Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1935 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Catered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. J. H. Heller President X R- Holthouse, Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies — * .02 )ne week, by carrier — .10 Due year, by carrier — $5.00 Dne month, by mall - .35 Three months, by mall SI.OO Six months, by mail 1.75 Dne 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 SCHEERER, Inc. 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Old New York may never seem the same to Jimmy Walker. The emperor ol Ethiopia gets a red silk tent to sleep under, pitched somewhere on the battle front. Many a hobo in this country wouldn't change places with him. The first of November with its dreary days and the time of year when you expect nasty weather. Enjoy the present brand while you can and then take the others as it comes. Adams Post No. 43 of the American Legion is planning an appropriate observance of Armistice day, November 11. A meeting will be held for the members and their wives and due respect will be paid the soldier in the ceremonies and program to be carried out. Troy, Ohio, is one of the towns in this part of the country that is growing. It has an acute housing problem, proof that it is growing and that business is good. One factory there employs about a thousand people and representatives from the thriving city feel about like we do here that conditions are a lot better. The way to help the fanner, the sugar factory, increase employ-1 ment and help a dozen different lines of business is to buy Crystal White Sugar, made in Indiana's only beet sugar refinery. Eight hours of labor are required for every 100 pounds of sugar put on the market, which if you set down and do a little multiplying mounts to a huge amount. A jurist of note and a man of pleasing personality passed from the picture in the death of Judge Ralph Smith of the Appellate court. He was only 57 years of age, but had been ill several months. He was elected to the Appellate bench in 1932 and was one of the most able members of that body. The state will miss his services and his friends Ills companionship. The way to get free publicity for a fan dancer or a show' is to start something a little “off color,” have the authorities bar you from the stage and then be sure of a big run. They are giving a Chicago show a lot of free publicity and probably the whole outfit doesn't amount to a hill of beans. When ~~■A.... .. .. 11 ’ ll J 1 _!. _ JUST RECEIVED shipment of new COA T S and DRESSES MRS. M. MOYER 128 N. 4th st.
you talk about a show not being clean, the public wants to go see and the producers are enriched. Within the last two weeks several men from the Resettlement division in Washington, under whose supervision comes the local Homestead project, have visited here and commented favorably on the division. It is being pointed to as one of the model (livisions in the country and as soon as the perplexing tax problem is worked out, everything will be in order. The visitors have been impressed with the sincerity of the community and the high type citizenry occupying the houses. . — • “Roosevelt had a plan when the nation was planless. He gave lead-' ership when a leader was the supreme need of the hour. He could not only propose but organ-| ize and carry into structure and form projects for the restoration and the stabilization of prosperity.: And it is evident that he could vision for a century ahead, act i with what seemed audacity to men of shorter sight and marks a broad ; ening highway upon which a whole 1 nation migfet safely travel.” —Portland. Oregon. Journal. The meetings sponsored by the Central Sugar Company advertised I the good name of Decatur and i acquainted wholesale and retail grocers that every time they sell a pound of Indiana beet sugar they help not only the local community, but their own. Coal, limestone, | cotton bags, only to mention a few of the products required in the processing and sale of the product are bought in great quantities. Farmers are provided a profitable crop, men are employed in the fields and thousands of dollars of gas are used in hauling beets to I the mill. New wealth is dug from the ground and circulated in a hundred different ways in as many I communities. Announcement that attorneys for Bruno Richard Hauptmann will appeal their case - to the I nited! States Supreme Court and exhaust ■ every possibility of saving their, client from electrocution for the i kidnaping and murder of Charles Lindberghs infant son is satisfactory to many. Because of the I charges that have been made and will be made that Hauptmann's conviction on circumstantial evidence was unjust, it may serve a decidedly useful purpose to have defense counsel use every avenue : of possibility to save their client legally. When all the instrumen-' talities for protection of a prisoner's rights have been used without i undue advantage to Hauptmann, it will be unreasonably biased for any to contend that unfairness has been shown, and the original conviction will seem doubly re-assuring.—News-Sentinel. o Modern Etiquette RV ROBERTA LEE Q. If one has attended a house party and did not have an enjoyable time, is it necessary for one ■to write the usual “bread and butter” letter anyway? A. Yes: it may have t>eon Jour own fault instead -of anything else that you did not have u good time. The proper thing to do is to write and thank your hostess. Q. Is it proper to have one’s initials engraven on a visiting card? A. The faultlessly correct card bears the full name, and never uses initials. y. What pews of the church are reserved for the families of the bride and groom? A. The first two pews. o Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the | Test Questions printed on Page Two. 1. Ohio. 2. St. Peter, Minn. 3. Si'in Houston. 1. Lake Superior. 5. A county of England. 6. John Adams. 7. It is a British Crown colony. 8. The English channel. 9 Elua Howe 10. Yes, it otherwise qualified.
