Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 84, Decatur, Adams County, 7 April 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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GAME LEAGUE ~ MEETING HELD Conservation Lea gu e Holds Monthly Meeting At Moose Home A good crowd attended iho regular meeting of the Adair..* county fish and game conservation league held at the Moose home Monday! evening. County Agent L. E. Archhold and French Quinn were the chief speakers. Roy Johnson presided. Game Warden Will Cuppy talked to the club, asking that the stray cats bo killed. He said they did more damage than any other | animal to game life. He also urged the destruction of crows’ nests. The club voted to leave a not ' in the hands of the Herne conservation club in the southern part I of the county to be used by both leagues for seining obnoxious fish from the waters in the county. Charles Knapp, chairman of the game fish committee, spoke, requesting the members of the duh to catch parent bass for fish breeding purposes. He said that they should be over the legal size of 10 inches and should be handled carefully. Before being placed in the breeding ponds they should be held and dipped up to their gills in a saturated salt solution. Then the heads should be dipped briefly in the salt solution. The fish should be kept in water until given members of the club or placed in the breeding ponns at the Catholic cemetery. The club has not decided whether to place its quota of pheasant eggs into the hands of members for hatching or to hire the hatching done in commercial concerns. Excerpts from Mr. Quinn’s talk were: "W’hen 1 was a little boy and grown up he-man who planted and tended a flower plot, considered a tree something else but to be cut down, or looked at the wild things of forest or streams with other eyes than those of slaughter, w’ould have been considered by all ami sundry as ‘not being all there.’ ’’Now your conservation clubs are behind a great movement. The bird refuges, even utilizing farm wood lots; camping areas in public parks; stocking rivers and lakes 40-50-80-160 acre farms for sale on good terms. Located in Adams. Wells and Huntington counties. Buy a farm home while you are young. Write for particulars to S. Q. Hipsher, 2521 Terrace Road. Ft. Wayne, Ind. JUST RECEIVED New Shipment of COATS, SUITS and DRESSES Mrs. M. Mover 128 N. 4 st.

Apr i w/f I W y W*AXX?jS< - ft fug sum is MoT ths ' . C.-/V* >if / rj I I <w fov/ THAT GW CAUSE A RAI/jfoU// In the Spring a young man's fancy 11 j 1 a lightly turns to thoughts of Spring Driving. jl SINCLARIZE your car for Spring service! Sinclarize Service includes all the essential |sg adjustments your car may need for Spring driving. Transmission and differential drained and refilled with the proper lubricant . . . Front wheels pulled and repacked . . . Crank case drained, flushed and refilled with the proper oil . . . Radiator cleaned and flushed . . . Chassis lubricated thoroughly . . . FOR COMPLETE SERVICE drive in at Riverside Garage and get the truth! Riverside Super Service When You Think of Brakes—Think of Us.

