Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
r\ DT C 1 V f 1 E 1 ir i '-'s3 v J I j/ - - g ■ , ■ I ■■■■ "'■" ■■ ■"" * ' "
WARTHREATMAY HALT OLYMPICS Fate Os 1936 Olympic Games Depends On War Situation B illn. March 10 (UP)— The fate of the I»3< Olyuujdc games j hangs on international <l«cinion« in ' the vastly more important field of. IMllltfCS. Germany is continuing al! Iter pre-' paratione for the International | Athletic Carnival and will continue to do bo, even though reports from | Geneva today told of the possibility , that France, Czechoslovakia, lion-, mania and Jugoslavia might refuse . to particfpalte. Their refusal, predicted as a result of the agitation for sanctions j against Germany, would cripple the [ games but only war will etap them entirely. Dr Theodore Lewaid, president ' of the Olympic organizing commit-!
. •» JmMSuußz ♦. — I List Time Tonight ETDIE CANTOR “STRIKE ME PINK" With PARKYARKARKAS ALSO-Color Cartoon. 10c-25e WED. & THURS. 90 Minutes of Roaring Comedy • Tantalizing Tunes! STAN LAUREL & OLIVER HARDY in a Full Length Fun Feature “BOHEMIAN GIRL" »■■■ — — NOTE-This same Feature and Same Entire Program will he s h ow n at the MADISON Theater Wednesday Night Onlv. ♦ « Fri. & Sat.—Gene Raymond, Wendy Barrie in ‘'LOVE ON A BET" —O—O—COMING — A blast of dramatic dynamite! "EXCLUSIVE STORY" Franchot Tone, Madge Evans, Stuart Erwin. .? r w <®B> — Last Time Tonight — Two Action Packed Features! ANOTHER FACE" Wallace Ford, Phyllis Brooks and “EAST OF JAVA" Chas. Bickford. Elizaoeth Young. ONLY 10c-20c —O—O— Fri. & Sat. — Big Double Feature, Show! BUCK JONES in “Sunset: of Power” and "Sweet Surrender” ' Musical Comedy. —o—o—■ COMING — Two More Big Hits! “CRIME AND PUNISHMENT" and “TWO IN THE DARK" MONEO AT 3 LOWER RATES INTEREST COSTS REDUCED NEARLY c ONE-HALF iThe "LOCAL" always loans ■ for LESS. All loans made at less than maximum rate permitted by law. No indorsers required. You can borrow amounts Up to SIOO.OO AS FOLLOWS: $ 50.00 now costs only i SI.OO per month 100.00 now costs only $2.00 per month 150.00 now costs only ? $2.50 per month 200.00 now costs only $3.00 per month 300.00 now costs only $4.00 per month Costs of other amounts are strictly in proportion as this new low interest rate governs all loans. YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCE Costs nothing to investigate. Call, write or telephone. Spec-al Time Plan for Farmers. I Local Loan Co Over Schafer store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.
