Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 67, Decatur, Adams County, 19 March 1935 — Page 5
■INCOME IS ■ear MILL ION I'X ■ rv ice(’on>l’ an - v MB , Mur. u I 'l N’'l V~, x.nn. nul.ani K. ,wi ■ :.•’> P>“-1 B*.p ■ e.inur. ■ ln '; 1> Hi UH' ■ M; ,f "!* Tin Bff. x ' ■ '" ,u ■L Tile .I..UU.H Rj“ coinl'JW "' ;l '«■’ 11,111 j» ;:: n r' b ; Ku: in IHiiT " of | ■ Ami'll in • 1 ”' 1 ’ ■';,”> re^ n ‘ ■ ! . nuee N' t, ■ ■p.,, ■ ■■* ■V 11111 11l 1 "' ,Ilg ■l'luvr te: 1931 r.-pre- 1 K ort than 1-' ' n'e <>Ut o( of gr S: revenue. Bfijun'' paid "H< ■ 'lf f H« ■„; .'erred -I- '•”<! <luri»K ■ . Ifit The c.'inp-wy s net ■tv ia.'i 'ear "-‘a >441 ill ■ '. h tn!! di'i'i' i.'l requirereport pointed 1,111 t!lal l- 'l' l Oilil-COUI- ■ ,j. r:vel :>■ 77 from its ■ property. I" I' from its *>7 fl '"”i ' ls walc ' ■ ami i in ii' !,s 'ellanKandhkors ■step from page one B Mm bo summoned are John ■be Kavelina, said to have ■ charge of campaign fund Ku>, and Judge George D. ■averli <>. member of tile, committee. j ■ Watched Closely ■intima. March I' l - (U.R) - 1 ( ■l !>:.<, .lie agreed that ! ’ mi tiie ' 'bio tederal.’ relief dispute rests, ■os of that state The case ', ■l. > mm next .'ear's presi-i ■campaign. ■sudden ferocity of adminis-j I attack was bewildering. 1 ■w dealers now must depend ' ■1 state aulhorities to carry B assault at the same tempo. ’ ■r. Relief Administrator ■l. Hopkins -ar Uemocratic ' ■ — a ’ yM '‘ ir ‘ , * r owtac»>v«ly «Htn ■ £■ ”•'*« Uwi. bc#hv OR «*■ | ■ IBt»»»it<»| -.vb|»ri. 9 .an ■‘lit w-fk acrh pvchoze , A ■ ct ’** °- CMo ’ *•**<» VW*'” Wh< ’ S * n .tl <l>> .m w ,l o , O C.d« I «»<, ~ M.p, ■ -I Wa.,l «»d I
IMAZiNC NEW Her Mother j DISCOVERY Knows the Value of Whig DINGS RELIEF TO Prun -°' Wheat Bread 1 wstimtion " 'OFFERERS "7 b a This darling is never given sturdy and strong on its abund rt * habit-forming cathartic drugs, ant food value . . . avoids all !rt ® aslusgidi»jstefei It isn't necessary. A few slices the evils of a sluggish system. ° f MWN-O-WHBAT every H .ve you tried PRUN-O---y a 10'al baker. C-.untlew da * < and how she loves it) keeps WHEAT? Give it a 14-aay ~ ' resulted in the per- ner system clean and regular, test. Ask your grocer. ■ 'Wing |.,af of bread PRUN-O-WHEAT BREAD . Supptles shundanf brings her the natural, gentle iaxat *- b - efits ° f f,aked te »U-aaked »he»t, rich in Vita wheat, Vitamin B and the cons and pur e concentrated prune centrated juice °F choice aun- — U B , s , ripened prunes. *" b »n wa 'oH i !r * n Wrially, She enjoys the matchless fla- CONTAINS regulation fyroperties of th j e medjral vor of this fine bread .. . grows flakti wheat ani pure prune jutet. HOLS UM hl lo ‘ f -PRCN-O-PRUN’O'WHEAT 0 ncß^ra -
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By HARRISON CARROLL Copi/rtyM, 19M, King I'tatnret Hgndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD.—Ginger K o g • r ■ will have to step lively to outdistance ' her talented mother. Not so long ago, Leia Rogers ! founded the liollytown theater here
rar Ginger Rogers
and began to .produce new playa Three of her flve productlons were promptly snapped up by the movies, and Ix-la finally sold her Interest In the theater—at a neat profit —to Mae West's pala Jim Timony and Boris Petroft. Hollywood