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with fish and conserving them; | planting trees, shrubs and plants, i protecting the quail, pheasants and 1 rabbits, laboring for sanitation of ;rivers; lakes and smaller streams. I, "It is a great and noble work and it is good to know'that Adams I county is so deeply interested in 'I this noble work "It is great to love the outdoors, lit costs nothing to enjoy its bless lings. Personally, I hope that our 'people will take Hanna-Nuttman i park to their hearts and make it a practice to picnic there. I "It is a beautiful spot and to 'take the family there and eat a '"snack" in its cooling shade costs ' you nothing. It will repay you and | the kiddies a thousand times over. "Adams county folk have been slow to encourage the picnic idea. In many places this has become a .weekly habit. It should he so here. The simplest food tastes better and the less elaborate prepi orations made for a ‘snack’ the more fun one gets out of it." Mr. Archbold gave a brief his i tory of agriculture and the art or sport of hunting. "Until recent times," he said. I “agriculture and hunting has been | an exploitation of our natural re-j sources attended by considerable! waste. Now. both sportsmen and ' farmers have a conservation plan, j Will they be able to work together for conservation as they once j did in helping to deplete our nat-. ural resources “If the farmers help to prevent I soil erosion, and to eheck stream I pollution and the silting up of I streams, they will give the sport-1 ing clubs a better chance to stock ’ the waters. "Farmers, by laying aside ground I for winter cover, by constructing brush dame in gulleys and by; planting fields too badly eroded sot cultivation, in forest trees, can provide cover for game birds and I small game animals. “The classification of existing wood lots will lower farmers' taxes and at the same time provide cover for game. Farmers need pay only $1 an acre on classified wood lots which they agree not to graze and to attempt to prevent forest fires. They may take all the timber they desire from the woodlots." he concluded. Markets At A Glance Stocks: irregular and quiet. Bond--: irregular and moderately active. Curb stocks: irregularly lower. Chicago stocks: irregular. Call money: of 1%. Foreign exchange: dollar firm against sterling; lower in terms I of French franc. Cotton: off 1 to 4 points. Grains: wheat cent higher to ' -s lower; corn unchanged to % : higher; oats unchanged; rye tinichanged to up %. Chicago livestock: hogs weaj<; i cattle irregular; sheep steady to | strong. Rubber: unchanged to 4 points higher. Large stock Markers and Monuments on hand for Decoration Dav Wemhoff Monumental Works Decatur, Ind. Ann *>.4.7

FRANKFORT PAYS HONOR TO TEAM ■ State Champions To Be Honored At Civic i Celebration 1 Frankfort, Ind, April T—(UP) — * Coach Everett Ca.se and the Frank--1 fort team, .state high echool basket- ■ mil < hatupiomt. will be honored to- ■ night at a clvl ■ celebration Trophies emblematic of the north central umference championahlp 1 will bo awarded to the Frankfort players. Coach Archie C-hadd. Anderson, 1 Murray Mendenhall. Central of F.u-t Wayne. Mark Wakefield. Central of Evannville, and representatives of all NCC and Clinton county echtnLs will attend the Banquet. Other guewts will Include Steve Sitko. Fort Wayne, winner of the Gfmbel award for sportsmanship during the state tournament finals; ,ra Turley Oak Farit, 111., Frankj tort's first basketball coach and j Arthur L. Treater, commissioner of j:he Indiana high school athletic asI sociation. * At the Training Camps By United Press ; ♦— ———♦ Yesterday’s Results Detroit (Al 0, Cincinnati (N) 0 I (7 innings). Chicago (A) S. Pittsburgh (N) 2. St. Louis (N) 9, San Antonio (TL) 2. — Chapman Ready | Knoxville. Tenn.. Apr. 7.—(U.R) — j The New York Yankees hoped to : get in their first exhibition game in four days today against the l Knoxville Southern Association j I < lub. Ben Chapman, who signed I contract yesterday in Nashville, probably will play a few innings. He worked out with Birm[lngham for three weeks and is down to 182. five pounds less than i he weighed at the close of last season. Release Four Birmingham, Ala. — Manager Charlie Grimm has reduced the Chicago Cubs squad to 25. only two over the player limit, by sending catcher Hal Sueme to the Birmingham Barons and pitchers John Hutchinis and Clauson Vines and infielder Joo Vitter to the . Portsmouth. Va . team. Dizzy Wins 1 Dallas. Tex.—Having vanquished I Houston and San Antonio in ord- j er. Frank Frisch's St. Louis Card : inals came here today to take on Dallas in an exhibition game. Dizzy Dean yesterday hurled the Red Birds to a 9 to 2 victory over l San Antonio. Senators Home Washington. — The Washington Nationals came home today from their spring training camp, ready for opening of the major league season a week hence. The Nats, rained out for almost a week, boasted a Grapefruit record of 11 victories and six defeats. Manager Bucky Harris refused to predict a pennant, but said “don’t count us out : we may spring a surprise." Rained Out Chattanooga, Tenn. —The Boston Red Sox arrived here today for a game with Chattanooga but again faced a da yof idleness because of rain and poor ground conditions. The game with the Chicago Cubs at Gadsden, Ala., yesterday was halted after one inning, much to , the delight of both clubs who took exception to the hill-and-dale surface of the infield, and submerged ' outfield. Larry French was on the mound for. the Cubs, and Fritz , Ostermueller for the Red Sox. Q .' Trade in a Good Town — Decatur I . _ , W - r I ||F h® . .7: The address of Postmaster James A. Farley (above) opening the national and state Democratic campaigns in New York state, will be broadcast on Wednesday, April 15 over an NBC Blue network at 10:30 p.m., E.S.T. Farley will go on the air at the Hotel Ten Eyck in Albany, where he will be addressing a banquet of the State Democratic Committee on "The Keynote of the 1936 Campaign.’'

