Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 20 July 1935 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evenlug Except Bunday by FHE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. ■titered at the Decatur, Ind., Poet nsflce as Second Class Matter. H. Heller — President A. R. Holthouse, Sec y & Hus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies .... — I •°- One week, by carrier — .1° One year, by carrier $5.00 i One month, by mail ..... — .35 1 Three months, by mail sl.o<> ' Six months, by mail 1.7;> Ono year, by mail — 3.00 i One year, at office— 3.00 i Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere i $3.00 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER. Inc. |ls Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. These are days when it's easy to strike up a conversation about the weather. You're not human if you haven't felt like bumping the one-eyed autos off the road. That eastern woman posing for pictures with a million dollar's worth of jewels on her hands need not complain if she is hold-up victim. Jack Dempsey is doing his best trying to hold his adopted baby in the proper manner. Many a father will advise him that he started ; too late. The Indianapolis-penr.y-ice fund has been boosted to more than, S2BOO and if this kind of weather I keeps up every penny will be need ■ Mussolini doesn't seem near as | anxious to start war since he has j been advised the Ethiopians will turn wild lions, tigers and elephants loose in fighting the Italians. The Dace is foolish to get into a mess, which might entangle the whole of Europe and destroy nations bigger than his. A few more killings and Chicago shoo’d be rid of hoodlums, bandits and racketeers. Two gun Alterie, a member of the old Capone gang 1 and a former "henchman of the former gangland chief, was riddled with bullets as he stepped from his hotel. He was running a labor rack- . et and someone had it in for him. Let the boys fight it out. Comp'aiut is made by residents ' in the south end of town that boys are using the Krick-Tyndall low lands for a shooting range, tin--mindful that bullets skim over the ponds and into adjoining yards. It is a dangerous practice and should be discontinued. The owners of the grounds forbid shooting on the premises and the boys are warned to keep away. Gypsies are warned not to stop, in Decatur and Adams County. Sheriff Brown and local police officers will not permit the bands of fakers and fortune tellers to p’y their trade in this community. Of-1 ten they defraud innocent people and get away with large sums of money. Notify the authorities as soon as you see the gypsies and they will be shown the road out of town. Fort Wayne is all aglow again , with the announcement that the International Harvester company , will spend a million dollars in en- 1 larging its truck plant. Three new ■ buildings will be constructed and j modern equipment installed to speed up production. The town has ' a right to fuel happy, for the program means work tor hundreds of men and steady payrolls during the year. | 1 There are a lot of court decisions | these days and among those ot int-i

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' erest in Indiana is the ruling made in the Fratlklin county court that the state teacher’s tenure is invalid. The case will more than likeIly be appealed to a higher court. (The judge ruled that amendments to the act invalidated the original law passed in 1927. It probably will not have any effort on teachei s contracts for the coming year, as most of them have already been signed. This man Clarence Green either got on the wrong track or wasn't much of an officer in the first place. A few years ago he was one of the -snoopers” emp'oyed to uncover violations of the old prohibition law and now lie has been ar-i rested for owning a still in Jay, county. The -tables have been reversed and he will find that Uncle ( Sa.tn still means business when it; comes to enforcement of the law. You wonder if he wasn't a weak- j ling in the first place and took any kind of a job merely for the sake of the pay. Not much sympathy for him. Mrs. Sage, described as the I ‘ woman in red,” and alleged to have lead Dillinger to his death, denies that she knew anything about the federal plot to get the arch criminal. She claims she did not know her companion was the notorious Dillinger, he being introduced as ‘‘Jimmy Lawrence”, She I has been living in Chicago, a short distance from the theater where Dillinger was killed and says she has a clear conscious on the whole ■ affair. That still leaves the source I of the tip-off to federal officers in doubt and it's probable the name of the individual who pointed the finger of death at the bandit will never be known. o * Modern Etiquette by ROBERTA LEE ♦ — ——————- ' Q. When a person has been known to his friends all his life by a nickname, such as “Bud" Wilson. isn't it permissible for this nickname to appeal on his visiting card? A. Never; it is unnecessary and undignified. Q. Should very small envelopes be used for correspondence? A. No; besides being in poor taste, they can so easily go astray in the mails. Q. What kind of costume should I a woman wear to a Sunday morniing breakfast party? | A. Any morning ensemble Is proper.

.' # J I Household Scrapbook by ROBERTA LEE The Garden The ribs from old discarded um-l . brel'as make excellent supports ■ for flowers. They can be enamelled 1 green if desired before using. I Plaits 0 If plaits are ironed down front I the band holding them, then folded in line with the grain of the 1 goods, they will always hang in straight lines. Pie Crust . ’ A rich brown crust will be the j result, when baking a pie, if an egg yo’k is mixed wifft a teaspoonful of cold water and spread over I the crust before baking. o — A —♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY From the Dally Democrat Flie 14 I July 20. 1915. — Alice Neilson, ! world famous prima donna, features : the close of Chautauqua. Shej travels in her private railway car. The c- binet is 100 per cent back of President Wilson in his position regarding war problems. Mrs. Helen Blossom buys the M i V. B. Archbold residence on Fisth 1

Millionaire Weds Secretary Wiil \ \/bt tx' 'll '\\ T’■’3l , | *. SSjKS I George W Hi! ij !~Mary Barnes | «eg i Chtriaxing a business office romance, George Washington Hill, "mil-lion-dcdlar-a-year” president cf the American Tobacco Co., married his .secretary, Mary Barnes, in a sunpie ceremony in the Caston Hall register office in London. p Hill, who gave his age as 50, and hi« bride hers at 39. are pieiiix£.d tea.vm the register .office.

- DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY. JI IA 20, 193a-

1 street. ! L. A. Graham is elected presii dent of the Ohio Farmers Insur- ' ance Convention in meeting held I at Winona. Committee contracts for Redpath I Chautauqua for 1916. I William We’dy and George ! Bright are building now houses at ! Peterson. Teeple & Ehitman have I the contracts. T. M. Reid is back at the Waring Glove plant after six weeks at Rome O!ty. Robert Garard leaves on a trip to Niagara Falls and Buffalo. ARRIVALS Rev. and Mrs. M. K. Cobble of Andersonville are the parents of a six Hid one >alf pound eion born Thursday evening, July 18. Mrs. Fuhrman. Mother aud baby are getting along fine according to word received here. MANY ENTRANTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 'and equipment. Grand circuit racing, exhibits by the state conservation, highway, health and other state departments i and universities will be included •on the program.

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