1936 Master De Luxe and Standard Chevrolets are Replete with New Features MB
New Master De Luxe and Standard Chevrolets for 1936 show marked I advances in appearance and in engineering. Perfected hydraulic brakes, high-! compression engines with full-length water jackets, and balanced carburetion i are among the mechanical improvements. The solid steel Turret Top Fisher | body is now used on the Standard as well as the Master De Luxe models.,
RMAU Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cole. Jr., i, left today for Portland w-here they, , will visit for several days with the | latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. |, Cunningham. Miss Mary Coverdale of Fort' j Wayne visited in Decatur Thursday , evening. Miss Sally Hower of Indianapolis i * will be the guest of her parents. Mr. j < and Mrs. Miltou Hower, over the week-end. Martin Stuckey of Willshire had the misfortune to fracture his left | arm Thursday evening while Visit- 1 ing in Decatur. Mrs. John Nf'dick, Mrs. H. H. 1 Stoner and son. John, left today for Let;-sic, Ohio, where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Edwards. On Satrday Mr. and Mrs. ■ Edwards and Mrs. Stoner will attend the homecoming celebration of Ohio Wesleyan university at Delaware. Frederick Schafer left today for Ann Arbar, where he will ' isit over the week-end. Jay Markel of Dayton. Ohio, returned to his home Thursday after a visit with his mother. Mrs. Elizabeth Markel. and other relatives. Charles Ehinger and “Lightning" Thomas, students at Purdue University, La Fayette.., will be guests, over the week-end of the former s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ehinger. Miss Anna Conrad was the guest of friends in Fort Wayne Wednesday evening. Mrs. Ed Franke, .Mrs. E. J. Voigt and Mrs. Robert McKee of Fort Wayne spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Tillman Gerber. Miss Helen Holthouse left at soon today for Milwaukee where she will attend the Marquette-lowa State game and the Alumni ball Saturday. Robert Cole is confined to his home with illness. Mrs. Tillman Gert,er will spend the week-end with her son-in-law
NOTICE STREET SEWER and SIDEWALK ASSESSMENTS are now due and must be paid on or before MONDA Y to save the penalty. Please Make Payments at the City Hall. i Mrs. Ada Martin, City Clerk • Treasurer
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1935.
and daughter. Mr. and .Mrs. Robert McGriff of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Scnulte an I Mre. Fred Schulte and son Billy huvq returned from Lima, Qiiio where they attended the wedding of Miss Lillian Starcat. Miss Alice McKean has returned to Auburn after visiting with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Kean of near Monroe. Mrs. Glen Mauller and daughter; and Mre. Theodore Drake were dinner guests f Mrs» Dick Mauller. east of Decatur. Thursday afternoon, and attended the home econo-. mics club meeting. W. R. Barr. Harry McFarren and the Rev. Morris Coens, Bluffton. 1 attended the meeting of tne Deca-' tur Rotary club Thursday evening. Mrs. Fritz Rudin of Elyria. Ohio, will arrive in Decatur Saturday to visit ovi-r the week-end with her; sister. Mrs. Amy Bockman. David Smith made a business' trip to Union City today Mr. and Mrs. B. Claude Case returned to Connersville this morn-' ing after a two days visit with the , Carroll Burkholder family. Mrs. Charles Keller and son. Hale have returned to Fort Wayne after a several day* visit with the former’s mother. Mrs. John Peterson.! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith and family will spend this week-end at Hamilton Lake. Mose Schmitt of Berne was a Decatur business visitor today. Sim Beineke of Kirkland township looked after business in Deca- , tur this morning Mrs. Ada Martui and family are moving today from 312 Winchester street to 208 South Second street. Mre. Elmer Anspaugh visited in Fort Wayne this morning She was accompanied home by her daughter. Miss Elva, who is a student nurse at the St. Joseph h.Kpital in , that city. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Harlow of Geneva were guests of Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Zwick at Richmond Thursday. Mrs. Will Bundy of Menomonie. Wisconsin; Mrs. John Bright of Ridgeville; Mre. M. E. Hower, Mrs.