wagered she wouldn't bo Idle long and so it has ' turned out Ginger's ma now goes to work for R-K-O, where sho will train young players in a little theater that has been used as a broadcasting station ' on the lot She'll also act as talent scout In short she's become one of the Important people at R-K-O. If It weren’t for the fact that honest people have been victimized, a racket being worked in Cleveland Heights. 0.. would be too funny. Some enterprising grafter with a stereoptican camera has persuaded would-be movie stars that Hollywood casting directors give special attention to three-dimension pictures—you know, the kind you used to look at through the special gadget. Fred Datig. casting director at Paramount, got the first batch and now they’re coming in to several of the studios And, of course, no one has the thingamobob to look at them with, even if he wanted to take the trouHere’s one that I couldn't believe at first—the Paramount studio has the fifth largest police force in California. Seventy-two uniformed officers. They're under command of Wallio Bryant, who went to work for the studio !0 years ago. C. B. De Mille first hired him to see that the extras didn't carry away props for "The Sqiiawman". Here is one police force that has • never had to work on a murder. ; Petty thefts occasionally wccur, but
I Governor Martin L. Davey’s relief lappointese shook down merchants ’for campaign contributions. Davey has sworn out a warrant for criminal libel. 1 The new deal complaint must l»e ! made lo stick with the Ohio elec--1 torate if the administration is to emerge without political damage. llf the charges are substantiated the administration gets credit for bold, non partisan action. If Davey convinces Ohio that he has been used unfairly the new deals hold on a pivotal political state will be too slippery for comfort. Postmaster General Janies A. Farley is counting on Ohio in 1936 although there are factional party disorders in the state. These points ot friction and the potentialities of the Davey-Hopkins dispute are beginning to give Republicans cause to hope for better luck in Ohio next time. Only three states. New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania cast more electoral votes than Ohio’s 26: • When tho Republican party in J 932 was more disorganized than | at any time since 1912. Franklin
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1935.
the main problems are the gatecrashers. would-be Colberts and Gables who'll stop at nothing to get Inside a studio. A laugh for you. Rain drove “The Crusades” company off the outdoor set and onto a stage where a section of a parapet had been erected. It was to be ; night scene and De Mille had braziers ! lit and torches passed around to the extras. In the middle of a take came a sudden downpour from above. The sensitive sprinkler system had been touched oft. Wiiat lugubrious comedian recently bad a late spot in hysterics when he Imagined—with the help of "giggle water”—that the audience was too cold to the colored entertainers ; and roae to denounce ringsiders? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Wendy Barrie got up SO early in the morning to go to the airport to meet George Ducros, blonde Span- | lard, and said to be one of Europe a handsomest men. . . . Willy Castello giving the welcome hand, too. . . . Among other things, Ducros is said to be tho water-skiing champion of Europe . . . whatever that is. . . . Tho Westmore boys, Hollywood's famous family of
makeup experts, are opening a swank beauty parlor on Sunset boulevard next April. . « . Tom Brown is still stepping out with Nan Grey but he sends a gardenia to Anita Ij ou i s every morning ... or is it evening? ... In
“ t J Tom Brown
case you've been wondering. Paramount changed the title of "Small Miracle” to “Four Hours to Kill”, because it feared audiences might think it a religious picture. . . . Woody Van Dyke Is said to have given Washington reporters an opinion on almost everything in Europe . . . and aii In two minutes. . . . After a diet of politicians the boys were positively goggle-eyed. DID YOU KNOW— That when Mae West was only It years old, she was making 4150 a week in a vaudeville act?
