Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 79, Decatur, Adams County, 1 April 1936 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entur&d at the Decatur, Hid., Post Office as Second Class Matter. (. H. Heller President A R. Holthouse, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller.Vice-President Subscription Ratos dingle copies * 03 One week, by carrier.lo One year, by carriers.oo One month, by mall .35 Three months, by malll.oo Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 8.00 One year, at office2. 3.00 Prices quoted are within a radius of 100 miles. Elsewhere 13.50 one year Advertising Rates made knowu 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 Decatur youngsters will enjoy the egg rolling contest on the lawn at the Elks home on Easter day. I It will be a lot of fun and a sight worth seeing. - — Repairing of homes and buildings has started here and will continue during the year and it looks like a busy several months ahead for the tradesmen. March didn't exactly go out like a lion but it managed to rough up a little. All in all the first month of spring was about as good as any one used to Indiana weather had a right to expect. Most folks will be glad to find something a little more construe-j tive than the Hauptmann stories on the front page of their favorite newspaper, but of course while it lasted they wanted to know what was going on. It's still hard to understand the position taken by Governor Hoff-j man of New Jersey on the Hauptmann case but he is reputed to be a smart politician and may have something up his sleeve that we' Hoosiers don't know about. Senator Dill of Washington is asking a divorce on the grounds that his wife buried dead dogs and garbage in the yard at their Spokane mansion. Perhaps Dill should have looked after those duties himself or had some one else do it. One of the matters which will come before about every legisla-i ture in the country next year will be that of governing speed of automobiles. The increasing death rate has caused many, including automobile manufacturers, to realize that something must be done. Senator Minton may not be the most experienced senator but at least he has courage and what he says about Mr. Hurst very probably gets under that gentleman's skin. He is right in saying that the only dictatorship we have to fear in this country is that of some arrogant and powerful leader like Hearst. April first, All Fools day, real start of spring, finest season of the year, when every thing mid every body is supposed to come to life. It's time to start house clean-1 ing. repairing, remodelling, building, doing things that show progress. help you and your community and makes life worth living. Happy days are here again Mr. Greenlee, one of the Demo cratic candidates has reached the point in his campaign where he is personally attacking a number of the party leaders, which certainly doesn't help his own cause and indicates lie doesn’t care a hang how the election in the fall will result. Fortunately, those who hear him, realize that he is telling what. he. knows because he was the main.
spoke iu the wheel when the things ho now discloses went on. The supremo court has a tough time. It they decide one way, the 1 Democrats ate mad and if they go the other way the Hooverites are up and at them. Os course they are accused constantly of playing politics and of being unfair but we have the idea that they do their best to uphold the constitution and the laws. Just now, since their last tWo opinions have been iu favor of the New Deal, they are in bad with the G. O. I’, and those newspapers which so loudly defended them arc now so mum its funny. Under the new security act a maximum pension of thirty dollars is permitted but this does not mean that each person on the approved list will draw that amount. The welfare board will have supervision and they may decide that no increase is needed. It is not likely that many persons will receive the thirty dollars, this maximum going mostly in counties like Lake, Marion, Allen, or others of those having large cities where living expenses are higher. All ! pensions granted by the local board ' will have to be confirmed by the state board and it will be necessary to show cause for increased amounts. - ■ ——o > ♦ Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the | Test Questions printed on Page Two 1- Paul Gorguloff. | 2. Knox. 3. The struggle between Emperor ■ Napoleon and the Spanish. Portuguese, and English on the Iberian I Peninsula from 1307 to 1814. 4. An enlisted man who is not ‘ in the seaman branch of the service. but takes the rating of third jclass seaman. 5. Vermont. 6 Secretary of the Navy. 7. Japan. 8. American agriculturist and botanist. . 9- A boatman who operates a gondola. 10. Brazil. Q * TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY I From the Daily Democrat File April 1- Oil field workers offered 3» per day to work in the Mexican oil fields. Adams County Creamery has con? leted the building of cream stations at Berne, Geneva. Monroe, 1 Willshire. Pee. Chattanooga kind Rockford. I Mr. and Mns. Henry Steele of j Pleasant Mills observe their 63rd ' wedding anniversary. Ike Zimmerman shoots seif at ,Fcrt Wayne, dying instantly. i Mrs. D. D Heller goes to Indianapolis for visit with her daughter, Miss I’rrtha Heller. Roads very soft and car owners arc warned to stay off. o Household Scrapbook | By Roberta Lee A Sewing Hint Instead of tying the ends of the threads when stitching a hem on the sewing machine, merely turn the goods and stich back about an inch. This will make a neat finish, and neither will the bom rip. Linoleum Rugs Leftover pieces of linoleum can be made into very attractive little rugs for the kitchen, breakfast nook, or iporch, by painting and stippling tfietti in the desired colon,. Silverware The efficient housewife never allows her silver ware to remain unwashed over night, Q Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE ♦ 4■ Q. In what form should invitations to a stag dinner be given? A. They are usually given verbally. in person, or over Hie telephone. Q. Are slang expressions in good taste? A No; It is unnecessary and not an indication of the 'boat manners; some people consider it vulgar. Q. What docs "ennui’’ mean, and how Is it pronounced? A. It means a feeling of weariness arising from satiety. Pronounce ang-new, a as in ah, c as in we, principal accent on last syllable. o— — -— Gigantic Structure Herodotus estimated that lOb/VG i men were engaged for 21) years In | building the Great pyramid.
