Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 284, Decatur, Adams County, 2 December 1935 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Publsihed Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DISC A TUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur. Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter. J. H. Heller — President A. R. Holthouse, Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller.... Vice-President Subscription Rates Single copies I -°- One week, by carrier 10 One year, by carrier $5.00 One month, by mail 35 Three months, by mail SI.OO Six mouths, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office— 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second sones. 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 Man Winter seems to have arrived an d since the season doesn’t really open until the 15th, is a little ahead of schedule. Release of bank robbers after they have served a third or fourth of their sentence may be a good thing but it hasn’t so proven in the past. ———l - — — Christmas shopping is on in earnest. Watch this newspaper the next two or three weeks for announcements from the merchants. It will save you time and money. Ouly.mineteen shopping days for' Christinas. Gee whiz how we will all have to hustle. However there ■ is plenty of time if you do it systematically. Read this paper and make up your lists. —r -• Unless you have been making payments on the State Bank Christmas < lub you can't benefit from it this year but you can plan to get in for next year and be ready for the 1936 holidays. -■ —~

Bank clearings in New Yo.k City have increased three and a half billion dollars the past year, a gain of more than 34 per cent. Guess that isn't something for those who are preaching ruin in the country. With regret we learn of the death of Frank Kistler, Logansport attorney, well known over the I state us one of the outstanding, public men. He was struck by an! automobile while crossing a street ' in his home city. — — England is trying her best to , settle the war crisis and reach a l settlement and when their diplo i mats really get down to business, j they usually accomplish what they go after. They have one of their toughest problems now. —= It will be easy for the General 1 Electric to conform with the security act because for years they have operated a plan very similar and will now only have to transfer to the regular order. No con-

| CORT - Tonight - Tuesday- - BIG SHOT” Sybil Jason, Robert Armstrong, Ewdard Everett Horton. Glenda Farrell. Plus-Comedy, Cartoon, News. 10c-25c EXTRA! News shots of the Notre Dame-Army game and slow motion pictures of the disputed Notre Dame touch down. Wed.-Thurs. Kay Francis • Geo. Brent •THE GOOSE and THE GANDER’ Genevieve Tobin - Ralph Forbes. Pius - - Gcorgic Price "TICKETS PLEASE” and Buddy, The *‘G” Man. Coming'— "SPECIAL AGENT” Bette Davis ■ Geo. Brent Ricardo Carter • Jack Larue Henry O'Neill NNMMMMHBNMHaMI

cern in the country takes better care of employes than this one. Huntington folks would no doubt appreciate any kind of a fair and • just settlement of the utilities controversy as a Christmas gift. It has been a problem for several years and has given the town much L publicity that certainly doesn’t do I any good. While the new security act will i cause some inconveniences until I we get used to it, eventually it will • be heralded as the greatest step ' of progress ever made in this i country for the working man. It 1 will prevent hardship and suffering when the next depression comes along. _ Polls being taken a year in ad vance of the election are nothing but propaganda. How can you make up your mind now. before platforms or policies have been announced? Most of the questions asked are designed to require certain answers like the magician forces you to draw a particular card from the deck. This nation has the highest I credit of any in the world and is on the way to great prosperity. President Roosevelt made a clear and concise statement of conditions in his Atlanta speech that ’ every one should read. Further 1 taxes will not be necessary and the big debt will not be reduced rapidly. The budget will be bal-I anced and we will go on gloriously and sounder than ever before. Here is how Ted Robinson of the Cleveland Plain Dealer dopes out the New Deal poll now being taken by the Literary Digest: "I shall not mark and return my Literary Digest vote card. It asks. ‘Do! I you NOW approve the acts and policies of the Roosevelt ‘New Deal’ to date? If I mark the ‘yes’ I vote an unqualified approval that is surely far from intelligent. If I I mark the ’no’ I align myself with ■ uncompromising administration en-

