Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 19 July 1935 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by FIIE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Bntercd at the Decatur, Ind., Post °*!ca as Second Class Matter. J. H. Holier President A. R. Holthouso, Sec’y 4 Bui. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Bingli' copies $ .02 *One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier $5.00 One month, by mail 35 Three months, by mall SI.OO Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 pne year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere $3.50 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 Dailies. Chances are that Archduke Otto will not live to a ripe old age on the Austrian throne. If it’s hotter in Washington than around these parts no wonder congress wants to adjourn. The world will be here a thousand years from now, so don't think everything has to he done today. China may make Chinese out of Japanese, but Mussolini will never be able to make Italians out of the Ethiopians. America is still safe when the middle aged and youth of the day argue the Cardinals’ chances of nosing out the Giants. The Wayne Knitting Mills, Fort Wayne, are now closed permanently. Such are the destructive forces of strikes. The mills formerly employed 1,200 persons. A 23 year old American girl has. married the son of the president of China. What about the poet’s line, “The east is east and the west is west, and never the twain shall meet." The fellows who predicted that the rays of the sun would be utilized for making and dispensing electric current, probably stood out on the desert during a July day. It does have power. These .’title black bugs stick like glue, apparently don’t bite and seem to come with the harvest season. They have been classified as "oat bugs’’ but don’t confine themselves to the fields. The danger of double parking war clearly demonstrated on Second street Thursday afternoon. An auto was parked in the line of traffic and another ear going north •rammed it. Someone might have received a broken neck. Don’t double park. .Mrs. Waley got 20 years for her part in the Weyerhauser kidnaping and will serve her time at the federal detention home in Michigan. Her husband, who was sentenced to 45 years, is now a prisoner at Alcatraz island. When crime becomes a motive in life, live's are changed as in the case of the Waleys. Auto owners paid $7,700,064 for licenses during the fiscal year endTonighT SQUARE and ROUND ! 1) A N C E LINCO GARDENS N. E. of Decatur Clyde Brown orchestra ! Il 25c per couple

ling July 1, reports from the state i I house show. The total is $625,975 greater than for the same period a year ago, registration of new ears being more than In 1934. Let *' times improve only a little and the t auto business wll 1 reach peak records. t . Payment to depositors depends t largely on the amount paid T>y creditors of a baulk. Down at Wak- > arusa, Indiana, collections must ) have been perfect, for the deposit * ors will receive 100 per cent, plus J 1 7.9 per cent interest on their de- , posit. When the bank closed in 1 1933 It had total deposits of about I $200,000. The stockholders were called on for ar. assessment. People want amusement. Chicago is convinced of that fact and will build a Coney Island along the lake front. Mayor Kelly is endeavoring to obtain the services of Major Lohr, who managed the wor’d s fair in 1933 and 1934 and if he signs up. the exposition should he a success. It's a wondur they didn't save the sky ride and other attractions of a permanent nature and incorporate them in the Chicago fair grounds. Boy Scouts and their friends are happy to note the high honor bestowed on L. L. "Hotchy” Hotchkiss. scout executive of the Anthony Wayne area, with offices in Fort Wayne. Mr. Hotchkiss has been named chief transportation officer for the national scout Jamboree in Washington next month. That means making up schedules and looking after a thousand and one jobs for the boys and organizations formed by the jamboree. ( Hotchy can do the job and with his happy smL’e and pleasing personality will rally the support and cooperat ion of every man and boy connected with the Mg outing. * STAR SI G N A L S * by OCTAVINE j For persons who believe that human destiny is guided by the planets the daily horoscope is outlined by a noted astrologer. In addition to information of general interest. It outlines information of special interest Le persona born on the designated JULY 20 Most favored ones today are those who were born from March 10-30. General Indications For ' Everybody The evening is fairly good for entertaining. ' Today’s Birthdate You should be very careful by I nature. Many agriculturists and plumbers are born about this tjme. Some enterprise should turn out to be very <ati.sfactory in October, ' 1935. It should also be a good time to develop new plans. Danger Nov. 30-Dec. 5, 1935. Socially favorable Dec. 30, 1935Jan. 2. 1936. Headers desiring additional information regarding their horoscopes are invited tn communicate with Octaxlne in care of this newspaper. Enclose n o-cent stamped selt-addressed envelope. * TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Dally Democrat File » ■ 4 July 19 —Joy night al the Chauthuqua. A. D. Shallenberger, former govi it nor of Nebraska and now a member of congress lectures u.t Chautauqua. Churcee held Union services in the Chautauqua tent lust night. President Wilson reutrnu to Washington after a short vacation to find his deek piled high with important (problems. The Mrs. Stella Mitch residence in Union township struck by lightening und destroyed by fire. Henry Colter of Bobo is a business caller here. Miss Mayme Demoree of Indianapolis is visiting Decatur friends. The Elmer Sherman family of Louisville, are guests at the Terveer home. Mr. and Mrs. Lavi Ba lor entertain nt a six o'clock dinner. Walter and Winona Wertzberger ot Hammond visit here. o Dance, Sunday, Sunset. JUST THINK Only $500.00 down and j $250 per year are the terms I on which you can buy the 67 acre farm at Public Auction, ' Saturday, July 20, at 2 P. M.

