Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 27 September 1935 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. I. H. Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies — I .02 One week, by carrier — .10 One year, by carrier 15.00 One month, by mail — .35 Three months, by mail — 11.00 Six months, by mail —— 1.75 One year, by mail..— —- 3.00 One 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 St'HEER ER, Inc. 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Os course we enjoy the sunshiny days, but a little rain does not come amiss. Hats oft—salute the new American Legion commander, J. R. Murphy of Ida Grove. lowa. Another small town boy who has made good. Adams county has 2.712 pupils enrolled in the public schools, exclusive of Berne and Decatur. That speaks well for the community and proves its steady growth and certain future. Alfred P. Sloan. Jr., president of General Motors, says the slump is over. The* auto industry is planning to produce and sell 3,750,000 new cars next year, which if taken as a barometer should indicate prosperous times in 1936. Sloan is generally right on his predictions. Bankers of group one in session yesterday adopted resolution of respect in memory of the late Charles A. Dugan of this city. Mr. Dugan, for many years was a guiding hamkUM the banker's organization and his advice and counsel will be missed. Several citizens, interested in the clean appearance of the city, have commended the street department | for the way the streets are being kept, despite extra heavy traffic. It is thj desire of the department to that way and every effort will be exerted to do it. | < Good housekeeping requires it. The Berne Democrats offer a splendid ticket for the election next November. The former town councilmen, Chris Balsiger, Henry Winteregg and Paul Felber have been renominated. David Stauffer, nominated for clerk-treasurer is a popular man of the community, able and efficient. A good old Democratic victory should be rolled up. Young Cavarretta no doubt got the thrill of his life when he knocked the home run which won the first game of the series between the Cards and Cubs and cinched the pennant for his team. He was a rookie from the sand lots, but now a hero in the eyes of those who follow the great American game. Few cases tried in the Adams circuit court have ever attracted and held the interest as the Ratliff vs Caylors suit for personal darn ages. A battery of able attorneys are trying the case before Judge Huber Devoss and each day a crowd is on hand to listen to testimony and arguments of attorneys. 1 The jury's verdict is anxiously a- , waited. Young Joe Louis may not grow rich as the prize fight champion. ] He has such a wallop that sport i writers predict it will be difficult to match him after he finishes . Schraeiiing and Braddock may find he has an empty honor However iu the meantime he'll make more

money than they do around a printing office and with too much easy cash, may go the route of Baer and others who preferred the soft life. A New York messenger boy found $150,000 worth of bonds, was honest and returned the fortune to the rightful owner. He will be rewarded with a job and possibly a cash gift and no doubt feels happier than if he tried to hold onto something that did not belong to him. He had no right to do otherwise. but at least is entitled to the rewards following the "it pays to be honest" policy. Three thousand relief projects, estimated to give employment to 300.000 tnen and calling for an expenditure of $200,000,000 have been approved by President Roosevelt. Before work can start on them, approval must be given by the director of the budget and it is expected that this will be forthcoming in a short time. The fate of Decatur's PWA application is not yet known and until action has been taken by the federal departments, no steps can be taken towards construction. The Zion Reformed church anniversary program is being attended by large crowds each evening. Former pastors of the church are assisting in the observance of the 75th anniversary of the founding of the local congregation and besides the spiritual value of the services, they also serve as the occasion of happy reunions for members. A union service was held Wednesday with ministers of the various churches officiating and extending felicitations from their congregations. o Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two. ♦ ♦ 1. Shoulders .of eoil or concrete on either siffe 6T a surface highway 2. Mulatto. 3. It us attributed to Frederick the Great. 4. Joseph Conrad. 5. Th? Acts of the Apostles. 6. Hanibal Hamlin. 7. Mrs. Alida Sims Malkas. 8. Anglo-German Orientalist and , comparative philologist. I 9. Norman Thomas. 10. One who on moral or religious grounds refuses to serve as a combatant. o TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File i ♦ -♦ Sept 27 —Bill Leonard has foot crushed white bringing his race horse here on the interurban. His foot was caught on a milk standard as he dangled his legs out the side door. Mr. and Mrs. W. Kuebler return from trip to California. Mr. anti Mrs. Dale Moses and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Kunkle return from a 1,000 mile trip to Niagara Falls and Canada. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith visit in Columbus. Ohio. The Guy players open a weeks engagement under tent here. Test case aganst Dr. O. L. Burgener, chiropractor, charging him with practicing medicine without a Icenee, opens in circuit court. Th? case was filed by William T. Gott, secretary of the state board of registration and is attraeiug state wide attention. Fair w ek opens with heavy rains, causing much worry. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Amspaugh give a dinner tor Uncle Jerry Archbold who is observing his 86tb birthday. o —♦ Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee ♦ —♦ The Piano Keys Care should be taken to wring the cloth out quite dry when washing off the piano keys. Water should not be allowed to get Tn "Between the keys. Use a clean dry cloth for polishing and the luster will be retained. Silk Stockings Mend all holes and rips in silk stockings and underwear before laundering, then turn garments inside out. Silk garments should be washed as soon as possible after wearing, and should be rinsed very thoroughly. Cooking Odor One can avoid that cooking stpell in the hair if a dust cap is worn wjjen frying food.