tec, made that plain. I "War Is the only thing that can (.prevent the coming Olympics." Dr. I Lewaid said. “Simctionm as much I could not d. > so. for the Olympic, are neither an oconomic nor political football. I "Germany believes the justice of ■ her cause will (prevent sanctions. I However, even with Sanctions, unIder the Olympic mien, there can be | I no question of pontponing' the j I gamed. The games either imtist b< ! 1 abandoned or carrie dout." I Foreign observers here fear that | (if th' league votes sanction, a l I gainot Germany, many European ( countries may withdraw their teams 1 even if Germany still should wish 1 | to hold the game.. Advicie from England said tha' I the question of a British boycott on th? Olympics has not even been con-1 Lsidered, but despite that fact, the I (ißrotlsh Olympic committee han sue-j | pended Public and private appeals I for funds for the time bMng to avert : :H»ssible rebuffs. Held If Possible 1 Chicago March 10 iU)')- Olym-i i pic gam. s will be held in Berlin this I 1 summer regardless of how many | nations vote to withdraw, Avery ; Brundage. American Olympic com-1 I 1 ittee chairman, said today. Brundage said the only .hing that | could prevent the gaoieo would ibe lan European war. "As long as the city of Berlin I does not violate any rule of the inI ternational Olympic Association, I she can hold the games of the 11th .Olympiad even if only one team is ! competing." Brundage declared. I The games were awarded to Berlin - Not to G many." An European war probably would cause complete abandonment of the | 1936 games, he added They could not he postponed. Hundred Pheasants Released In County Th? Adams c. unty fish and game 1 conservation league announced to- | day the release of 100 pheasants in I the county under the wild game replenishing plan that has become , state wide. The birds were releases! yesterday, after being received from ’ the state conservation department, i The birds came six to a crate. ! I three males and three females. Os I this number Decatur received six 1 crates. B -rne five and Geneva six. 1 The pregram of the league also ini eludes th? replenishing of the quail I In this territory. The league, at the j I last meeting, when given the choice I of quail or pheasant eggs i ’nose the I quail and are to receive a shipment I of these eggs in the near future. The state department ipays the 1 I local league for raising the birds after hatching. Herman Lengerich, 1 member of the local board of directore, announced the release of the birds. 36th Annual Bowling Congress Is’ Opened Indianapolis, Mar. 10. —(U.P.) —The 36th annual Amreican bowling con- ■ gress opened ceremoniously last I night before 2,500 spectators. Gov. Paul V. McNutt rolled the | first ball, as leadoff man for the 1 State Capitol executive team. As- , sisting him in inaugural ceremonies were A. E. Jankowsky. Detroit. A. B. C. president, and Mayor John W. Kern, Indianapolis. The Indianapolis Rotary No. 2 turned i nthe best five-man team score for the evening. 2,518. Kiwanis No. 1 placed second with 2,418. Two squads of Indianapolis teams are scheduled for action tonight.
I CORTI - Last Time TonPght - Warner Baxter, Alice Faye - Jack Oakie “KING OF BURLESQUE” Plus-News and Novelty. 10c-25c Wed. - Thurs. ; Allision Skipworth - Mae Clarke “'HITCH HIKE LADY" COMING—<ERw S.IF Reserved seats now on sale for I “Midsummer Night’s Dream" i Green Kettle Confectionary :
LOOP LEADERS ARE FAVORITES High School Conference Champions Are Among Favorites Indianapolis. Mar. Id — (U.P) ' Champions and their close rivals In the state’s major conferences today appeared strongest of the '-iirvivlng tetvna in the 2*>th annual I Indiunn high school basketball I tournament. Martinsville, champion in 1921. *1927 and 1933, was a notable ex-1 I (-option. Anderson, the defending chamIpion. was among seven North I Central conference teams which I survived the first round of the I tournament. The others wore Frankfort. Log- j iinsport. Kokomo, Marion, Newcattle, and Muncie. Frankfort won ; 'the conference championship with 1 13 consecutive victories, j Tipton. unbeaten champion of j I the Central Indiana conference, is! I considered a strong tournament 1 favorite. The Blue Devils won 22 1 consecutive games during the. I regular campiugn. Washington, state champion in, ,1930. led the Southern Indiana 1 <(inference during the season. Among the other Southern conference teams) are Central of Ev-i ansville. Linton. Princeton and Vincennes. Hammond, champion of the Northern Indiana conference, will, lead the contenders from that see-1 tion into the regional tournaments, scheduled Saturday. Profited of Gary, Goshen, Riley of south Bend, and LaPorte are, other Northern conference teams | I in the surviving field. Control of Fort Wayne is an-1 other conference champion in the 1 regional field. The Fort W ayne I