taken |to the United States department j of justice in the Bankers building. | I left there when my brother ar- I rived to take me back to Ham-. inond, about 8 Wednesday morn-1 , ing- | | "The reason for all this, and 1; don't see how I could be capable I

I o' C-jWj 7 t-/1 I I I It’s the wjjlLJI I Performance -I ■ THE REFRIGERATOR that counts that def,es time G-E sealed in-steel Monitor •In buying «»v refrigerator T°PG“ ““ " t £/ always ask How long will apart ac t he Genera! Elecit last?” Performance means trie's Research l aboratories S more in savings, more in i?"s‘ £ convenience, more in protec- impossible to place a limn I tion to health than all other on the years of service to feature., combined beexpectedfromthismatchteatures comnincu. less refrigerator mechanism. You can have a General Electric Monitor Top inyowrhome < tomorrow and feel secure . . , . i in the knowledge that you Don t wait another month to have performance protection. In have the convenience and addition to the standard one economy of a Genera! E.ectnc year warranty, the famous in your home. You can have General Electric scaled-in- one tomorrow. It will serve i steel mechanism carries four you for years and years. more years protection for only iS Waiting is actually wasting —live years for only fl aycar! at least 38 to -10 a month. „ j a c.u. Users will tell you a General i , Hundreds of thousands of Electric means as much to '<• General Electric owners have w j nter as j n summer. had dependable, trouble-free ... refrigeration service day after day, month after month, for General Electric offers all 3 types more than 5 years and today 0< ro f r jgerators. Monitor Top the sealed-in-steel mecha- ri_.»n liHnn ' . w/s nisms are as good as the -Hatop-lrftop Q 4 - day they were bought. The . performance record of G-E "*•s os low as refrigerators can be dupli- Payment plans to meet the needs cated by no other refrigerator. of any income. H. L. LANKENAU CO. Cor. Monroe & Third st. 'Phone 816 Decatur i

jof such a thing is this: I had bell ieved that our family was growI ing farther apart for some lime. ! 1 know that I was wrong in that | belief, and that 1 had deceived I myself by exaggerating petty quarrels. etc., into something serious. But I believed that members of the family were growing apart from j one another, and I wanted something that wquld bring them together again. This kidnap idea was the result. 1 did not realize that such publicity would arise from It, or 1 would never liad done it and so made more trouble i for my family.” i o I Killer Os Pastor To Plead Insanity g Lebanon. Ind.. Feb. 21 —(UP) — ( Theodore Mathers, 21, Coalmont, charged with the murder of the , Rev. Gaylord V. Saunders, former ( Wabash minister, will plead insanity and eels defense when hie trial 01 n.- hare Feb. SB. * 1 Amending hie origin il plea, of , •elf-defense, Mathers filed a special t plea of insanity in Boone Circuit ( court claiming ho was of unsound ’mind at t ie tima of the crime. Mathers is charged with accepting $lO fr in Mrs. Neoma B. Stiun- ( I ders. the minister's widow, to kill | | Saunders. Mos. Saunders w.ie tried lhere last December and found guilty | of plotting the death, but she was ; freed on the ground that she was 1 temporarily insane at the time of the killing. —-o Rare Violin Sales Aided Him Milwaukee. (U.R) -William Peter i : Stoffel, who lost his job as a real t | estate agent when the depression i came, has built up a profitable and | (enjoyable business buying and < I selling rare violins. He bought one ' violin for $46. rebuilt it and sold iit for SI,BOO. — : | CORT Our New Silver Toned Screen Enables You To Enjoy Better Picture Entertainment. RESTFUL to the EYES Clearer Reproduction. - Last Time Tonight - I SOMERSET MAUGHANIS . “THE RIGHT TO LIVE” Josephine Hutchinson. | George Brent. Colin Clive, i I Henretta Crosman. Peggy I Wood, C. Aubrey Smith. With the enchanting story of “Happiness Ahead.” PLUS-Ben Blue‘OUT OF ORDER' and An All Color Merrie Melody Cartoon. 10c -15 c Saturday John Wayne “NEATH ARIZONA SKIES" Sun. Mon. Tues. Paul Muni "BORDER TOWN" Bette Davis. Margaret Lindly, Eugene Pallette.