D. Roosevelt carried Ohio. But his margin was only 74,016 vote* With banks closing and the country skidding 1.227,697 Ohio voters preferred Herbert C. Hoover. In 1 the Democratic 1931 landslide Ohio Republicans held six of the state’s i 24 house seats. Both senators are . democrats, elected in 1932 and i 1934, respectively. to BROAD PROGRAM CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE agency. ”10. A war finance corporation to assist in financing of essential war industries.” ”11. Commandeering of essential industries and services. ”12. %1-icefising industries, establishment of priorities in purchasing and when essential, price fixing.” 0 A few days are left in the IC. D. Teeple quitting busi- : ness sale. Come and get your bargains. I
GEN.JOHNSON INNEWinACK
Hugh Johnson Makes New Assault On Huey Long, Rev. Coughlin Chicago, Mar. 19 —(U.R) General Hugh S. Joliuson uved his "underan ng" vocabulary in a new aM*jult luat night on Huey Long and the Rev. Charles B. Coughlin and infereutially termed people who follow them ‘ saps and suckers.’’ The former NRA administrator claimed victory in liU recent echoing controversy with Long and Coughliu but said be intends later to answer "their 1 lies and Insinuations." "I think they got about as ntuejt as they wanted out of our oue passage," Johnson said in an address sponsored by Northwestern University', "not because of any mass of my attack but because of the complete vacuum in the body of their defense. •‘k'ather Coughlin, after four previous violent attacks on Roosevelt, came scuttling back to the President’s fold and Huey simply folded up like the oratorical accordion he is. That was as much as I hoped." He said lie wished that both Coughlin and Long would "put on the record” ali that they stand for. ”1 have yet to answer their lies and insinuations," he said. "But 1 want to do this just once. I want them to put it all on the record. 1 shall not rely on any personal ground, but on a specific showing ot the fallacy and danger of what they stand for. 1 will try to do it in plenty—and once for all.” The rest of his speech, presentI ed as one of a forum series on ' "Views of Tomorrow,” he devoted to asking tho American people to "march toward the sound of the guns” in their combat with depression. "Platitudes and panacea,” he said, can cure nothing. In those categories he listed “money curealls, share-our-wealth anodynes, anil communist and fascist pain killers.” "This brings me,’’ he said, "to something that at least is specific. Which would you rather have —
the platitudes of 1932. or the middle course of this administration? You can get the latter by supporting it. But you can't get the panaceas any way you turn. “Let’s be independeot, let’s be courageous, let’s speak our minds, but for the sake of our country and ounselves, let’s not be saps and suckers.” HOLD HEARING CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE half cents for first 30; five cents for next 30; three cents lor next ITTiO; two and one-half cents for all over 210, and monthly minimum of $1.50. o REPUBLICAN CLUB CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE lined, however. The preamble of the program recites that the calm judgment and sound common sense of the American people must in time determine the course of our government. o V alparaiso Man Sues Deputy Fire Marshal Valparaiso. Iml.. March 19—1 UP) Suit tor $50,000 damages againat William Hindle, Rochester, deputy state fire marshall for alleged fa.lee
1™; tOOK FO« THE TdANGIE / HADE MAUK Os OUAIITV The Range You’ve Always Wanted Now, you can have that High Power Perfection Ran«c at a price you can afford to pay-Perfection-nude products are priced at the lowest they have been in years, but, the low price does not mean that the name ’ Perfection” stands for any less quality. On the contrary, Perfection High Powers axe GREATER VALUES than ever |?e fore —they include additional conveniences. A demonstration will convince you that thr High Power is the fastest oil stove burner in the world. See it today, or better still, try one tn your own kitchen, without obligationLee Hardware Co. High-Powtr Perfection Oii dtrusg LOCI STOV-, 5 «uuf BANGU