Face to Face. --. iWfck., __ zjZ S' ' Arc • zZ " -siz/' ' -zA / W I Ajf ■ i »■ i r " x, ~*——; —• $

k Household Scrapbook | by ROBERTA LEE T urnips Add a tespoonful of sugjir to the, water when boiling turnips and it. will tak oway the strong taste of I the vegetable. Scratches on Walnut A scratch on walnut furniture t cun be c:n.e>l?d by rubbing over' the scratch with a shelled walnut hull. Rats To keep rats from the cellar sprinkle chloride of lime around the ' walls and corners. Floor Whitener Ordinary beach sand is one of the best floor Whiteners. 0 * « Modern Etiquette by ROBERTA LEE Q. What kind of gifts are given for a tenth wedding anniversary? A. Tin. Q. When one is traveling, and is foretd by circumstinces to econo-

Tar, Feathers Rout Aged Pair ’ ■w, B m. MMg. Ag ir JBvh • 41 B v -■ W f ■ -Aw .» ■* Mr- an£ l Mrs. Julius Sweitzer Threat of hot tar and feathers failed to cool the love of Julius Sweitzer, 60, • for his 86-year-old widow wife, the former Mrs. Sarah King, of Cory, Fa. When the Cory townsfolk, 500 strong, and irate over the man’s marriage to the widow, drove a truck up to the couple’s home loaded with hot tar and then proceeded to hurl stones through the windows, the couple fl£d to Erie, Pa. Resentment against the marriage was aggravated by the slaying of Lawrence Field, 39. Police have held Guy King, the new Mrs, Sweitzer's son, in connection with the slaying on grounds that King had mistakenly killed Field instead of Sweitzer, the man he didn’t want to many his mother.

— DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRI DAY, .11 IA 10, 193.*.

mize. is it necessary to give the ; same sized tips that one sees the other passengers giving? i A. No. it is not necessary. One I should give tips only according to one’s means. Only a timid person feels obligated to be more genrous I than the purse allows. Q. Should a woman keep on her i wr.ip, hat, and gloves, when making a formal cull? • A. Yes, though she may allow her fur or heavy drap t: slip from her shoulders, but not remove it. o TWO BOYS ARE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE of the truck bed. The truck which struck the vehicle on which the faun pe pie wera riding did not stqp otter the accident. Members of the party said the truck was ipulling a trailer hoiring the name of the AiEC Washing Machine company of South Bend. Reisener tsaid he pulled toward the side of the road nd slowed down when the oncoming truck failed to di n its lights in response to

hits signal. The speeding truck (swerved, the .ar narrowly missing Reieener'e truck i’i<l the trailer sectio nowinging against the sideboard on the Newland truck. The children killed were struck by i sideboard broken by the impact. MASS ARRESTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Prussian state councilor and a ■ reichs ag deputy. He is a confidant of Goering. As Prussian minister of justice he j went even further than the drastic: federal laws in purging his depart- 1 ment of "non-a.yan" elements. He is 4'7, all, broad-shouldered with short graying hair and a small Hitlerian mustache. As the government opened its ■ campaign against Catholic, the officially guided press stimulated its attacks’ on Jews. _o Orphans Play With Dynamite Tiffin. 0., — (UP) — Somebody' must consider the little residents of the Junior Order United American Mfchunics Orpbin Home a husky lot. Boys playing in the park at the home foftnd a half stick of dynamite, which arrived on the grounds through mysteriou'3 channels. Potatoes Grow Above Ground Senath. Mo., —(UP)—B. S. Harkey, farmer, has a potato vine on which the potatoes grow übove the ground. They are about the size and shape of radishes. A LL RHEUMATISM LEFT HIS BODY Indo-Vin Quickly Stopped lx>ng Suffering’ Os Indiana Man MR. CHARLES J-. WEBER, of 617 E. Jefferson Blvd.. South Bend. Ind., says: “I had rheumatism al)

over me, in my ■hips and legs and jeven in the back of my neck, and it just seemed [like my WHOLE (SYSTEM wa.s poisoned and full of this rheumatic affliction. I got Indo-Vin and will say that here is a REAL and GENUINE medicine

i s ll j Y.” nr 1 TWW i

for a person to MR.CHARLES take. I started to J. WEBER take it for rheumatism and it lias eliminated all I the poisons from my system and that a.wful rheumatism that had | been over my body is all gone and' the joints of my hips and legs are limbered up. I can walk straight I now, and I don't limp any more." Anyone who suffers can get Indo-t Vin at the Ho’thouse drug store, here in Decatur, and from all leading druggists throughout this section.

