Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1935 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published —6i A. THE Every Eve- DECATUR ting Except DEMOCRAT Sunday by CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Tost 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 * 02 One week, by carrier ._ .11 One year, by carrier 15.00 One month, by mail .36 Three months, by mail 1.3'1 Six months, by mail —— 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted arc within first and second zones. Elsewhere 33.50 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 Dallies. • April showers will not only bring | May flowers but assure good crops, and that's of importance to every I one. Decatui is getting over the depression and its up to each individual to see that his personal for- ! tune is retri o < d. . — South Dakota had a loot of snow ■ over the week-end, convincing us i that the occasional flurries here were scarcely worth worrying over. The FIIA will help yon modernize your home up to $2,000 and you can pay it out monthly as rent. That looks like a fair proposition : for those who get busy. Os course those who are opposed j to the live billion dollar appropri-j ation just concluded in congress. I will not take any of the money asj it is distributed. That surely | wouldnt be on the level. War clouds seem to be lifting; temporarily in Europe, though the I fact they are arguing over the period of time of peace, indicates they expect some day to get out the old fife and drum. .Bpring tax paying time is near and it might be well to be getting a few dollars together. The rates this year by the way, are considerably less than last, which will be | gratifying to those who may have been led by the cry aliout high taxes to believe otherwise. Fifty people were killed in the first serious tornado of the year, -4 i which swept across Dixieland ami destroyed several towns ami millions of dollars worth of properly in the rural sections. It doesn't take long for a seventy-mtle gale to wipe out miles of civilization. Looks like we may some day be getting new houses by parcel post, with a new model each spring like automobiles, if the proposed fabricated dwellings come through as predicted by no less a sound business man than Owen D. Young of the General Electric. Chicago is chasing the bandits and killers out of town and many l of them will prob;,bly hung out at northern Indiana summer resorts, so they will be conveniently located to return when the drive lets up. Police officers should watch for them and prevent tin® from even getting a temporary footing. Jpsse liice, president of the Decatur ('humber of Commerce and his capable assistants, members of the Iward of directors, are constantly working to make this a better community tn which to live. Give them your honest and earnest assistance and encouragement. It •will be a lire investment of effort all around. If flits nation ever goes Io war again, and we hope it won't, the first thing will be conscription oi ail men up to 15, giving us an army]

of ten million immediately and the next thing will be to take over all munition plants and every other concern needed. This is all provided in the McSwalm war profit measure now nearing final passage in congress. Pleas Greenlee, secretary to Governor McNutt, held n love feast at Vincennes, bringing together the disgruntled party factions. Immediately this was announced as his coming out party as a candidate for governor. Os course these things are largely in the minds of the newspaper writers for its still a year until the primaries and convention campaigns will be ripe. In due time announcements will be made by those who desire to enter. Those who are hurrying to Washington to get their share, and more if possible, of the five billion work relief fund, will probably find they will have to rush back home to help the state get their part before I the various communities can have I any. When the distribution is | made, we arc sure it will be done lin such manner that the pushing) |of claims by any one community l will avail little. However, it is i wise to find not what bus to be done and then of course do it. The Mutschler Packing Company ; ; has for years been one of the out-. j.-landing institutions of Decatur. • i Besides furnishing employment for many it lias provided an excellent market for stock in this territory. It is the sincere hope of every one : here that whatever reorganizatzioti | is necessary since the death of the . president and general manager, the i late Albert Mutschler, the big plant ' will continue in the high grade and efficient manner of past years. | Cooperation of every good citizen ‘ is assured to those to whom the j task of carrying on fails. —o — * s ta iFs j (Tn a l s 1 By OCTAVINE ♦— ♦ For persons who that huI man destiny is guMed by the planets; the daily horoscope is outlined by a; j noted astrologer. In addition to in. i formation of general interest, it outlines information of special interest to persons born on the designated APRIL 9. This is a very good day. The only trouble today may come through self-indulgence and extravagance. The morning is good for routine work and the evening tor the theater or for planning. You should enjoy having company in the home as that should lie the center of interest. I Birthdate You may be drawn into a profession around where mining oper-1 ations or similar work is going on. This is attractive but also dangerous for you if you do not ] know of A and use care. 3 oil j should have a favorable month dur-] ing February. 1336. Push financial activity. Danger July 1-10, 1335. Socially favorable June 21-27 1935. I 4 Write letters and do your clerical I work April IS-29. 19:15. There may be opportunity for a complete change around Oct. 12. 1935. APRIL 10. It will be best to be quiet this morning and attend to routine affairs. . The same applies to the early afternoon. The late afternoon and evening is very socially favorable, but be careful of intestinal trouble through food or drink. Birthdate You should avoid dangerous pursuits. Player should be most helpful to you. You should have a very favorable month during February, 1936. Danger July 6-12, 1935. Socially favorable Juno 25-28, 1935. Write letters or do your clerical work on April 18, 19, and 20, 1935. Possible opport tinny for a change around October 12, 1935. Headers de Oring additional information regarding their horoscopes are Invited to communicate with <)ctuxlne in '-are of this newspaper. Enclose a 3-cent stamped self-addressed envelope. — O __ * With Our Subscribers | 4- ■ —— ♦ Rolland Repp rt. studmtt at Heidelberg university at Tiffin, Ohio had his paper renewed today. Willis J- Reed of route 3, Decatur w.ts in today and renewed hi-s paper. The Harrison Th ater and Realty Co., of Fort Wayne mailed in their renewal today. o — REM ZU — lor General ‘ Household Cleaning.

