Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 228, Decatur, Adams County, 26 September 1935 — Page 5
KjVAYNK MAN ■ <>sB _' K l -• fc'lv."''-' ""’“‘l H , .ptimlMn f'»- future 9« aud Hress. -at the I Hit"' w pr . iua<le by Ti *J *' lir h.v of Auburn; I ■‘‘n Jiell " f I' 1 ' 1 ' 1 """’ I"*'* 1 ' ; '\ heli.uia ILinkers IP' *o 9* inJ K bartoll. ('. I’- j ■Jn 'i •'“' l X '' r '“ an i 9. of '!><■ ' I at the I KTo»>n-ul-‘ the '« dia " a tjnui.'ti- h.mestly anti ■ l„ .atiina tins period aiis.niml. dangermucii ““ . .. Hfl - . ~|< ti .hhl siM ialislk I ■ kI- .Hx.uat. d H"', . ~<!>•':al!' aiatrflll IO ■ Jalil'S 1 Parley. < <»n-1 R ■ feurtli district, ■“un.l a.b ■" "“I ~ iU |. ■ , I "i I" "'al aav ' | f,. n '''d -ervii e | B'lviikinc aii'l < 'irr.ni'v t on'-1 M» '■ dp. ii.ai- dm ing the ■ of the ' till' 'l'"of the i K act of 1935.” Ker vesoluthn adopted by I gSf i- <>n ir' ml* I t 'o' Paul Kt and li" s ate govern- ■
■ Years of experience, g - ■ j — 1 . ? ,,, 1l g. in thousands of :R - , homes, proves the V g - ' Glow Boy Heat Gir■ft ; eulator saves as much as 35% on fuel. I* P a X s for itself in H ' : I fuel Bav * n ß* alone. B j Built like a heavy-duty basement K i furnace. Firepot guaranteed 5 My, years unconditionally. HeatKBs' . X— K amplifying casing adds 75% to J P radiating surface. Cotne in during the Juhilee Sale. R f / jpUl Cet us give you a Glow Boy iilM ,^‘ monstrat * on that *>H startle ■Eg - 1 you. Buy now and get the full K season's benefit of Glow Boy's S comfort and economy. allowance on your old heater as first payment. K I _ rc=r> The SCHAFER Store T - MM,——m—mm—iW’l3UßNS CLEAN 111 NO CLINKERS II NO SOOT Il STRINGERS I \ SAVE ON YOUR I x X coal b,lls wnH I SUNDAY CREEK purk Elevator Co 9“’ Ur I’hone 25 Monroe Phone 19
I telllgent and cooperative effort In, ; the enactment and direction of > I sound banking legislation." Another resolution was adopted ' which aske that steps he taken to remove the gross Income tax on I banking institutions of the state. This resolution reads in part anl | follows: "The collection of this ' tax is not legally possible against l national banking Institution*, with i the result that state hanks, which : must pay the lax. are placed in lan unfair competlve position. We I ! respectfully request that steps be taken to remove this gross Income! I tax requirement from the already ’ ' heavily taxed state banking insti-' tutions.” I I Committees Named Mr. Brown, who .served as chair- ; man of the meeting, announced, | the appointment of the following committees: Resolutions: Frame J. Mills of Fort Wayne, Elmer : Funk of Warsaw, and Earl I). Leas lof Waterloo; nominations: Theodore Graliker, Decatur, Oscar H. I Bushing and Lawrence Mullins of. Fort Wayne. The Itankers also adopted a res- j | olution in honor of the late Charles A. Dugan, formerly of the ' First State Hank of Decatur. I Another resolution was parsed, thanking tne Fort Wayne clearing house for entertainment of I the visiting bankers. Counties represented at the meeting were Adams. Allen. DeKalb. Huntington. Kosciusko, laigrange. Noble, Steuben, Wells and ■ Whitley.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBR2G, 1935.