AUTO LICENSE FEES INCREASE Motor Vehicle Fec« In Indiana Increase sb2b,600 Over 1934 Indianapolis, July 19. <UA‘ J* ' provement in the automobile sales in Indiana was reflected today in I a report of the state auto license, division showing that motor’ hide fees increased nearly •’ 000 over 1934. The figure, covering collections for the fiscal year ending June ■ . | 1935, included license fees of an types of motor vehicles. Frank Finney, director of the division, pointed out that 45,62 more passenger cars were in operation during the past fiscal year than in the previous 12-month per-; iod. New car purchases during the first six months of 1935 totalled 80 472. an increase of 28.030 over the same period of 1934. Used car i purchases increased 44.272. A total of 109.292 more persons purchased drivers licenses than in 1934. A drive against persons operating without permits, and increased sales of new and used automobiles accounted for the rise in revenue. Finney said. The department's collections Lorn all sources were $7,700,064. compared with $7,074,088 during the fiscal year. Passenger license fees were $6,727,244, compared with $6,312,432 for 1934. The remainder was collected from drivers licenses, $435.312 and transfers and notary fees, $324,332. Os the net receipts. 25 per cent goes to the general fund, 50 per cent to the highway department. !and the remaining 25 per cent to cities and counties of the state. A total of $543,389 was distributed to local units on July 1. ABYSSINIA IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE signal fires are lighted for war, warriors all over the country will respond on the minute, in groups of from 50 to 500, under their tribal chiefs. But in addition to their rifles, the disorganized army will have but about 1.000 good machine guns, six little trench mortars, 13 slow commercial airplanes, and 200 canson to augment them, according to an expert estimate today by Jean Perrigault, correspondent of the newspaper Matin of Paris. League To Meet Geneva. July 19, - tU.P.)— The League of Nations council will meet to consider the Italo-Ethiopian disI pute about July 29, the league secretariat indicated today. The league issued a communique

■ Mid-Summer Dress Sale i ■ I ■ WE'VE had Great Dress Sales before, but never such a i ■ »■ k large selection of beautiful dresses at such drastic pnce ( 8 1 reductions! Don't wait, plan to be here tomorrow! Y «»u H ( a Mmß not be dissapointed! . Regular Sizes, Half Sizes—All Styles and Colors. ■ 1 BA SILK dresses Qn £ A * ■ //AW formerly $3.98 and $1.98, now at.... ( ■ Mu 1AA SILK dresses d*Q CA ■ ■ / I f/7 ' J ' s A W formerly $4.98 and $5.98, now at .... a ■U Jf feS I QA S,LK ’DRESSES PA ' A-F \\ I i formerly $7.98, now at tPA.t**' ■ 11 -\uC lAA SVMMER COTT()N DRESSES, Voiles. ! a w B AW batiste, seersuckers, d* lOQ g ■ ‘Wil /' I formerly $1.98, now on sale at 8 sF ’. / B U? 1A A and Womens Cotton Dresses Q7/» * ■ Ml 1 ? B| A »vv to close out at o i ■ * jfelH F ■ N ° LAY AWAY —NO EXCHANGES—EVERY SALE FINAL | ■ ■V\ 11 —MORE BARGAINS— ; ’II f\ 1B h Re baffle Coats $2.50 AH Wool Spring Coats I *9 H J! Im White Wool Coats. . $1.50 were $10.75, now. $7.50 I «£■ U / 111 L ’ nen Swa «« er Suit » W. 58 Better Spring Coats. $ ■ IM VB Alf Wool Suits, $16.50 « 19.50, now $lO j ® I'M* s i f —2 piece styles .... $5.00 Girls Spring Coats. ’ 11 Best quality,.. 1-2 price i S llii "WHITE FELT HATS ' i Reduced to tp !•»/♦' j B 'I s BM Newest styles, also Lilac, Yellow, Rose and • ■ll SiiflßM Navy colors. Fine quality, I p ■- - - I ■ Womens Cotton Bathing Suits, Saturday Onlv’ I ■ sizes 38 to 42, all colors FTQ /n,y * ■ each i»/C “Real Silk” Hosiery i ■ Childrens Cotton V'ubA B I ■ Bathing Suits I mC (Irregulars) Full Fashioned. |L 'vM ■ I ■ One lot Girdles. r/Y ( ° r S * rV « e , Weight I ' ■ reduced to ..J S()C Famous for Wear I 2 Pair sl.oo ' I One lot Silk Crepe Underwear, — — ‘ Panties, Gowns, Slips, Q* -j a l ■■ ■ Niblick & Co. :