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, APRIL ", 193 C.

11 • •>. f?CARP j mBT RWotfA , /A — Jail I- MIAMI AJXT'OSJAI- \ W Zf-BAU.Ti’n.ir 7w t w Bk *' itb- B '"*. ' a M VOPEI; 4 ;?■ SSSMt Your Children’s Teeth Are Priceless — > Give your boys and girls the best breajc you can: see that they take good care of their teeth. Our Washington Service Bureau has , ready for you a carefully compiled, easily understood bulletin containing 4,000 words of information on the Care of Teeth. Send the coupon below for your copy: , CIJP COUPON HERE - Dept. 362, Dauy Democrat's Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street. Washington, D. C. I enclose five cents in coin or stamps, for return postage and handling costs, for mv copy of CARE OF TEETH: NAME - - - -- i | STREET and No. I CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur. Ind.

401 BODIES ARE KOM i theria. and other anii-toxins. Those who objected to immunization were innoculated anyway under ironclad health regulations decreed by civil authorities and enforced by the military. The bodies of the dead were bei ing carried to improvised morgues 1 i In Gainesville and Tupelo and ' i authorities, fearing they might be- : come a menace to the living, ord--1 ered that they should be buried as ; quickly as possible. Mass funeral ( services begin in both comrnun-1 ities today. It was believed that . scores of bodies would be buried in common graves. There was a possibility, if any alarming outbreak of disease develops, that mass cremations would be ordered. o Dairy Herds Thrifty Harrisburg. Pa. — (U.R) —Pennsylvania's dairy herds produce 2.77 pounds of milk per cow more than thte average for the entire country, according to a report to the State Department of Agriculture from the Federal-State Crop Reporting Service. o Muscles Grafted on Eyelids London. —(U.R) —A child who has t

) j Important 1 l» W W — _ C Public Notice j

I Seldom has such acclaim heralded the approach of a motion picture as that which has preceded “The Story of Louis Pasteur." Although it was originally scheduled for release one month from now, the pressure of public interest and demand, fostered by excited press reports from Hollywood, has become so great that we have been forced to postpone other attractions in order to bring this important production in immediately. One of the most unusual and important films ever produced, ‘‘The Story of Louis Pasteur" dramatically portrays the thrilling life story of one of the truly great heroes of all time —the man who braved a thousand deaths that countless millions might five.

( “THE STORY OF LOUIS PASTEUR” ) {starring ( Anita mill MT TUI Josephine i Louise f AUL hIUhI H “ tehin «>" ) CORT Theatre Wednesday and Thursday

i had sound eyes from birth but no I eyelid muscles, has had muscles ! grafted to the lids by a new oper-' : ation at the Royal Waterloo hospital. The operation is believed to. Student Mine Built Salt Lake City —(U.R)—Fifty national youth administration workers began construction of a fullsized mine at the University of Utah, but thtey don't expect to find any gold. The mine will be used by mining and engineering students in tests for ventilation, surveying. timbering and other forms of mining activity. i o Livestock Value Increases Lncoln. Neb. — (U.R) —The total value of Nebraska's livestock increased more than $97,000,000 during the past year, reports A. E. Anderson, state and federal agrii cultural statistician. He placed the 1936 valuation at $219,065.0000 as [Compared with $122,045,000 last ' year, an increase of 79 per cent. o Main Street Unpopular Salinas. Cai. —(U.R) —Sinclair Lewis’ “Main Street” has made such an impression on Mayor V. J. Barlogio that he has asked that the name of the principal street of the city be changed from "Main" to something more citified He believes a name like "Santa Lucia" would relieve the city of ibe im-