Life of Model Young Woman Not an Ideal One /Y J o (I '"4 \ W <3l is b\ x V fl fw'J J V ■I 1 M m wft 1 wi - J /jr- 1 ffcß # J \ ! BF t f ° bß’ ■ k B Jt •-.■-.-.nt 1 \ '* V jf JP 11 i- ■< » I • . Jttß AI \J iHP k i . Adrrenne Amo BO ♦ 1 (fe >. V— 1
This business of being: a model young woman is no snap. Those sleek and sophisticated young ladies who arc now showing the fall and winter styles live • far different existence than popularly imagined. Each is a product of long and arduous training which taught them to walk properly and wear clothes to advantage. Even Lhe most successful of
EXPECT EARLY CONTINUED FROM USE ONE of some of their surplus coal. Miners, who always like a fight, I are anticipating an increased i wage even though it will not be all they had hoped for. Should the negotiations break uown a different situation will > exist. Picketing, more militant than that now in progress in some soft i coal sections, would be ordered, j The United Mine Workers, declaring that less than 20,000 miners j are at work, would attempt to' close every mine in the country. The calmness with which the wage negotiations have been conducted has astonished observers here. Hot words have been ex- ■ changed and some bitterness has developed, but in the main the conferences have been conducted with even tempers and in a spirit ■ of fair play. Never before has a coal strike; been carried on in this fashion. Until recently coal operators refused bluntly to deal with their employes through the union. Now both operators and miners saunter in amity about the richly appointed Shoreman Hotel. A friendly wave of the hand ha.s taken the place of the glowering greetings of former days. An outsider would find it diffi-i cult to distinguish between miner i and operator in the groups about j the hotel lobby. For instance, i Charles O'Neill, one of tile sub- 1
“Died at Hands oi Unknown” bAißevyw a’Bl, h ■ ■ ;}♦ Mr*. Mary Roger* - Grand jury investigation into the mysterious death of Evelyn Hoey, torch singer, found shot to death, was predicted following the verdict of the coroner’s jury which found that she “died at the hands of persons unknown”. The entertainer died at the West Chester, Pa., home of Henry H. Rogers HI, millionaire oil heir, left, shown as he left court with his mother, Mrs. Mary Rogers, right.
them find their lot far from ideal. Those in the higher range of salaries earn from $2,000 to $3,000 a year, but a considerable portion of this must be spent on the wardrobe which each model is required to have. Society debutantes have also invaded the field, making the competition even keener than before.
[ committee of four as a reprej sentative of the operators, is a j former miner. He knows the language of the pits, the psychol- j ogy of the worker and the prob- • ■ lems of both sides of she con- i i troverey. MAKES APPEAL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 'er mates—and what becomes of I the home?” "You have in it another father, ■ tomorrow; another mother tomorrow —and the home, a home no 1 longer, becomes a thing even more precarious than a boarding house and with much less morale. “And now comes a last attack. As if it were not sufficient to tear ! down the altar and to uproot the home, there is left tor our day the > last sad onslaught made against humanity by those who worship at ■ no altar, and know little of the joy of permanence of the heme. It is I ! the attack on motherhood itself, i The attackers claim that owing to: economic conditions there are too ’ many people in the world, and in order to help depopulate the world they demand that motherhood be restricted. “To attain that result — though; condemned by every law, natural and supernatural—they now insist their sordid methods shall become legal; with the result that what | the church has elevafW to the idignity of a sacrament and what I people the world over and through 1 the ages believed it to be. namely
a holy state, shall now be made largely an opportunity for mechanized lust.” o Spencerville Child Unconscious 46 Days Fort Wayne, Ind.. Sept. 26—(UP) —Robert Lee Shockley, 4. Spencerville, injured in an automobile accident August 11, today was in the 4nlt h day of unconsciousness in . Lutheran hospital. , The boy was struck by an auto- I 1 mobile in front of his home. Phy- ■ sicians described his condition as critical. He suffered a series of egg-shell ■ ! fractures. ■WHaHHMMaMaMnBHMBBMaBMBBMBa"""" 1111 " - Last Time Tonight - RETURN ENGAGEMENT by POPULAR REQUEST “NAUGHTY MARIETTA” with Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy, Frank Morgan. Elsa Lanchester. Added-A Travelogue. 10-15c| — Fri. & Sat.—Zasu Pitts i Jimmy ! Gleason in “HOT TIP.” Sun. Mon. Tues.—GEO. BURNS & GRACIE ALLEN in "HERE COMES COOKIE” — with Geo. i . Barbier and Betty Furness. | CORT - Last Time Tonight - The General Electric purchased 1,200 tickets for this show. “There’s a Reason” ' Norman Foster “SUPER SPEED” Plus—Fifi D’Orsay Comedy and Travelogue. NOTE: First Show at 6:oG. ' 10c-15c Sat. Only "CYCLONE of the SADDLE” Rex Lease | Plus—Comedy and Cartoon. Extra Added Attraction! ' Chap. 1 “The Phantom Empire.” Gene Autry. (Radios Singing Cowboy), i Frankie Darro. Betsy King Ross. ; NOTE; All Children 5c at Sat. Matinee. Sun. Mon. Tues. Janet Gaynor - Henry Fonda “THE FARMER TAKES A WIFE” Jane Withers - Chas. Bickford, I Slim Summerville - Andy Devine. . —________