i„. that the council would be sayihß l 1 ” 11 . ~l lv 25 if I obliged to meet after J'"> i the four arbitrators on the East. Mrlcan conciliation commission I were unable to choose a th an I neutral Chairman or fMl** 10 tend the arbitro’-ion period beyond dietary xenerai coundl on July 17 l« t 0 attend a special meeting^ of tM , ; council between July 25 and K 2 to consider the dispute. NO RELIEF IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE O»B_ I Jack Haymond l was killed at Carmel l Struck by an Indiana railroad trac tion car while returning home on I his bicycle from a swimming party. Bridge Itegdon, 10. *'«» hilled | : when run over by a construction I company truck at Valparatso. I Seven men were injured, two I ! seriously, when a thresher explodea on a farm near The I most seriously injured were Arthur Chapman and Virgil Nettleton. Kyle Reel. Re* Sandwel’, George Marx and wtl ,!liam Gilmore, all of Wabash coun--1 ty, Illinois, suffered cuts, bruises .' and burns. . i William Sims, 56. street car opllerator. suffered minor injuries, when the car

PUBLIC SALE RFAI ESTATE — IMPROVED 80-AURE FARM ! I the undersigned, will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder. ■ mv farm, known as the David Klopfen-tine farm, located 4>, mitei ‘ east of Bluffton, on the Kemp Road, on WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1935 Sale Starting at 1:00 O’clock P. M. This is an improved 80-acre farm you must see to appreciate, i All under cultivation, except 10 acres ot woods. The farm » nirdr , located on good road, close to market, close to school and .hurra. , The farm is well fenced. The line fences all around farm are new. HOUSE—IO-room house with new roof, with large basement: has bath room -large cement porch on two sides of house; nice front and BARN Igirge bank barn with slate roof, size 88 ft. by 45 f.. with cement floor on entire barn. SUMMER HOUSE—Nice large summer nouse. size -4 ft a th n. CEMENT BLOCK BUILDING—2O ft. by 20 ft., used for wa.-h hou r 1 butchering house and smoke house. o r , n. s MILK HOUSE -New modern built, size 8 ft. by 16 fi . wi'h 4-ta I drilled well in it, pump jack and gas engine. Will sell with farm. j HOG BARN—Sire 70 ft. by 20 ft., with all cement floors and , cement hog troughis. POULTRY HOUSE—Size 26 ft. by 12 ft.—und o-her out building. TERMS Part cash. Balance on easy terms. ’’ NOTE —Anyone interested in this farm and wanting credit, should I see Gideon Gerber at Farmers and Merchants Bank, or Jess> Ellenu berger. i On name day, July 24. 1935. I will sell large barn on land now 8 owned by Government on CCC Camp Grounds, lowced 14 mil. east ot David Klopfenstine farm. This barn is in A-l condition, size ft by 36 ft., has wind brake, size 50 ft. by 15 ft. This barn will sell to the . highest bidder, and must be moved from premises on or before March I I Ist, 1936. TERMS ON BARN—(Cash. MRS. DAVID KLOPFENSTINE. Owner. i Elienberger z ßros.—Auctioneers Gideon Gerber, (lei'll 5

nine-ton trailer truck in Idianapolia. ’ 111 - I — Dick Engle Leases Filling Station Dirk Engle, aon of .Mi and Mr* ' Fred Engle t Rugg street, has ed a filling .station one mile north of .Monroe on U. S. road 2J. u. . Engle will operate the elution auj i will sell g aoline, oil and autonio.I bile accessories. - Disabled Veterans Appeal For Bonus New Haven, Conn.. July 19—(ppi |—The disabled American vetenim ' national convention today voted to I make a personal appeal t congress 1 for immediate paym nt of the j bon tie. Spurred by an uddress by re?re Isenative Wright Patman. Texas, author of the vetoed bonus lull, a dele. I g (tion ot three, Including Patmu, was elected to bring the case before administoition. Besides Patman, the invention J elected Frank J. Irfwin. Hollywood, California, ana Frank Haley. a [ Wa-ahington, to epear before the , national legislature with a resolution. the terms of which were not . immediately made known. II ~ Trade In a Good Town — Decatur