nrreet of Ira Berendt ou an arson uharge. was on silo In Porter circuit court today. Berendt, a former Gary and Valparaiso railway tnotoruian. said he confessed burnlug his homo north of here Jun. 36. 1933 afU* the deputy fire Marshall had terrorised Mrs. Berendt and the prfsoner’e brother. Given a suspended sentence of two to 14 yeans iimprisonment. Berendt obtained a new trial aud the case wan diuuiisued. Several Killed In India Riots Today Karachi, India, March 19— (UP) —-Several pcrsoim were killed and more than 2QO treated in liov-pitals today when troops fired on Moslem rioteiw. Tlhe riot and the firing came after the burial of the Moslem Abdul Qiiuyan. who was hanged at 4 A. M. fcr the murder of the Hindu matThe murder was committed in the judicial commissioner'a courtroom. ——o i ■ - Pleads Guilty To Possessing Still Fort Wayne. Ind., March 19 — (UP) —John Poet, farmer living near Gryant, Jay county, pleaded guilty to a charge of poeseseion ot a still and manufacturing moonshine whiskey and was bound over to tho U. 8. DLsJrk't court under
Pre - Easter Sale Os * China and Glassware V K CHINA IS THE ONE THING THAT EVERY ONE CAN ENJOY AT EASTERTIDE. A Gift of China Will Gladden The Hearts of All. « China and Glassware will add so much Beauty and ** Charm to your Easter Dinner. We’re advising early buying — There’s no telling h° w soon these Specials will be gone especially when prices are so low. $25.00 Value 100 pc. DINNER SETS ' — These sets are positively the biggest Dinner Set Values ever offered for the / U I 1 price - ¥ z <X V SERVICE FOR TWELVE. ¥ z Four PifTcrent Patterns. /- • Beautifully Decorated 111 111 I 7 100 pc. Dinner Sets I| | ||| | with Floral Design Laid H B I '*• — on a background of a ■ K u f " {'v 9 ( Delicate Cream Color. | K n|h | L * / wX*’ Y„„r Tabic. Sets Advertised Similar To Picture Shown. y ... SALE OF $45.00 “NORITAKE” Sale of Beautiful 93 pc. Imported G-L-A-S-S-W-A-R-E ■ T ■ T hON’T OVERLOOK THE WONDERFUL SAVINGS f ■ f /%/ /%/ jw f IN OUR GLASSWARE DEP T DURING THIS SALE. BXMIW A w A kJ hobnail hobnail CHOICE OF 1 LOVELY PATTERNS SALAD PLATES GOBLETS “ELAINE” “GLORIA" “ALTHEA" and “PLAZA" Regular Price SB.OO doz. Regular Price $5.00 doz. A Real Opportunity To Save Money ,!*/» /a/i n-r-,I ’"' d thi " a ' $6.00 Dm . $3.75 noa. PRE-EASTER SALE PRICE BBS Regular 29c Decorated Glassware ■Jr Jy ItZT m ■bJr SALAD PLATES. SHERBETS, GOBLETS, (<H k TAIL GLASSES, IRI IT .JUKE GLASSES, WINE »■ afy J GLASSES AND CLARET. .).) ■■■ Bi Choice of Any 29c Glassware — Each w»>C service roi l T I'WELVE. “FOSTORIA” HERMITAGE Glassware — a iz l l aqt* ' r,<,c SALAD PLATES, Now 37c ea. ALL BKEAKI Ab I SEIS 3Qc GOBtKTS Now 22c ea. ,32 and 3o piece sets HA Percent urna kt Beautiful Patterns AfU OFF ovC SHERBETS, Now 22c ea. Wschaferßs HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS XE -rfr—ar
ILSOO bond by Wjlliwui D Remrwll V. 8. Conimbwionor, here yeeterday. F<x»t **• arrufiicd l*»l JiaUurday by agents of the alcohol tax unit of the bureau of internal revenue Tfho raided hie farm and confiscated a 100-galU>n stilj, 400 gallon* of inqpnshine whiskey. -’iSOO gallon* of coni sugar and a complete diattlliug outfit and miacolkuieoun equipment. The raid was the largest made in the Fort Wayne division since the repeal of Uie prohibition act. Cab Drivers Protest Licensing Cleveland.—(U.R)—The city defied the state to make cab drivers here pay for two licenses, bringing the result cah drivers hud sought, but iu a surprising manner. Frank Sommers, president of the Cab Drivers' Protective Union, protested drivers should not have lo get city licenses (*2, plus 50 cents for photograph* inasmuch as the stake this year was enforcing its own requirements. (J ■ Fort Wayne Man’s Plea Heard Today Indianapolis. Ind.. March 19 — (UP) —Marion F. Shuckman, former Fort Wuyne banker, serving a i-14 year sentence at the stale prison on an embezzlement charge, was among IS in mates wliose .petitions for leniency were heard today by the Matte celciuency commission. Henry Pollard, Shelbyville farmer, serving u life term on a charge of slaying John Thoma* nearly nine
yeaiw ago, was another inmate wbose petition wa.s heard today. Shuekmuu was convicted In ths Allen circuit court May 18, 1934
Specials For Wednesday Nice Jumbo Frogs Boneless Perch and Fillets Smoked White Fish and Salmon Fresh Oysters .... pint, 20c; quart, 35c Cream Cheese - - Cottage Cheese Creamery Butter 2 lbs. 72c Fresh Boiling Beef 2 lbs. 25c Plain Wrap Coffee Ib. 20c Sweet Heart Oleo 2 lbs. 29c Fresh Country Eggs 2 doz. 45c 1 can Peaches and 1 can Apricots with meat order, both 29c Phone 106 or 107 Free Delivery Mutschler’s Meat Market
Page Five
on a charge of embezzling several thousand dollaiw of finide while serving us trust officer of the Dims saving and trust bank. Fort Wayne.