End-Dole Campaign Enters Final Stage Washington, Sept. 2G—- (U.R> — The new deal’s 14,000,000,000 end-the-dole campaign entered its final stages today, with officials | confident that 5.500,000 unemplov-1 ed on relief rolls would be working by Nov. 1, All funds have been eannarked or allocated, internal disputes have been settled, and officials | were ready to witch results. Public works administrator Harold L. Ickes prepared to announce projects chosen for his PWA and housing programs after President Roosevelt approved a 13,000,000.000 list of 2.500 undertakings. The president's action will enable him, Ickes, and works progress administrator Harry L. Hopkins to lea.vo on their western | trip tonight with major obstacles in the relief program cleared. O - Deserts Family, * Son Is Injured Bloomington, Ind.. Sept. 26 —(UP) —Amputation of two fingere by Ju- > lian Baugh, 15-year-jld Ellettsville ' youth, while working at a meat grinder in a grocery store today caused juvenile authorities to investigate a report he was support ing six motherless brothers and sisfers who were deserted by bheir father. The father gave Julian a dollar with which to feed the children beIETMDNEYS FLUSH OUT 3 LBS. A DAY Clean Out 15 Miles of Kidney Tube* Nature put over 15 miles of tiny tubes ajud filters in your kidneys to strain the waste matter out of the blood. Kidneys should pass 3 pints a day and so get rid of more than 3 pounds of waste matter. When the passing of water is
scanty, with smarting and burning, the 15 milea of kidney tubes may ti'-ed flushing out. This danger signal may be the beginning of nagging backache, leg pains, lose of pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes and dizziness. If kidneys don't empty 3 pints a day and so get rid of more than 3 pounds of waste matter, your body may take up some of these poisons causing serious trouble. Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan's Pills, which have been used successfully by millions of people for over 40 years. They give happy relief and help the kidneys to flush out 3 pounds a day. Insist ou Doan's Pills.
MEN! HERE’S SAVINGS JUST WHEN YOU NEED THEM! SUGAR FACTORY OPENING ISISPECIALS lai WBF' ————————— —- ciMtuumo J | FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ““ ■ Mens Moleskin Mens 8 ounce MENS DRESS Cloth and Covert canvas or work caps Trmworu san. WORK GLOVES adjustable head size irousers, san aiue Knjt Wnst> new Fa|| patterns forized shrunk. pa ir all sizes, will ■ Hand rough X W C C wear. __________ ___________ Mens Athletic Shirts and Shorts — Knit gB Q[| shirts and fancy broadcloth IQ/* J | shorts, each JLt/U I S Mens Durable Work Socks Q _ B Black or plain colors, pair 0u —————————— Mens Full Zipper ~X Mens Black Leather Mens Blue Denim fIH ~ 1 WORK SHOES OVERALLS P Hint MCI tO n iN< □ lain toe style, full cut, triple iiV. good wearing stitched, high back, Jackets, in navy A quality. large pockets, i B&XJ. $1.79 64c Ke Mens Blue Chambray J | O H H V \MW WORK SHIRTS, g > ■ mß—' 9(j I 14'/z to 17 ■ Mens Ribbed Union SUITS, MENS DRESS SHIRTS MENS JERSEY SWEATERS long sleeve and ankle length Fast colors, well made, Part wool, f| cece lined, or short sleeve and ankle in a large selection in Grey and Brown, length, sizes 36 to 46. to choose from. Button style. 79c 79c 98c
I fore he left for Indianapolis last Sunday to rejoin his second wife, authorities were told. Julian remained away from school and sought work in the grocery store to support the family. , , —.Q.., r— Detroit Man Named Milk Administrator Fort Wayne, Ind., Sept. 28—(UP) Charles ißrldgeman, Detroit, Mich., I has been appointed Federal Milk Market administrator for the Fort Wayne area it was learned here today. Bridgeman, who has beeu connected with the agrlcutural adjustment administration at Detroit, will asume he new duties here on Octo-
us l O X^PaBESSSS—L O '’lfi Os course Youll Stay at rs-Mt “i*! - '' •Iw« M 94 • 13? v/ »•w ksi ■9 a • • ">.• 1700 ROOMS • 1700 BATHS from ?2?° I ' In the Heart of the Loop in I
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her 1. He succeeds C. W. Humrkkhouse who resigned to become executive secretary of the Indiana Milk control board. — o~—— -—•— Town Wars on Hay Fevsr Racine, Wi>. —(UPI— Country wide elimination of ragweed, live No. 1 stteeae menace tor bay fever I sufferers, was sought by businessmen here who gave prises to children to pluek and deliver it to a vacant lot. Bidders Shun Hazardous Job Moscow, Idaho.—<U,R> —Only one bidder sought the job of painting the city water tower. Five prospective bidders considered the work too hazardous. The tank will • be sprayed from a 90-foot scatfold.