It is a picture which we C present with pride and un- ] hesitatingly recommend to < every one of our patrons. 1 Screened by Warner Bros, f on a lavish scale worthy of 1 its great subject, it provides { Paul Muni with the most 1 powerful role of his career, r supported by a huge cast In- % eluding such film notables J as Josephine Hutchinson, % Anita Louise, Donald Woods, J Fritz Leiber. C Unfortunately, the de- 1 mands of world-wide book- f ing contracts permit only a J limited engagement. We ■ therefore urge you to see J this momentous film during f the early part of ite run. 1 We are confident you will / find it one of the most me- 1 morable screen experiences J of your life and that it will 1 be excitedly discussed for J many, many months to come. ( —The Management

plication that "Mitin Street" means' it is a "hick" town. .. . 'll! in iw |Q '■■—*** Onions Grown in Cell Mauslleld, O. - (U.R) - Prisoners I In the county jail are eating homegrown" onions. James Morris has been raising his own crop in hit coll, wrapping the plants In dampened paper and placing the bindies

fatf 615 . I , ond i» c»ki no odd» Z* l '- Wf of ony cor at any prico , -’■*<. \ \ \/111 ■ v :[ I V Murer Sii 4 Duo, Built to match the finest in everything that countS ♦Price Class Winner 352-Mile Yosemite Economy Run | B J 3 4 mi. per gal (n.. ml at.'x." under Amer Auto. Aa,n. eupervinun WMitsiHgiinn-rurA Tnpie-Seaied Hydraulic Brakes 2 K, Smooth and sure in any weather w ak Knee-Action Ride y For safety and comfort on any road "Turret-Top" Fisher Bodies * The smartest, safest bod.es built teday f ’ OHIOM Level Floors—Front and Rear Zjl economi Foot room for all » Mt * List price* at Pontiac. Mich . begin at 5615 for the ‘ 6 and 9730 for the "B“{9ubject tochange without notice} standard on L»e luie o and 3 . Standard i>cceaaorfeitia. t ~ I White & Zeser Motor hales ■ 248 Monroe St. Decatur. INTER PONTIAC’S NATIONAL ECONOMY CONTEST-FREE CARS-164 CASH i. i ■— —

STEP OUT IN 1 The EASTER Parade I

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! -to Complete the EASTER Outfit I

( SHIRTS Arrow and Elder In the plain or fancy patterns 1 with the new wide spread $1.50,, $2.50 [HATS 1 Made by Emerson with the new snap or roll r $2.50,. $5.00 > NECKWEAR L Snappy new patterrns in stripes, figures or J plain shades. Hundreds to <2l Hfl I choose from OVV to 1 ’

Holthouse Schulte & Go|

|ln empty match boxes. The “match ;box“ onions appear regularly on 11he Jail menu. — —_-o Starlings to Be “Seined" l.ondon, Ont. —(U.R)-—City oHleiais here are going to use nets to catch starlings this summer. They pro--1 pose to place the nets above the I ground, with food underneath.

Women are Particular » about their Easter clothes K Men Should Be I Yes, men should be just as proud to be well dressed in the latest BE styles for Easter as a woman, because it adds that touch of spring |Ui to his feelings. BE When you step out in one of these K bright new Curlee S Hart Schaffner & Marx or Clothcraft B —suits with the latest g and in the most beaut) llll * ■ H for spring you can t help kn f K you are dressed to the heg Eg fashion. $16.50-S32JO I

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