X i What Hand Will Light It? // r Il \ \ V<- a .

* TWENTY’ YEARS * AGO TODAY 11 From the Daily Democrat File | 14—— —♦ April 9, 1915. — Closing day of .Monmouth school delightful with many patrons attending. B. F. Kizer and Miss Ruth Gay are teaclTcrs. Lemuel Fisher badly injured when attacked by an angry bull near Huntington. Fifty years ago this morning General Lee surrendered to Genj eral Grant at Fort Blakely near Mobile. Alabama. Number from here are attending | the Methodist conference al Aubnrn. Two boys caught selling razors] and knives here confess to robb-

J J W9 I UjE in HOLTTWOOD^^J,

By HARRISON CARROLL t Copyright, 1935, i King features Syndicate, Inc. > I HOLLYWOOD—WhiIe doctors are ( i fluoroscoping Jack Oakie to find out what makes him gain so many pounds, Cecil B. De Mille wishes they ' would locate the actor's sense of humor and cut it out. j Recently, on “The Crusades" set, , De Mille was re- ‘

■ bearsing a draI matic lovn scene I between Txvrctta | Young and: I Henry Wilcoxon. I Imbued by the . I spirit of the ‘ | passage, the dlI rector was prue- . 1 tlcally acting it I out. I Suddenly, onto | the set walked j J Oakic. In place of the usual sweat shirt, he

4 1 Cecil B. De Mille

i wore a full dress suit, a top hat, and ho twirled a cane. Ho was beaming. Ignoring Do Mille'n most Zcusllke j frown, lie cried | “Hello, folks, is it too late tor me ; U replace Wilcoxon?" I The lowdown on Ida Lupino's big diamond ring is too disappointing. Romantic as it would have been, the spnrklcr wu not placed on her finger by Lewis Milestone, her latest director. Nor yet by a rich British admirer she met on her reqent trip home. Tile truth, we are told, is tb.it her father, St.-uilc.' f.uphio. nve her the ' ring. And Ida han just l>een having a little tun with the b ; 3. ' One of the better meet tack stork: ta being told by Harry Ruskin. At the recent Santa Anita meet, ' he reports, a prominent eastern owner was berating his Jockey! for , losin; a ra> r. “Why didn't you obey Instructions?'' be demanded. "When you got into the stretch. why didn't you get among the leaders.” Whereupon, tho fed-up jockey squelched: “What! And leave the horse behind!" Don t be surprised If M arner Brothers square oU with the New ' [ York censor who is objecting to i . “Black Fury”. Especially on ills I

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. APRIL 9, 1935.

