Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 275, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1935 — Page 7
hgHENT TO Mom springs To Leave To- “ Little White | n I House” ■-tajMtnl' N>«'’ 2 " * UR) *” I’' p< at h iH ady obji-ctiVeß as bl> ~.r ,i i at Warm K„.. l m (, rvrrs. lie li t it he i,. ■7 l( > round on . ltll i E w(11 iw ' ,i '‘ ni ’ xi '’"'y- ■ L Roo- ' • t "” i, ‘ " gathering r uling to Krth his i’” 1 ' * in '' *' lf ' E« to '■" '’"'" ~s BHoaa.toi Milwaukee. Win., ho Ee> of ftt'n. uvi' been very sue ,u|IU Ot ; MV . not Esu(-»(1' Through this pro Es. we It bling up. as Mayor E an has - 1 111 " " iationahip Eween ■< ;I, ■i ,, iit branches of ■ Mr 4E' ' 1 J ,l,[ 11 added that K h»d yen asked if the govern- ■ theMs 1 next July. •"That K '! ■ h'd of thing — Erading the word around that who on iwe ADAMS ” I with I KAIWRIXE HEPBURN, I Fit MacMurrav. ■Fred Sfctte. Evelvn VenaMe. KHtaßfung Story of Budd• ng Dangerous Con1 BEAUTIFUL LAKE ISE. in COLOR. 10c-20c — •CLIVE OF INDIA”' NALD COLMAN and YOUNG. 10c-15c BfeQl Tuss. — "THE DARK with Fredric March, ptrie Olbrcn. Herbert Marshall. Tender Beauty. Love Nf>MHr 'ice. CONTINUOUS (ALL DAY SUNDAY from 1:15. IgOBTI pß»ht - Thursday • B* e saw all •• • [EARD ALL . . . OLD EVERYTHING! o HOTEL" rc2°« TERL,NG ' HANK MANN, WRPIN, MARIE PREVOST CHESTER CONKLIN. The Original Keystone Kops «nd inerrie Melodie Cartoon. 10c-20c Sat. [HOOT GIBSON (~1- e HARD HOMBRE" ' S| tt. shc.// Sat. starting at 2:00. [Sun, Mon. Tues. She Sings, Dances and I Cuts Up too JANE WITHERS “SO THIS IS THE LIFE" J ohn McGuire, Sally Blanc. Continuous show Sunday ■Parting dt 1 6 .
I State University Co-eds Lick Depressior KKKM3I k —BMWlßfrl ''l rßpßSgi! wJc r JJf j?*' »4 ’ a / wF fe dogs earn tuition, [ | fan.. IK. \ mt ii v I I i sewpw. *? wl peddlers decrease. |
Most recent evidence of the determined fight which thousands of America’s youth are making for an education during these depression years comes from Ohi > State university at Columbus. Sponsored by w women graduates of the university, 33 outstanding co-eds have established a co-operative dormitory where they share expenses and work, a . plan which is expected to cut living costs nearly one-third. From Yale comes word that students
will be . taken off relief rolls be- [ ginning tbte first of July—we have | to combat.” be said, sharply. "My answer was that the feder-; al government, and 1 am sure your answer will be the same for the city governments, does not pro-1 pose to let people starve after the first of July any more than during the past few years." Then, swinging into a discuss-1 ion of the $4,000,000,000 works program. he defended its administra- j ' tion and predicted that "some peo-, pie are going to find in a few i weeks' that the program as a whole I i is going to be carried out before ! the end" of November just as planI ned last spring.” The president declared that I "taxes have grown up like topsy in this country.” i “We haven't had a revision,” he I said, "and I think the time is coming—not at this coming session of congress because we hope that it will be a very short session—but by the following year, when all of us can get together and sit around a table and work out a better system of taxation, state, municipal and federal. | "Late this winter we are going I to ask you to come down and talk about that subject around the table. I suppose this meeting will be dignified by the name of a tax | conference, but I would rather keep it informal and have it beI cotne a continuing study which 1 will brl._„ forth an intelligent report before the close of the year 1936." i Mr. Roosevelt plans to leave early tonight aboard a special train for Warm Springs where he will enjoy a Thanksgiving holiday for the next two and a half weeks alternating work with recreation at his little home atop Pine mountain. o LICENSE PLATE CONTINUED EKOM PAGE ONE Should the application be lost or destroyed it will be necessary for the applicant to then take his title to the branch and he may encounter tedious delay in completing his registration. Therefore, he will save time and avoid any delay by taking care of and using the application he received in the tnaij. The colors for the 1936 plates are white figures on a background of crimson. >——— ■ | NOTICE No hunting, trapping or trespassing on the Niblick Dairy farm east of St. Mary's river; the Studabaker farm east of Erie River Bridge and along river to Piqua road, also Studabakcr farm south of Piqua road and west of Erie railroad. Peter Miller Rumschlag Brothers Erwin Zimmerman I Joseph Spangler Cecil Harvey A. D. Suttles, agent
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1935.