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I 4 0 Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. Should a man ask permission to .smoke when h ■ is with women 1 who smoke? A. Not if they are smoking at the time; otherwise, he should| ask their permission. Q. When senumg out invita-1 tions for an afternoon tea. and ■ ’ there is to be music or cards, j where should this be shown on the j invitation? A. In the lower lefthand corner' of the invitation. Q. Is a larger tip than the usual ten per cent expected at such oc-1 casions as tea? A. Yes. o - - i Producer’s Son Burned To Death Freehold. N. J.. Sept. 27 —(UP) — Although admittedly having only . the scantiest of evidence, Monmoutili i county authorities today expressed | themselves as certain the man burned to death in a bungalow here was i William A. Brady, Jr„ eon of the

Farmers Hunt Wolves by Plane

|k Where wolves abound. "x k ' 1 •=« ' jHLi t .IU’WMt lIM fl Li 1 Newest weapon of wolf-hunters.

Hunting wolves by airplane is a new sport, or rather, work, of mid-' west farmers. Constantly annoyed by raids of the “killer”, and failing to kill the animals on the ground, farmers in the vicinity of Macomb, 111., are shooting them down from an airplane. Although wolves are not particularly numerous in the prairie states, they have been seen recently and have destroyed cattle and chickens. 1 Several airplane hunts have been staged this summer and numerous wolves killed. There are two species of American wolf, one is the large gray, timber or Canadian wolf; the other, u the prairie wolf, qr coyote.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRATFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1935.

’ noted theatrical producer. County physician Harvey W. Hartman, who [performed an autopsy, reported the body was that of a man. six fe-t or six feet one i inch tall, that it measured 20 inches between the shoulder joints and i that it was that of a person under 50. Gharlt* Tate, ehtef investigator J for the piosecutor’s office, said I young Brady was 36, six feet high, • and that he was broadtshouWered. 0 — ' Violence Breaks Out Again In Kentucky i Harlan, Ky„ Sept. 27 —(UP) —' I Charging that violence against un-; I ion miners was spreading, J. J. Pin-, ko, representative of the United Min? Workers of America, today asked Adj. G n. H. 11. Denhardt to move trows into ‘bloody Harlan county.” More than a dozen mines in the county were closed by the strike this week but the situation is exj petted to be eased by the new i agreement signed in Washington ' last night. Milters will return to work Tuesday. s National guardsmen are no novel-

ty in this strike-torn community. Their presence here during strike riots and election brawls has been bitterly opposed by the sheriff and other county authorities. o Phoenix, Ariz. — (U.R' — Arizona business spurted during the first six months of 1935, or 2.18 per cent over the same period for 1934. the Arizona State Chember of Commerce reports.

SUN., MON., TUES. ISL Matinee Sunday 2 pm. Evening 6:30 W 10c-25c ■MB . the W |GREAT AMERICAN EPIC ~st last rjita r t u! era °f American life now 'P* shown for the first time ... A fOX Picture with Charles Bickford Jane Withers Jr Slim Summerville Andy Devine , >4s JWP| Margaret Hamilton * Roger Imhof - pins - ..'■pgESS w All Color Silly Symphony W Eux News — — TO-NITE — —1 Bp TAKA CHANCE NITE” xvv Saturday Only Rex Lease “CYCLONE OF THE SADDLE" All Fun Cartoon — Roscoe Ates Comedy and EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION! EXTRA! ■ *JF j P 1 1 fQ J L A NATION 20.000 ' the GROUND — 500 years 2. Ahead of the Times—Original'ri TV B. *, ■ Spectacular-Fantastic — with V X..J GENE AUTRY »y<! fc ' (Radio’s Singing Cowboy) Bk aw xIAI *1 '■ Frankie Darro, val Betsy King Ross. yj> i ' ALL AT 10c -15 c j NOTE:—Special Kiddie Matinee Saturday f* All Children• tJV NOTE—Saturday Evenings Show starts at 6 o’clock P. M.