ing hardware at Payne, Ohio. E. A. Maun purchases a Ford car. I Robert Meyers starts shoe shin- ' ing parlor in Lose barber shop. 1 Eggs 19c, butter 27c, butterfat 30c. ——o * Household Scrapbook | ROBERTA LEE J Painting Galvanized Iron Before painting buckets, tubs. ] rain-spots, or anything made gal-j vanized iron, paint the entire sur-, i faoe with a .oat of good vinegor, iand leave for about three days lie- 1 fore applying tlie paint. Then the I paint will not peel off. j A Da r k Kitchen A dark kitchen can be brighten-

particular criticism of the picture. That it shows oft the police in a bad light. The studio took special care to get over tbo idea that the brutal mins ; police In the film were a bunch of hoodlums recruited by a racketeering protective agency. What makes It odder is that ths Pennsylvania censor board, rated as I among the nation's toughest, passed j the new Muni film tn its entirety. What youthful actress, who has just broken with a childhood sweetheart, left one of her new lx>y friends at a dancing spot the other evening and retired to a quiet corner for a good cry? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Looks as if a predicted screen reunion is to take place. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were dining at the Trocaiiero the other evening. Or were the boys merely trying to show they had not personally quarreled? . . . Things that should make California legislators shiver . . . I >uis Fazenda, Claudette Colbert and

r ■ Jl . » ■* • !-<>,■ ■■ ■ llcniy Wilcoxon

Joe Rapt have Stopped construction on their new homes. . . . Henry Wilcoxon's father will pay hi in a three month’s visit. Hls name is Robert Stanley Wilcoxon and he Isa retired bnnlv-r from the W'.-t Indi' .... Tbo old Colony club an d the

Clover chib have co il.ii’i I. T m.v spot i nt the o'd Clover address with Lew Wertheimer prominent in the management. 11. in is to operate under an exclusive membership basis. . . . Eli a Landl rid-3 b"r horse, Bourbon, in the society horseshow in Flintridge. . . . Clark (table Is grins all over. His Irish setter has a new litter of 11 pups, all thoroughbreds wit h pedigrees THAT long. . . . And a laugh for you. Earl Carroll just wired Tom Rooney, Hollywood agent, to line up W. C. Fields. Bing Crosby and Mae West for his new Broadway show. DID YOU KNOW— That Alas Mowbray ran away I from home when he was 16 to ship . I to sea as a cabin boy ?

< d wondeffitily by a gay-colored linoleum on the floor, and gay chintz shades for the widows and 'glass door. Then, of course, a| bright paint should be used for the walls and ceiling. When Storing Linens Do not starch the linens that are | 'to be stored, as starch will make them very liable to crack. o Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE d i Q. What is the difference belt ween a formal greeting and an informal greeting, when meeting a 1 person? A. The formal greeting is “How do you do?” or "Good morning." The informal greeting is “Hello.” Q. With whom should a debutante, at her coming-out party, go to supper? A. With the first man who asks I her. Q. To whom should one send ' notes announcing a birth? | A. Only to intimate friends. • o it Answers To Test Questions I Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two. .... 1 ♦ ♦ 1. Chateau d'lf. i 2. Wabash. | 3. Mountain. i. Brothers of Christ. 5. Lord Nelson. 6. Yes. 7. Northwest India. 8. Electric Home and Farm Authority. !). Bishop of Antioch in the reign of Trajan. io. A disease of a nerve or nerves, accompanied by inflammation. Roland Reppert Receives Sweater Tiffin, Ohio—April 9 —(Special) The Heidelberg Student Prince band announces that the following people have been awarded “H” sweaters for two years service in the I Hid: Roland Reppert. Decatur, Indiana; Alfred Pfenner, N- Y., Walter Trogler. Dennison; Sheldon Swickard. Bettsville; Harland Hpurow. John Bastian, and Edwin 'Kohli. Tiffin. Mr. Reppert, who is a sophomore at Heidelberg, is the: son of Mr. end Mrs. Fred Rep; ert, 422 N. 3rd j St. Decatur, Indiana. He is a mem[her of the Men's Glee Club which i! as just returned from a weeks tour I of Ohio and Indiana, and is a manI her of the Aploualton Literary SocI iety- • o ♦ ——♦ Adams County Memorial Hospital ♦ ♦ Miss llulda t Myers, route 2 De--1 calur. dismissed today. Mrs. Martha Holston, 421 North ■ Seventh street Lcatur. major opori itiou Monday night. Her condition is reported to be much improved-