there last year, more than 35 per cent of whom worked to help defray expenses, earned $432,132. Undergraduates throughout the nation are taking all sorts of jobs to help lighten the parental burden and meet tuition bills. Co-ed bootblacks, student operators of hot dog stands, undergraduate sales* men—these are included in the army of America’s jouth working for an education. Many other students are employed at odd jobs.
GEHRIG NAMED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 'school awards; Dr. Simon Young, Edward Hines hospital. Bluffton — Lee Wahnian, Boy I scouts; Elmore Sturgis, foreign ; relations. I Waterloo—Alfred Mcudy; Ligonier—Lester Blake. Poppy I comjnittee and Dr. Morris Blue, j ' Red Cross. RED CROSS ROLL CONTINUED FROM DAGE ONE Long. Mns. Hazel Widdows, Mrs. Mary Briggs. Gladys McCollum. R. A. Hunt and Albert Harlow. Hartford township: Mrs. John Ireland. Mrs. Fred Liby, Mrs. Russel Steiner, Mrs. Charlee B?ntz, Mrs. Claude Ninde, Mrs. Remy Rierly. Mrs. Ernest Zeigler, Mrs. Lewis Martin. Jefferson township; Maggie Amstutz, Mrs. Paul Butcher, Helen Kenney, Mrs. Guy Arnold. Monroe township; Mrs. Ja_r.es Kercher, Mrs. Adolph Hanni. Mrs. Ernest kgley, Mrs. Everett Rise, Miss Ruth Schwartz. Union township: Mrs. Chauncey Clem. Mrs. Jacob lEarkley. St. Mary’s township: Mrs. Lee
y LEGALLY SPEAKING (Registered U- S. Patent Office) o XJbEt t THIS WAS THE WAV MOST LEGAL DISPUTES WERE DECIDED IN ENGLAND IN THE IQ CGNTUR.V |T WAS KNOWN AS ’‘TRIAL SV BATTLE? THE WINNER. GOT THE JUDGMENT. R»n 1 Syndicate. Cleveland. O ; This peculiar form of trial flourished almost everywhere in Europe at the dawn of legal history, and became very popular during the time of feudalism. Before combat, each party was s-.vorn in by the court to "wage i his law.” The defeated party not only lost his case but was also convicted ;of perjury. In other than criminal cases, parties hired substitutes t® J champion their cause. This eventually became quite a racket inasmuch as hired gangs carried on the judicial combats. The practice is now extinct, (C;
I Custer, Mrs. Ralph Longenberger, i Mrs. William N.'ll, Mrs. Glenn Mc1 Millen, Mrs. Artie Jackson. Mrs. Eva Mauller. Washington townshfit: Mrs. J. E. Anderson, Mrs. Delnia Elzey, Mrs. William Affolder. Mrs. Ralph Roop Miss Dorothy LaFountaine. o Autonomous State Declaration Delayed i (Copyright 1935 by United Press) Peiping. Nov. 20 —(U.R) — Declara- ! tion of an autonomous slate in Northern China, demanded by Japan under threat of invasion, was postponed today under mysterious circumstances. Japanese army authorities were reported angry at the delay. Major General Kenji Doihara, chief of intelligence of the army on the Asian mainland, flew to Tientsin hastily to consult with Chinese leaders there. Gen. Hsaio Cheug-Ylng, of the Chinese army council here, asserted that the delay was due to a peremptory order from Chiang Kai-Shek, generalissimo of the Chinese army and the country’s strongest man. o Trade in a Gvwd Town — Decatu-
TWOmOUATES FROM DECATUR Rosamond Hoagland And Russell Jaberg, Includ- ■ ed In 1. U. List Bloomington, Ind.. Nov. 20. — Rosamond Hoagland and Russell Jaberg, of Decatur, are Included . on the Indiana university fall graduation list containing the names of 224 candidates for degrees announced here today by the Indiana university board of trustees. The fall grad’.ut-.s are counted as members of the 1935 class but | did not receive their diplomas at the June commencement exercises since they needed the summer term to finish their work. They participated, however, in the June commencement program. A total of 978 students are carried now on the 1935 I. U. graduation list, as 754 were granted degrees in June. The degrees granted here today are a« follows: eehool