1 emies, with the utilities magnates, with the Diehard Republicans. 1 do not belong to either camp; if I vote at all. 1 shall record a lie, just as thousands are doing, and thus help to swell a misleading and ' i meaningless tabulation which will be unjustifiably used as a basis for prophecy’.” -■ ■ o Answers 1 o Test Questions Below are the answers to the | Test Questions printed on Page 1 wo. ♦ • i 1. Good tidings. 2. Shintoism. 3. A gas which possesses the odor cl chlorine or moist phosphorus. 4. Gotland or Gothland. 5. Arthur Conan Doyle. 6. Shakespeare's “Hamlet.” Act 3, Scene 1. ; 7. Chile. 8. American actor. 9. Kentucky and Tennessee. 10. A form of purchase of goodr* on ' a rystem of extended credit. • 1. George Westingtlwuse Jr. . 12. 1802. . 3. Pitcairn Island. ' j 4. English historical painter. 5. The Septuagiut. 6. A large heavily-built, shorttailed rodent, recognized by its spotted fur. 7. Scotland. | 8. A ncn-couditcting device, or ma- - terial. iwed to separate two electrical conductors. ' 9. Washington Irving. 10. Famous American actress. Modern Etiquette Sv ROBERTA LEE Q. When a man had taken a ' girl to a public dining room, ' should she give her order direct to the waiter? A. No; she should give her order to her escort and allow him , to give the order to the waiter. y. Where should the date be written on a social letter or note? J A. Tlv- date should be written ; a.t the bft of the signature, on ; til'- last page of the letter or note. q. Is it good form, when introducing Iwo persons, to say. “This is my friend, Mr Wilson"? A. No; this implies that the other person is not a friend, j 0 I Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

Old Man Winter, the Finger Man! Jim’ - ' / Z%ZZ h A ; ''J IMP* jrlfe "7" ** *5; ~ '•*.*' Z * tJM, Fetivm Svn&car 1:, Grtit Bticuo . gho reserved. |

♦ « | Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee * « Hand Lotion A quart of excellent hand lotion can be made as follows: Soak 1 ounce of qui.'.ce seed fc.r a day in l*i pints c f warm water. Then strain and add 2 ounces glycerine. 2 ounces tincture of benzoin. 3 ounces of alcohol, and 10 drops of rose essence. Mix thoroughly i and put in a bottle, securely corked. Storing Eggs Don't wash the eggs before packing away in water glass. If the eggs are Igidly soiled, sponge them very lightly with a cloth dampened in vinegar. The Thimble When the thimble is too large for the finger, try attaching a piece of adhesive tape inside the thimble. — o - * TWENTY YEARS * | AGO TODAY | From the Dally Democrat File | ♦ # lAic. 2 —Frieude of Judge David E. Smith present his name for consideration a« a candidate for the Democratic nomination for congress in the eighth district. Electric- lights turned on at Monroe last evening a.id every body

Beauty Treatment Is Incomplete Without Care of Eyes

By Jean Prentice THE fact that proper lighting enables us to see better should be ample reason for having it. But there's a further reason than that; proper illumination actually helps us to look better. Those eye wrinkles that come from continued squinting and eyestrain don't have much chance to form when the light is glareless and abundant. The question is, however, how to obtain this kind of light conveniently and economically'’ Well, let s take a typical case; that of the attractive lady in the picture. The numbers and lines on the illustration have been placed there to help you visualize the relation ship between lamps, the position of the eye work and r tie auteutt of light as it would be shown by a light meter. By actual measurement it has been prove* that when a good-sized table is used for a lamp beside a fairly large comfortable chair, there will be approximately 32 inches between the lamp and the eye work Utilize Light Effectively When sitting in the average chair, the book or. eye work is Iv-ld about 30 inches from the floor Under such conditions it is found that 150-watts. or two 75-watt bulbs arc needed in the table lamp to obtain on Hie tajsk the desired amount of light for average eye work — approximately 25 foot-candles. (The foot candle, you know, is tlio unit of measurement of illumination intensity. I One bulb may of course be turned off when eye work gives way to conversation, and still hold tlie <harm of this grouping The lamp shade, you’ll notice, has a white lining, a very desirable virtue it we want to utilize thelight most effectively. It is tall enough to throw a generous circle of light «o that, our lady doesn’t have to hug close to the lamp in an

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1935.