team led the Northeastern Indiana.1 < onterence. North Vernon, champion of the , Southeastern conference, is the ■ only leader of a major state; ' league that failed to survive the 1 sectional round. The North Central conference has won six of the last eight state I championships. Martinsville's vic-1 tory >n 1933 and Washington’s I title performance in 1930 were! the only breaks in the chain. * At the Training (amps By United Press Tigers Lakeland. Fla.. Mar. 10. —(U.R)— The Detroit Tigers have sent their final offer to first baseman Hank ■ Greenberg, manager Mickey Coch- : rane said today. "It will be the 1 1 last he’ll hear from us until he | agrees to sign,” Cochrane said. I l"He has been given a generous; (boost." Outfielder Goose Goslin signed yesterday, leaving Green- , berg the only holdout. Cardinals Bradenton. Fla.—Outfielder Lou Scottie from the Bloomington j Three ! league club has been call'ed the St. Louis Cardinals’ best 1936 spring prospect by manager Frankie Frisch. "He looks like a 1 real phenom." said Frisch. The Cards play thte Athletics today. Dodgers Clearwater. Fla. — Van Mungo, Brooklyn pitching ace, was expected to sign his contract today at ter showing up unexpectedly in j camp last night. It is believed that Mungo will get the $12,000 salary he demands. Phillies Winter Haven. Fla. — With the arrival of outfielder George Watkins in camp, the Phillies' squad is complete. Third baseman Ver-1 gez. who has been nursing an injured ankle, is showing steady im-! provement and may be* able to play against Brooklyn Thursday. Rain Kept the Phils idle yesterday. Bees St. Petersburg. Fla. — Hal Lee, Boston Bee. outfielder, was scheduled to have his first workout of | the spring training season today. ( Lee arrived here yesterday but i was not allowed to practice because he still was a holdout. He signed his contract last night. Yankees St. Petersburg. Fla. — After a I week of the worst weather ever encountered in 12 years of training here, tne New York Yankees hop ! ed to get down to hard work today. Only an hour’s work was accomplished yesterday between 1 showers. Ben Chapman, holdout | outfielder, took the club at its word I and did not report yesterday. Outfielder Roy Johnson, although sign-j ed, hasn't reported. White Sox Pasadena. Calif.— Manager Jimmy Dykes of the Chicago White Sox today began drawing up a tentative lineup to oppose the Chicago Cubs Saturday and Sunday. He expected to use either Kennedy or Whiteheard on the mound ! with Radcliff. McCulloch and Kreevich in the outneld. Cubs Avalon, Calif. — With no more practice games scheduled until the , Cubs meet the Chicago White Sox , Saturday and Sunday, manager
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MARCH I<>,
1 [ ww (COCHRANE J/' 3A' LOur " Straight AkIOTMCR FLAG" r r * 4 A J' / Ml- if' - / k.' < 1 Simmons \\ . I X 1 «s tyjaiaiiaj'S SchoCtboU' x •• /Ha'£ Aowfi' C™
Charley Grimm today put his team through routine unll. NEW HAMPSHIRE PRIMARY TODAY President Primary Today Is First Os 1936 Campaign Concord. N. H.. Mar. 10. —(U.R) — New Hampshire’s presidential primary. first of the 1936 campaign, pitted two outstanding Republican candidates against each other and President Roosevelt against a volunteer favorite son today. It was reasonably certain that Frank Knox. Concord and Chicago publisher, would win a majority of Republica neon vent ion delegates and that President Roosevelt s prestige would not be seriously ruffled, but several contests between individual delegates promised an indication of which way political winds are blowing. Republican voters were to elect seven delegates at-large and four district delegates. Democratic voters balloted for eight delegates atlarge and four district delegates. New Hampshire Republican won three convention seats above their 1932 reprsentation by holding the state in the G. O. P. column in that year's election. Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas opposed Knox in the Republican contest. A conclusive fight was prevented by the fact that none of the 26 candidates for the 11 conventio nseats was formally pledged to a candidate. But State Senator Eliot A. Carter pledged himself informally to Landon and thereby created a test of Knox-Landon strength, because all the other candidates promised, in the same manner, to support Knox. President Roosevelt's rival, who under normal circumstances might be laughed off, was elevated to serious consideration by New Hampshire opposition to new deal farm policies and a campaign resplendent with rosy promises. He is Dr. ’ph A. Cotremarsh. 61, a re’(<■'> !.» i> ino’’ dentist who has made an avocation of economic studies. He proposes to issue $30,000,000,000 of new paper and silver money, establish a generous old age pension and abolish capital punishment. —o ■ ■ — Revival services. Church of God. 7:30 each evening. tues wed-fri.