Schafer’s Sensational Mattress SALE , — - vjß— mL S_ < T-' f--s. St--; g on! l u <‘' M J B S S -WWwMSHff 1 ® mA J Tv?*Saw $10“-” A great mattress value! Fully GUARANTEED! It’s a tremendous event for these high grade mattres- Over this is an INSULO CUSHION, of carded felt ses to he so sensationally reduced! Each craftsman criss-crossed to give fibres extreme strength, making that has had anything to do with the making of a it impossible to feel the coils through the top of the Stearns and Foster mattress puts his initials on the mattress. tag, certifying that the construction conforms with .Long fibre felt, scientifically treated, gives the top a the BEST. delightful softness. The inner spring unit is of a type that has been The roiled edge is built on the inside of the mattress thoroughly tested for strength and buoyancy under where it won’t collect dust. Prebuiit border and side the most extraordinary conditions. The roughest stitching prevents the walls from breaking down, usage could not destroy it. Beautiful quality covers in many patterns. “Kent” Innerspring “Restful” Innerspring No. 1 Innerspring Mattress Mattress Mattress Prebuilt corder border. Hundreds of Piped roll edge. Button tufts. Triple Roll Edge. Cotton Tufts, resilent coils. Fluffy cotton felt uphol- tempered spring units. Vendors. Sulendid Suring Unit stering. Roll edge. Handles. Ventl- All Cotton Felt Upholstering. Heavy . pring I.nil. lators. 9 Button tufted. Imported panel Woven Ticking. More value than price indicates, damask ticking. $21.75 \ alue $11.95 Value .«„3Va lu . $19 . 95 $15 , 95 $11<95
of education, 109; graduate school, 123; college of arts and sciences, 39; school for nurses, 23: school <>f law. 6; school of business ad ministration, 3; school of music, i 3, and school of dentistry. 2. Miss Hoagland was granted the : graduate nurse degree and Mr. Jaberg the A.B. degree in English. OUTLINES FOR CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 1 per cent under 1929 and about 34 i per cent above the 1935 growth. General reductions in wheat acreage in all major growing regions was proposed for the “grea.t plains and Pacific northwest." The total would then be set at 52,000,000 acres with an estimated production of 722,000,000 bushels during the first period. This acreage would be about 23 per cent under that of 1929 but about equal to 1935 figures. In the semi-arid range region, a slight decrease in the number of cattle and sheep from the 1930 or 1935 level was suggested, with a.n increase in hay. This, it wis said, would result in cattle production from 1936 to 1940 of 136,-
’ 0(H),000 hundredweight, as com- ; pared with 130.000.000 tn the normal period. In the northeast, the experts recommended stabilization of production at the present level. It 1 was believed more milk could be produced if a more favorable market situation were to develop. Other crop estimates for the short time period wore: tobacco, about equal to the base period and slightly above present levels; I poultry, about the same, with a' 25 per cent Increase in the south; I oats, a slight decrease from the, 1929 and 1935 levels; hay, an In-1 crease from between 68,000,000 and 82,(MM),(HM) acres to between > 100,000,000 and 115,000,000 acres. | EXTENSION Oi CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE drive either north, soutli or west, immediately after receiving a call or seeing a violation. Ben Eitlng appealed before the ' council stating that the lease the j city owned for a substation at the south city limits on the extension of 13th etreet expired in October. ■ Ten years ago the city leased a
PAGE SEVEN
small plot of ground from Mr. Kiting for the substation for S4O for 10 years. Mr. Elting asked whether the council wished 'to renew the leMo. The matter was referred to the electric light committee. —— o ■ Sun Glass Fires Home Orleans, Maas. — (UP) — Sun raye, concentrated by a dime Jug 1 filled with water, fired the summsr | homo of Dale Crosby. Damage was | estimated at $250. Firemen said tne jug acted as a magnifying glass. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWithout Calomel— And You II Jump Out of Bed to the Morning Rarin’ to Go The liver ihould pour out two poundo of liquid bile into your bowel* daily. If thia bile la not flowi nr freely, your food doesn’t digeat. It juot decays in the bowel®. Ga» bloats up your stomach. You ret conotipated. Your whole syatem is poisoned and you feel sour, aunk and the world lookspunk. Laxatives are only makeshifts, A mere bowel movement doesn’t ret al the cause. It takes those rood, old Carter’s Little Liver Pills to ret these two pounds of bile flowinr freely and make you feeU’up and up". Harmless. rentle. yet amazing in makinr bile flow freely. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills by name. Stubbornly refuse any thing else. 25c.
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