Goodies For The Holiday Season If you want full directions for making all sorts of i od things > for your table during the Christmas Holiday season, our Washington Bureau has ready a packet of five of its bulletins that you wiH find indispensable. They are: 1. Cake Making 2. Doughnuts and Crullers 3. Pies and Fa.ncy Pastries 4. Sauces of all Kinds 5. Tea Cakes and Party Pastries A packet containing these five bulletins is ready for you. Fill out the coupon below and mail as directed: CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. SP-37. Washington Bureau, DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1013 Thirteenth Street. NW„ Washington, D. C. I want the packet of bulletins on making CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY GOODIES, and enclose fifteen cents in cola or postage stamps, for return postage and handling costs: NAME -— STREET and NoCITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur. Ind.

pleased. Great Britain has so far lost 510,- , 230 killed and missing since the i i war began. |! C. 11. Worden completes Uie payment of $75.hf10 for the interurban , and announces the road will operate under present management for I the present. Teddy Roosevelt announces he ■ will not return to the Republican ! fold. James Deain fined five dollars for ■ hunting without a license. Real estate transfer-George H.

».wniwiMrn mum——l ian«Mii' uiwnWßiwswi'nmrwwwj—mwar ‘ 18 HI HPRSHI Hl kill J *“ s ' it - ''K ‘ IIMSIM—■ - 1 MIH Ul.il "'ll --''llli—TT II l li'llllll II lll..iil—MMW>WiilllMl—l— Soft, shaded light of adequate intensity enables one to see better and look better. Wrinkles show up less and are less likely to form.

unnatural and uncomfortable position. Thus, we have a fortunate combination ot three important elements in homo lighting: 1. Enough light to see by. 2. Shaded light, which softens and lends attractive tone. 3. General light, plus extra local light for close eye-work.

Bright to Gue Yake. 40 acres in Kirkland t.;wnehip, *B,OOO. Fresh pickerel at Fullenkamps. Wheat went to *1.12 per bushel I in Chicago today. SIO,OOO SUIT ■"■GNTINtTRn (-ROM PAGE ONB complete similar fracture of the middle third left femure, third degree burns to the 'posterior surface of the right leg above the ankle, severe contusions to the right thigh and extreme abrasions to the pos-

True beauty demands proper care ot the eyes. The right kind of light, properly shaded, and sufficient in quantity, will help te minimize eyestrain, reduce fatigue, and prevent the formation ot those telltale wrinkles resulting from eye-abuse that do so much to spoil facial attractiveness.

tprior surface of the right forearm and hand, broken and loosened front teeth." As a result of the accident he paid; medical bills amounting to $155.50; hospital bills amounting to $399.76. and special nuraea, $175. He stated that he will be required to pay an undetermined amount of future medical bills. He also stated that his left leg is ! one and a fourth inches shorter than the other and that ho is unable to perform his farm work in the manner in which he was accustomed. The attorneys made their opening statements this morning. Several weeks ago. Leonard Pense, one of the defendants in the present suit, recovered damages of S9OO from Mr. Walters in a suit tried in Wells county. His car was overturned in the accident and caught fire. He was unconscious for 43 hours and was not expected to live for a time. He was pulled from the flaming automobile by a woman who drove up behind the accident. QUESTION TWO IN COPS DEATH Jai! Inmate And Gary Man Questioned In Anderson Killing Anderson, Ind.. Dec. 2 — (UP) — Investigation of the mysterious slaying of patrolman Frank M. Levy here last week, centered today in the questioning of a county jail inmate whose name was withheld and Harry Janowski. 32, Gary. Janowski surrendered to state police at Indianapolis when he learned local officers wanted to quastio nhlm in connection with the Levy case. Anderson authorities questioned Janowski at length and said they placed little credence in the jail inmate's statement implicating Janowski in the murder. Janowski produced evidence to show he was in Gary the night of Nov. 24 when Levy was ehot while investigating a couple parked in an automobile here. Police said they expected to question the jail prisoner, and Janowski j together today. State police are working on the theory that Willard (Kit) Carson, LNiarty, Ind.. Desperado who han been sought for nine yearn and « charged with at least four slayings shot Levy. Cannon is alleged to have shot three policemen without warning and much in the same fashion Levy . was killed.