Bright, \ Cheery, New WallpaperWhat’s new in Wall Paper? The answer can be found in our large showing of new papers for spring. Wide and varied assortment of the new Rough Plasters, Plaids. Basket Weaves, and the big hit of the season . . . W | Colored Ceilings and Colored ■ E B ■ Walls and Star and Dot Papers for every room in the R .. ■ house. We’ll be glad to Koll ’ dn(l U P show you. 111 - Holthouse Drug Co.
DISPUTE OVER fCONTINITED FROM PAGE O-* l ?* sion when new revenue income will be more complete and the lionutt ccst mor accurate. One of the corporate tax revisions ; considered by house tax experts j wae to widen the range o fthe grad- 1 uated tax on undivided earnings I from 10 per cent on the firet $lO.000 as net income to 60 per cent on net income above $60,000. Another was to grant corporations a lower rate of tax on a percentage of earnings. Am tits above that percentage, from 10 to 2v per cent, would then ae taxed at from 20 to 40 per cent. The corporate surplus tax. according to treasury estimates, might possibly .mean tax hikes for 2.578,000 individuals who file returns. This maximum wat> based on the theoretical possibility that corporations would distribute in dividends all corporate earnings. FRENCH ATTITUDE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE), officially informed Britain today that the Soviet government Is "resolutely opposed" to negotiations with Germany and the Soviets are ready "actively to participate in any action decided upon at Geneva". Ivan Maiski. Soviet ambassador, visited the house of commons and delivered to Lord Cranborne, parliamentary undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, an important oral communication based on instructions just received from Moscow. It was learned that Vladimir Potemkin. Soviet ambassador to France, meantime conveyed a similar message to Foreign Minister Pierre Etienne Flandin in Paris. I I The Soviet communication was delivered to foreshadow a united front at the league council meeting of Russia. France, the little (entente —Roumania, Jugoslavia and Czechoslovakia —Turkey, and possibly others, not only against Germany but against the British inclination to compromise with Adolf Hitler regardless of Germany’s repudiation of the Locarno treaty. o Professor Serves Coffee Austin, Tex. —(UP)—Dr. C. PBoner, .physics profesfVr at the University of Texas here, hae a party along with final examinations Midway through their threehotir ‘ tests, students take time out for 1 coffee and doughnuts—and all on Dr. Boner,
PLAN TRAINING IN FIRST AID Ten-Day Course For First Aid Instructors At Red Cross l.ufaycttc. Mar. 10.- Imulgurating a new service which will make It iHissible to train Individuals from the major comniunitles of Indiana to become Red Gross Instruc tors qualified to give standard ami advanced courses In first aid. a ton day intensive training co’uree for first aid instructors will be held at Purdue university. March 3'l- - 10. Tt.c ti course, H- > ’ ’’t' its kind to be held oil u stat, wide basis, wilt lie sponsored by the public safety institute of Purdue university and the first aid and lifesaving division of the American Red Cross, with the Tippecanoe county chapter of the American Red Cross, the Purdue student health service and the division of physical education for men cooperating. Dr. Lawrence M. Thompson, staff physician of the American Red Cross, Washington, D. C„ will lie in general charge of the ten-day course. The other Instructors on the staff will include Drs. S. J. Miller and F. M. Hall, of the sttt dent health service; L. W Uißree and Homer Allen, of the division of physical education: Major F. W. Bryant. Tippecanoe county examiner for the A. 11. C , and Lieut. Franklin M. Krenil. of the publie safety Institute. Purdue. Enrollment in the course will lie limited to 40 students, and all applications for enrollment must be made in advance on or before March 23. Persons successfully completing the course l will be given an American Red Cross instructors certificate, authorizing them to teach first aid in their respective communities. Police and fire departments, schools, city playgrounds. BoyScouts. Y. M. ('. A., and county American Red Cross organizations, are all expected to take advantage of the opportunity to train one or more instructors available to serve in their community. o Renewed Rioting Is Reported In Spain Granda. Spain. March 10 —(VP) —A 24-liour g 'neral strike was declared today after rioting in which the Carmelite convent and the chur h and convent of St- Nasario were set afire. The fires were put out without great damageThe strike was called by left wing elements in protest against fascists who were accused of wounding 15 laborers in fighting last night. The strikers (prevented supplies from entering the city and stormed and wrecked headquarters of the fas.; ist party. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
? : -1 Z■ ■ •»; ■ - J* ' - **/ I I de ’ ■**—l Ik jrf w 4 -w* First Showing of the New Duke of Kent Shift The popular, button down, y-x SEE wide spread collar, sea- | LZ f 1 u i\I)OW tured on both plain and | ■ ... ~,. *y fancy patterns. tp 13 V V DISPLAY Peterson & Everhart Co.
Is Your Child Getting Thu Right P (M J You can be certain of the right w«le< t|( ln .... ing ftmys and girls, If you will follow the sutg Ml u? fftr you» lugton Service Bureau’s 4.000 word bulletin, 1,1 <>ur Just fill out the coupon lielow, enclose n iiiik. 1 .J 1 CLIP COUPON HERR Dept. 378, Dally Democrat’s Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street. NW., Washinnu Em loeed Ih u nickel for my copy, of || U , i,..., ~?, 0 ”• C. CHILDREN: in FOQ] NAME STREET and No. CITY ■ STAT).; 1 am a reader of the Decatur Dally Deimx iat Bwn,,. , ’ 1 Inil
FOUR PERSONS | ESCAPE INJURY Four Uninjured In Collision At Street Intersection Monday Four persons escurfi injury last evening at 5:30 o’clock, when a ! Model T Ford driven by Richard ! Andrews of this city, and a .coupe ; driven by Ray Molder, of Findlay, | Ohio collided at the interbection of Nnttman Avenue and Tenth streets. Niglit Policeman Floyd Hunter | was called to the scene to investigate the accident, and reported I fr im the versions of the crash of j the two men the probable way in which it occurredMr. Andrews evidently was drlv-! ing ahead of the Ohio car. which ao 1
~ fit ' Jr U , Jf 9gr J '/S BbIS U f r i£lßO a 6[0%l WWKW> WAS KJoTthe ~ / R First PteSIPEUTOF TWEOjA.t£j| Second to none in quality— Iff SINCLAIR GAS AND OILS! iflC Sinclair Opaline Oil and Sinclair Pennsylvania Oil are made for your particular car. There's a difference. Tune your radio to Sinclair Minstrels every Monday night. Riverside Super Service When You Think of Brakes—Think of Us.
ln, i. result of hand turn S | gna | W| •void striking Andrew ‘hough no one w as | -mger in the e a r othe ' rti ‘ suf'-ring „ # M waa mum gp a tier’s mother w a< a p!U ’ ear. The Ohio p art y to Huntington where the man was to visit rehtlvw The Andrews car was ort |’y <l4tnage<l. while the oft ; was damaged to the » Xlnt I crumpled f. nd r and two h) 'tires. I —(iM)(l, c|m Rags, suitable for r machinery. Will pav Decatur Daily Democn Another shipment of 1 Grimes Golden, 59c, *! 89c. Baldwins 79 f ' gi SI.IO. Kintr pack Ik ‘51.50. Bell’s Grocer?,