I Either Knee-Action or conventional springing may be had in the Master models. The illustrations shew: Top left, the Master De Luxe sport sedan, with built-in trunk; top fight, the re-styled, deeply moulded radiator I grille, used on all models; lower left, the simple arrangement of Chevrolet's I perfected hydraulic brakes, all models; and. lower right, a Standard sedan.
H. N. Shroll and granddaughter. Jane Ann Brumley spent Thursday at Richmond, the guests of Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Zwick. Mre. Jethro Fuller and daughter Corinne of Cincinnati. Ohio, who have been visiting at the home of Mi s. D y Lhamon, returned to their home today.
WORTHWHILE SAVINGS I ©DOX POULTRY TONIC v I FOR KOOP AND COLDS 9 ■ R n v dfarfOv /jjSSy , SF Halibut » Used in the drinking water Dox has F proved very effective. Liver Oil I a Capsules I \^ P '..69J| 'i&V FLASH LIGHT | " i,h M Tonics liLW «6L ' “I Come in and get a free sam- <,W. A I pie of Dr. Hess Worm Pow- V/*rWl| der. Enough for five fowls. v c3w IIONLT and ALMOND . ! Dr. Hess disinfectant for CREAM <SfV Liggetts ( hocolate 1 ««-' if No„”e k e y >. lOtl sl-10 ,'X 0 FREE D.SPENSER -& • ;vB / V-—-—— fr. Hortons Chocolate I 35c X M ™eX ,nshand 45c g C “ vm " lhcrr ”.29c DEOXOGEN ’O/> ££ I FACIAL TISSI E .CREAM OvC i/ 2 th. bar Chocolate ! 500 sheets OKr» 'Jnfr Almond Bar iXpl topkg ZDC COTY’S POWDER SI.OO MINERAL OIL • *|« YARDLEY ENGLISH d»1 . . 4I tj I ai Jai’on 98C shaving bow I 81 dfe Rubbing Alcohol REM—FOR ’l., QQzv ® Full Pint iQf FIRSTAH) SANITARY COUGHS QIC and NAPKINS, 25C VICK’S SALVE QQ Pkgs fciMV ig. This is Rheumati’’ FRESH GROUND BLACK ALKA-SELTZER 97 ri Remedv for this aihne’t PEPPER TABLETS / C & O4L Per boHk> Assorted tpA CASCADE ALARM CLOCKS .’s£l t ” Guaranteed QW/* TOILET SOAPS Roxbury 1 year «/OU z-*.— WK »> nu AS& oeake, 25c Hot Water Bottl« MELLOMALT with COD f®.. aRCS intp<l 4A/> LIVER OIL Q Qz> yr.guanmte 6 full pint 98c JF 2 <l uart 9g Deneschaud’s el Cough Syrup -' JC B.NOWEARS CAQg 4> g lumirKn leather covered g jqr 4DC certified 3 power fejy t B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
Florian Geimer, route 5. was a Decatur business visitor this morning. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Uhl and sons, Bernard and Richard, of Toledo. Ohio, arrived in Decatur Thursday for a several days visit with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Voglewede of West Monroe street.
* TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY | From the Dally Democm File +—. — ™...«... a Nov. 1. Mrs. C. A. Dugan ami Mm. Jessie Deani return from visit • In 'indlanapolia and Kokomo. All Saints day in observed at the I St. Mary'a church. Daughter born yesterday to Mr. ami Mrs. Avon Burk. Mrs. Harvey Duckett die* at Bloomfield, lowa. J. N. Bulkhead and son have harvested 195 tons of sugar beets
Sale o( Dress Lem™ Silks and Acetates I o u r customers demandeJ " e ' c ' l ‘ ci'ed a new a<R ' nient PietTs-eadi pi yards-inij Green. Rus’. 81, Brown. COME IN TOMORROW. You’ll find just the piece you want for your newfai 5 1.99 NIBLICK & a
from 16 48 acre,. LFlve »n<ikiat n ■ «'• •• a' 1. o. 0 / j * reh'phmie s j rll ' t home I Buktr. | l-ew Weis ■ Worthen. Michigan. *■ •Sam a ker, th,. ■ fn« fi" i. Geneva to | 1 H ■tluuise (; lr „ inc ,l " Bunee. Sunday, sj