COURTHOUSE Rule Against Defendant The court ruled against the defendants. James K. Staley et al, to answer on or before April 18 in the note case brought against them by the Department of Financial Institutions for the Peoples Louu and Trust company. Attorney Fees O r dered Harry Mlllisor was ordered to pay SSO for attorney fees in the divorce case brought against him by ■his wife Virginia Milliaor. An appearance was filed today by H. R. McClenahan for the defendant. The defeudant was ruled to answer. Order Defendants to Answer The court ruled against Labon G. Gage, Edna Headington. Dott Huer. Madge Johnson. Alfred Bollinger, Elizabeth Lobsiger. George Headington, Isabel! Headington, Amanda Murphy, Mina IJollenbacher, the defendants, in the case to contest a will tiled by John A. Lhamon. et al. to answer on or before April 18. The case was set for trial May 8. Appearance Withd r awn H. 11 McClenahan withdrew his appearance for Homer Deßolt, et al. defendants In the note case brought by Gilliam Lumber company of Chicago, Illinois. Case Transferred A petition to remove a case to the federal court was sustained. The case is entitled WesTey H. Dierdorf and Margaret E. Elmore, administrators of the estate of George W. Dierdorf vs. the Pennsylvania Railroad company and is a damage suit. The abstract was ordered sent to the Federal court, northern district. Fort Wayne. A similar case filed by the same parties against the Pennsylvania Railroad company was also sent to the Federal court. Real Estate Transfers Francis M. Tlnkham to Julia E. Campbell, inlots 532, 533, 534, 535 in Berne for SI.OO. Sarah R. Huffman ct al to Ralph Christy et ux 60 acres of kind in Jefferson township for SI.OO. Herma J. BouUon et al to Waldo E. Smith et ux. 40 acres of land in Washington township for >I.OO. Anna C. Burkhead el ux to John i Thomas et ux. 6 23-32 acres of land

BY POPULAR DEMAND We are continuing our SA L E ON Permanent Waves until APRIL 20 Get Yours Now! $2.00 Oil Wave QI JTA Complete .... A tt)V OPEN EVENINGS COZY Beauty Shoppe Phone 266 K. of C. Bldg.

OGOSH/ I cd cJ ~I I 0" S 1' -I *I B B I I I I kV I I 'I i ’I Sht NinuH-S’i'iitiiirl I 9 Fort Wayne’s "Good Evening” Newspaper , fl

tin Wasnington townernp lor sivv Louis E. Neuderhouser et ux to Cal F. Peterson et ux inlots 498 - and 500 in Decatur for SI.OO. Marriage License LMter Simian, farmer, St. Marys township. Adams county and Irene Huffman. Blue Creek township, Adams count.’. o , EUROPE’S MONARCHS CONTINUED intOM PAGE ON» monarchy continues. King Gustaf i V of Sweden is the oldest of Eurlope's reigning royalty; King llaa ■ kon VII guides Norway's destinies; and King Christian X is ruler over , Denmark and Iceland. Ixiopold 111. son of the late Albert of Belgium, is on tlie throne at Brussels. Certain political faci tions have agitated for a more liberal constitutkinnl monarchy but ■i the young ruler apparently Is firm- • ly seated on his throne. Victor Emmanuel 111 of Italy ' I has reigned for 25 years. Although ' Mussolini Is practical dictator of ■ the government, the Italian court '! in many respects retains more of ! the old flavor of pre-war days than any of Europe’s monarchlal capitals. Five Thrones Topple Four kings are still in power in ' kingdoms in southeast Europe. ' Boris 111 rules over Bulgaria; Carol 11 in Roumania; King Zog, who recently declared himself a candidate j '. for a rich wife, in Albania, and

?-if-Al I >>*• HR f 1 >' ~£-a H '' K Ji, Sv Ifs the Immaculate B STREAK IN YOU! ■ There is, it has been proven, a great preferencc among men for white shirt-. Men realize that in a white shirt they will be smartest. One further thing has been established..- BB Men ktivu they can make no mistake if they buy shirts by ARRCPX’. lor it is a name HH that has, for more than twenty-five years, stood for the highest quality, the best workmanship, the most dependable styling and everlasting good taste. If you want the best in shirts, we can furnish you with it from our line ... we earn ■■ a complete assortment of ARR-OW Shirts—every one Sanforized Shrunk. Come in and see us for your next shirt ■■ purchatd. K HOLTHOUSE SCHULTE CO. ■ ■war iiit'tw

: ■ ■ I" ' 1 ■ 1 "’i. ■ ' -

I; SLIP-Oi*