ACTIVITIES OF GANGREVIVED Sweetheart Os Dillinger Gangsters Seeks Brother’s Parole IndianapoU*. Ind-, Feb. 21 —(UP) Activities of the shattered Dillinger gang were revived today when (.lie state clemency board heard a plea of Mary Kinder, sweetheart of the mobster*, for release of her 11 uaband, Dale Kinder, from the ■date prison. Kinder U serving a 12-year sentence Imposed in Marion criminal court July 9, 1931. He waa charged with robbery of an Indianapolis filling station. While he did not have any direct connection* with the gang Kinder was acquainted with its members while they were inmates of the prison and his wife accompanied Item on many of their travels. Members of the gang banded together after their escape from the state prison in September, 1933. Os the original gang of 10, only one has escaped deatli or capture. He is John Hamilton. Eleven other inmates of the etale prison also sought leniency froiff the clemency board today. Among them whs Steven Karanovich, Clinton coal miner, who is serving a life term on a second degree 'murder charge. He wae sentenced in the Vermillion circuit court Maroh 27, 1923, on his plea of guilty of killing Mike Obradovich during a Serbian wedding celebra-

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tion. Others who asked paroles or com mutation of Like county — Wlllkun laracliied and Roibert Walson, Sullivan coun ty Denzel Armstrong; Blackford county—Eric Jenner, Dubois coun ty — Howard Bullock. A\NOUN(E EXAM CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE The Civil Service Commission will make inquiry among representative kcal business and professional men and women concerning the experi ence, ability, and character of each applicant, and the evidence thus ae cured will be considered in determining the ratings to be assigned to the applicants. The Commission states that presidential postmasters are not in the classified civil service and that its duties in connection with appointments to such positions are tc hold examinations and to certify the results to the Postmaster Gen eral. The Commission is not interested in the political, religious, or fraternal affiliations of any appli cant. > Full Information and application blanks may be obtained from tht secretary of the local board of civil

SPECIAL TIRE SALE Friday and Saturday 400-21 | 450-21 $4.40 | $4.90 ! 475-19 500-20 $5.20 $6.10 13 plate BATT E R Y $3.50 exchange PORTER TiRE CO. 341 Winchester St. Phone 1289.

eervlce examiners at the poet office i- in thie city, or from the United States Civil Service Commisaion. j Washington, D. C. i- o DEATH CLAIMS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tire W. H. Zwlck and Son Funeral Home. Funeral services will be held Set[j urday morning at 9 o’clock at tire Sl4 Marys Catholic 'ehprcii with Father Joseph Seimetz officiating. I Burial will be in the St. Joseph h cemetery. 3. — —--o—— — NOTICE —-I will not be responsible for any debts of my wife, Florence Brueck, after thia (kte. Marvin *• Brueck. 45-2tx n »

w A ► jy a ® Jr i - Last Time Tonight - (Sponsored by The CIVIC Section „ of the WOMAN'S CLUB) 1 “ONE HOUR LATE” “ with Joe Morrison, Helen Twelves trees. Conrad Nagel, Arline Judge, Gail Patrick, Toby Wing, Ray Milland. Added—“BANDITS & BALLADS” I with Ruth Etting, Pathe Topics—(and EXTRAORDINARY ADDED I ATTRACTION—LATEST EXCLU- “ ‘ SIVE Pictures of a Day in the I Lives of The DIONNE QUINTUPLETS. This COLOSSAL Program at ONLY 10 and 15 cents! Friday 4 Sat. — “THE SILVER STREAK” — with Sally Blane, Chas. Starrett, Hardie Albright, — Wm. Farnum. Hearts beat faster . . pulses pound . . blood throbs through your veins . . Romance is at the throttlj of the fastest train on earth, in its epic race for life! : Sun. Mon. Tues. — 808 MONTi GOMERY & ANN HARDING—in I "THE BIOGRAPHY OF A BACH- ( ELOR GIRL” with Edward Everett Horton, Edward Arnold, Una Merkel.

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