-White-Lady-Out-of-Mud! . C OH t> ’< r. ,I.W I« M —-W ’’ ~ W : ■ j?. \A,L I Jj . FLOOD RECOVERY; I ZU/- ' '7*l J \v ’ I ft g/, i/mH \JW w A 1 k -.A,. ’ I >• •.■■fl —n » I ''" ■A. I m ■ ■ rl s -k '■ ■ l l—' I,> 'I M - '■— - " Ju---— t *a '- ;8 ’*►•4 Uh*- - — s22—UKwwl ■ Hhwriu lai II
NEW THREAT OF (CONTINVEDjmoMJMGE chukuoan force clashed with 12 Mpngoliaai airplanes on the frontier Bear Lake 80l for one hour. It was believed the Mongolians sustained heavy losses, the dis- ; patch said, and that there were Lome casualties on the Japanese side. These grave reports fame just ' after Boris B. StomoniaJcov. Russian vice commissar of foreign I affairs, gave to Tamekichi Ohta. Japanese ambassador, a warning I whose tone was unmistakable. He said that Japan was under serious responsibility for the 1 clashes. He said that the most energetic measures to end them were urgently necessary. Finally he reminded Ohta that Rusrin. was bound by treaty to assist Mongolia :p defending its territory. \ven as Stomoniakov talked to the Japanese envoy, it appeared, a new. grave clash on the ill marked frontier was going on. The Mongolian version was that a Japajtese-Manchukuoan de■tachment in trucks, support 'd by several batteries of artillery, tanks, armored cars, and airi planes, crossed the outer Mongoii ian border at Adjkbolari and continued on to a. point 28 miles inside the frontier. It was implied that Mongolian soldiers fought a retreating action, for the official dispatches said that the Mongols were reinforced at that point and resisted with such energy that the "invaders' were driven back to the frontier. Then, it was s.ajd, the Japanese-Manchukuoans were reinforced at the border and again started inward. Stomoniakov's stern warning to Ohta was given in answer to a Japanese proposal for a limited border commission to investigate dashes. ’ Stomoniakov again pointed otr*
Centennial Good - Will Bond Barometer Manufacturers Retailers, Employees of Professional Lodges State, County, Wholesalers, Commercial Factories, Os- Men And Service Clubs, City, Federal Utilities Concerns fices, Stores Women Churches Employees QUOTA $2 000 QUOTA $3,000 QUOTA SBOO QUOTA SSOO QUOTA S4OO QUOTA S3OO 2,900 2,800 2,700 • 2,600 2,500 2,400 2,300 2 020 II 2.200 | 889 | 500 1,985 || 2,122 | 845 | 450 1,950 || 2,000 | 800 | 416 400 1.910 II 1,900 | 710 400 375 300 1.900 || 1,800 I 700 350 350 275 1.800 |1 1,700 | 600 310 325 250 1,700 31 1,625 || 500 300 300 225 1.600 || 1.600 | 450 290 275 || 200 1,500 || 1.515 I 400 275 255 ff 180 || 1,400 || 1.400 | 350 250 250 jj 175 || 1.300 || 1.350 | 300 225 j 225 jj 150 jj 1,200 || 1.300 | 275 200 j 200 jj 140 jj 1,000 II 1.200 | 250 150 150 jj 125 jj 900 II 1.000 I 200 100 100 jj 100 || 800 || 900 | 150 90 90 II 90 II 700 II 800 | 100 80 80 jj 80 jj 600 || 700 || 75 70 70 jj 70 jj 500 || 600 || 50 60 60 jj 60 jj 100 || 500 || 25 50 60 II 50 II
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1936.