&as&& &A? A'jfc' abs a* at A' st & ata' a*f & & di a* dt A! &dl I.IL J|i .-r, K - - * FURNITURE IS SANTA’S BEST SUGGESTION ? "he one present certain to be enjoyed for years to come, by every member of I J’amity. Make this a furniture Christinas... .You'll be glad you made so v hoice. Our L iberal Help! > ■'/Ob Ji FCS * ~ ’ Wy'.B Il I»>— —»f "‘®L. i -i -> HP *1 j? ? 1 v - nd & ;;rd j J Beautiful 2 Pc. Kroehler Living Room SuiU> Handsome New Bed Room Suites Distinctive New 8 Pc. Dining Room Suites ■ I I HARDWARE and HOME FURNISH 3t Jt itat atatsststtat

DENIES UNFAIR TRADE PRACTICE Terre Haute Company, Scene Os Labor Trouble, Denies Charge Terre Haute, Ind., Dec. 2—<U.R) —Charges thiU the Wagner labor relations act is unconstitutional were made here today by the Columbian Enameling and Stamp-' ing company in denying accusal tions of unfair trade practices. The enameling plant, focaj point| of a general strike here July 22 which paralyzed business and brought martial law to Vigo county, was charged with unfair trade practices in a statement filed: with the national labor relations I board by the Enameling Workers Union No. 19694. Hearing on the charges is scheduled in federal court here Dec. 9. Employes of the enameling plant went on strike March 23 and the general strike was called . in an attempt to enforce demands of union recognition and a closed | shop agreement. In replying to the union's accui sation, the company denied it was ’ engaged in interstate commerce and that it hail in any way violat- | ed the labor relations act or interfered with the free flow of interstate commerce. The company also charged that ' ( the strike of its employes was ', unlawful. Since the plant reop--11 enod all employes without regar 1 ’! to their union affiliation have 1 been asked to return to work and many have done so, company ofti--1 cials said. Prior to the strike the companv ' had bargained collectively through ’ the union, they said. i j Normally the enameling concern ~ employee about six hundred peri sons. o— LIQUOR EVILS CONTINUED FIOT PAGE ONE the liquor forces have decided that it would be much more profitable ; to have ,nct only men but men, wo- ; men and young people in their list | oi habitual drinkers. The old saloon is replaced by brightly lighted road houses, by music halls, and reetaurante where music from high ebss orchestras and where dancing with all of its possibilities and where I -miling young women serve the drinks, combine to make drinking a very social and a very pleasant . occupation and in so doing more i young people are drinking today

I and tt -i-ii* People *"d during the Bnl I' ’“' 1 ' oUo e?"' ','' 1 " ,,u "' and «><!& m i“ USe ” f '>**? S !,av, ‘ ' ;l '«nw<i l!teir r ih " ,tl,eftwk, «inAi!2 and Tra d« in a Goon i J KEE 1J36 Li CWi Buy AJsedcirrj?'

Tonight & “THECRUSAB with Loretta Yom 1 * of others! i d l Ti d n;:.“- THE < ) u'!i TAI ION" m COLOI Wed. A Thurs. - dom TURE PROGRAM , •j BREAD" King Vidor's Eg | million hearts! with & Tom Keene — aM - n EXIT" with EDMUND LC« ANN SOTHERN. ■ Coming— I "MUTINY ON TH£ MADISON Ife Tonight & “STORM 0111 THE AW with JACK HOLT, i Iktrrie. Antonio l|«« Gene LockhaK Added-Comedv and (■ in COLOIL IMk Fri. 4c Sat — 808 S’Eiu "RIDERS OF THE UT —mM Coming—"TO BEAT THt | with Roger Pryor. Fred ( S . Eric Blore. Phyllis Brwii,l Herbert, Helen Broderick, k . ■MMWi