NEW HIGHWAY I WORK STARTED State Detour Bulletin Lists Five More Detours In Indiana Indianapolis. Sept. 27. —(Special) -Inauguration of the fall construction program planned by the state highway commission is reflected in the current issue of the detour bulletin which lists five new detours around construction work on the state highway system. Additional Improvement projects will be started within the next tew weeks, necessitating additional detours. The new" detours are on road 15 between Wabash and road 114; on road 29 and on road 35 at the north edge of Logansport; on road 50 north of Aurora, and road 115 between roads 24 and 15. A temporary detour is in effect over the week-end on roads 1 and 124 iu Bluffton. Detours removed upon the completion of improvement work are: Road 1 between Hamilton and road 20; road 13 between road 3 and Millersburg; road 56 between Kelso and road 50; road 58 between Bedford and road 135; road 124 between Wells-Adams county line and road 27, and road 727 between Ashley and Pleasant Lake. Motorists are cautioned to observe detour markings and caution signs, particularly on highways where workmen are engaged in construction and improvement projects. —* o Indianapolis Woman Named WPA Official Fort Wayne, Ind.. Sept. 27 —(UP) —Mrs. Miriam Hart, Indianapolis, lias been appointed certification intake officer for the Fori Wayne WPA district, it was announ ed here today. Mrs. Hart former relief supervisor of th? souihw.st district of Indiana under the FERA program, will he in charge of the casework of nine counties in the Fort Wayne district and will handle all certificat s of eligiblity tor tne WPA program. Mrs. Hart will establish certification staff in six centers throughout

lhe district. The centers will be located al Fort Wayne. Wabash. | Marion, Blutflon, Peru and Hunting ton. Lifeless Fish "•itaa” Delray Beach. Fla—<Uß>--Coun-ty Commissioner C. Y Bird had to pay with a sore finger for the ex perience of being bitten by a dead fish. Bird's party brought a 400-

—■ WWHWWWVVWMWMMWIMMAMMUUum A—l| MADISON THEATER SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY I Matinee Sunday 2 P. M.—loc-20c —FIRST Sunday Eve. Show 630 I \ A Gallant Lover | \ Turns Into a Fiend- \ jLjOMßwftk ■■ * 1 I \ ish Monster Before \ L I \ Your Very Eyes I 1 \ Adolph ZukO' I \ Prei en f $ bffipZSSH sL -3S A Reuben Mamoulian Production \ ■ fRtBRIC MIRIAM I<1! I \ I JtM MAR(HHOPIIIHS-H0BA!ll\ ■L Based upon the novel by Robert loui> 9 Stevensoo • • A Pjromounl Picture g ADiDEI) — Selected Short Subjects. I Tonight and Saturday KEN MAYNARD in "WESTERN FRONTIER" HIS LATEST PICTURE KEN anti TARZAN! MASTER and WONDER HORSE! Roarinjr Headlong into a Nest of Bandit*! Hard-Riding. Fast Shooting ACTION! as KEN races into Trail-Blazing Adventures! ADDED — BUCK JONES in “THE ROARING WEST’ _ Cartoon; and STRANGER THAN FICTION! This COLOSSAL Program for ONLY ONE DIME on FRIDAY NITE! On SATURDAY NITE 10 and lx. Coming—Gary Cooper & Richard Arlen in "The Viryinia’ MWWWWWWWMAAAAAAAMMMWMAiaAAAAAAAA/'iAAMW SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY Matinee Sunday 2 P. M.—lCc-SSc—FIRST Sunday Eve. Show 6:3C i num I ' IwM- ' yo ° Albino*' S / ■ Cu’ eS * f ' igr ‘ltol jjgakjmaflM f * I - * M Adolph Zukor presents IkcewiiE' A Completely kolonol kontribution to kontentment .. . o circus . o cornivol BW j ... a musical comedy ... a deep dish < P' e °f thrills, spills, Jills, ° n d sills I Il * Paramount Picture • George Barbier < Betty Furness ' 'i/ya\ Andrew Tombas .. . <> ntl * I /l , Brcedwey'i Favorite Vaudeville Headline’s y t \w/ / \ Directed br Normoa Mcleod Added—“THICKER THAN WATER” A J,AI KEI & J‘ DY Comedy; “Tricks of Trade” with The EAS* Altand a COLOR Cartoon. Tonight and Saturday — — ’ZASU PITTS and JIMMY GLEASON in “HOT TIP” from the Story by Wm. Slavens McNutt- , The Hamburger Stand is Mortgaged! . . His Horse has k to win! A Red Hot moment in a horse-lau-gh drama the turf! Addedv-Comedy; Traveltalk, and COLOR Cartoon. W 4 Coming—“CHlNA SEAS.”

I pmmd tiuii t<> „,~ aag ß I open th,. vat. h'H , llll!llh « graphs could tak,. 111( curelesHly dro P |„ ,| „,,, „ »«■ Ih)'«v Jaws . i,,,,,,...,! Dog Grows Second T.. th I Holyoke, Maes (UP) -i** h ■ 12-yeai-old ain-dui, dog Mr. and Mrs chfford l'r a ■ grown tta encond m-i u t