HEROES OF AMERICAN HISTORY r • I *5 * THE. st " • ,4 JAMK.LB.SRAKI'-M < lames Ewell 8.-own Stuart, known by his j troopers as "Jeb." stud.ed at West Pom: t J and then entered the U. S. Army. - seeing service on the Texas frontier andV f X * 4-?'" v in Kansas, he assisted Colonel Robert E. tJA- ’/A ' . i i Lee tn suppressing the Harper's Ferry raid. V; When Virginia seceded from the Union, he resigned from the army Io share in the de- J lense ol his native slate. A dashing, color- 7 ful leader. Stuart, though still under 30. A j distinguished himself from the outset lor XI \ his coolness and personal bravery. Al- " I ways willing to fight, he led his horsemen | on brilliant and dar- »XU| k Ll li i. ’ I®®4. Stuart ening raids in which he 'rl tfii countered Sheridan s destroyed Union .'MKtanLj cavalry on the latstores and ccmmuni ; ter's march to Richcaticns. obtained MW y JWs, mend. la the battle valuable information J ‘ 1 7 "t A l bat followed he was and in general har- UrMp' - k f> ‘^ y mortally wounded, assed and checked * E-C'S’ - v ’■ ” u! undaunted even th- Northern armies. '■TF,' in the face of death. In one campaign. >Wt Ft KfiVy, *• 9 aT * orders to Stuart’s troops com i' J advance and attack I pletely circled the —“• V ■ federal forces. —.»■ • t—. * Wil ~ J ■ — -
1 that Russia had been under an ob--1 ligation to assist Mongolia ever 1 since 1921. when the governments . bound themselves mutually to defend themselves against attack. This obligation, oral, was made [ I formal March 13 by a protocol | signed at Ulan Bator. Stomoniakov ,j said. I Miniature Earth Exhibited ■ Edinburgh. —(UP) — An "earth i sculpture" laboratory Jias been esl tablished hereby Prof. Alan Ogilive
Its purpose is to shew, with the aid of Modekf. how rain rivers and the waves of the sea combine to mould the changing shape of the earth. — ———o ■ — ■ Dog Runs Errands Quincy, Mass. —(UP)— Thor. < . German police dog, is the "maid ' (or the Edward E. Moore family. When Moore returns from work, Thor greets him at the door with i his slippers. Given a nickel. Thor goets to a corner and barks for an ice er<<em cone
GREENLEE HITS AT WAYNE COY Pleas Greenlee Attacks State Administration Officials East Chicago. Ind.. Apr. I.—(U.R> —Wayne Coy. state relief direct or. came under the political lire of Pleas E. Greenlee, Democratic candidate for governor, in a party meeting here last night. Greenlee charged that Coy. Frank McHale, Logansport attorney; Virgil Simmons. Bluffton, state con servatlon department head, and Bowman Elder, American Legion officer and close friend of Gov. Paul V. McNutt, were "bosses of the administration.” Quoting from an article from a Washington political columnist. Greenlee said Coy "had permitted politics to creep into relief work ' Following the line of recent political speeches. Greenlee directed a vigorous attack on McHale, political advisor to the administration. "The state administration reeks with McHaleism," Greenlee charg ed. “It stands for the special privilege of spending huge sums of state money to purchase land in Wells county to benefit investors in a bank at Bluffton, Simmons’ home town " "The land was purchased at the highest price ever paid by the conWAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWithvut Cihrnel-And You II Jump Out W Bed in the Mornin? Ruin' to C» The liter should pour out two pound* of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If thia btl* is not flowing freely, your food doesn t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stfknach. You get constipated. Your whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. Laxatives are only makeshifts A mere bovre! movement doesn t get at the eauw* It takes ‘hose good, vid Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel*'upand up” Harmless. gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver F’llls by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25c.
"My TERRAPLANE does more than most cars claim" | ■ - |T— - — ' * ’'jl ■l.* *• w. J£S:?l < ■ ----- ■ , "it's 'tops' of ell the cars I’ve ever owned. IN out showroom, “owner talk” means more than ' "sales talk.” We’re content to let claims take a j yuj PRICE FIELD back seat while owners give you facts. rDOitoi tUF I? On performance, you needn't take the word of TERRflr LAflt D anyone but the man who knows how much caster his j )f| S|II uno room Terraplane handles in traffic . . . how much better it base... 115 inches. Moot room...*l’ takes straight-aways or curves ... how much faster it cubic feet, is on the get-away. His economy figures talk louder ntST IN POWER—Greatest than any salesman’s claims ... even ours! He can tell ... SS or 100. .And tbr smoolknl! you facts about Terraplanc's long life that would c » t rrv R.xlv really ’M sound boastful if ue sa.d them. “ h But even a Terrapiane owner can’t put into words Safety Control (patent ap? just what it means to sit at the wheel of this car and I Duo-Automatic Hydraulic drive! With the Electric Hand shifting the gears, (patent applied for). i your hands stay always on the wheel. Just a flick of PUST IN COMFORT -Tru-L.neS**-* the finger . . . and gears shift! And your front floor i The Rhythmic Ride, is all dear .. . Terraplane is the only low priced car I F|RST (N reuly new with real comfort for three in the front scat ... no I rca r-openinK baegar * n,i gear or brake levers to stumble over! I partmeut.The Elector f Steering is truer. There’s an amazing riding iat small extra cos.)- • •moothhess. At the brake pedal, safer stopping than :R8 ot 100 j f p_ ju-iach you'll find in any other car, with two braking systems I «»« MM at your command... and still a third from the easiest £ BP" tfc''" jfej handling parking brake you ever saw. You ride over the world’s first safety engineered chassis ... in a 'wf , bodv really all of steel, with solid roof of seamless j tH j u pforDeLuxe"odels.f» steel. On every side, something new to discover and Standard group of enjoy. Stop in now and take this "Discovery Dris ... tee for yourself what a change Terrapiane has SAY!-with an uwnwlW made in motoring. Tim. M-nt Hj- ; LEO KIRSCH, Terraplan. Dealer [ Let Decatur Owners Tell You Why They Bought TERRAPLANES HERE ARE A FEW . . . OTHER NAMES ON REQUEST 524 N. 2 nd A. R. ASHBAUCHER 626 N. 3rd street JESS LeBRUN s Ten th st™ 1 H. 0. EARNEST 415 W. Madison street A. V. YOST - 1U P. KIRSCH & SON raOMkSN 1 I '-Ml >wBUUT BT HUDSON-TEMAPLANE, SSSS AND UP, HUDSON SIT. SHS AND 0* NUDSC *■ - - EIGHT. STM AND UP, F. O. B. DETROIT .
nervation department. McHalelsm lalao stands tor dlamiasarof Green 1 lee frlenda in the statehouse " • The Republican party wan dej seated became of boeaiam: ao why j not clean our own house and profit ■ by its experience?” Huge Oyster Shell Found Santa Crus, Cal. (UP)—C. R. Look found an oyster ahull 12 inches king and 5 inches wide. The eyelet was tnlving
xflh &. 1 I y\tMe' 'tri 9 « ry i Iv I I- Lt<l y ' I I MAKE OLD.PIECES I NEW AGAIN! You can work marvels with a brush and a £la I LOWE Hkoihfßs QUICK-DRYING tN\Mai I For here’s enamel that brushes on anything i M | woodwork, furniture, glassware, metalware, potters, I plaster, anything about the home. I It flows oo smoothly and doesn't leave a brush ■ It hides so well that one coat is usually enough. Aod I it dries so quickly, that you can paint after tuncheoe L and use the finished pieces in the evening! I We cao supply QUICK DRYING tN.AMU.ia I | wide range of attractive colors. | Holthouse Drug Co ]
,tve " "f the UpL? n relief. ni!> M M _ T rarte ,1 a Good To wn S
