Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 107, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1936 — Page 5

Bstibts gIMBSLRHNCt ■SS-Ji" K Founding *■ Tiiir vl „..s J^H |ll|; Indiana unhersity this WfcLer will J"' 11 *" l ‘ ,hC MF.... iving alumni ami student* Wednesday Knmng the 1"”" anniversary lusiituilon's founding, louis I). Coffman. former MM. |„,| boy. now president <>l ,p, Minnesota, Itl | 1 " l "’ 11,1 V ' b °‘ college presidents, will 1)0 T .d speaker be held tn 20 Indiana |^K S a n., m various out-of slate irelli New Volk to Seattle. development of the' K' uir.ersity will he a keynote Day « .-’.-bvation ■Hii, Hii.dl. lank building with 3^Vhoys 111 attendance. Today, plant 10 l>ui,,i d | H1,....!. I.gimi. Indian c poll . Winona Lake, with four new now under way and a

FORYOUR i Mother will appreciate your thoughtfulness when you give her a box of FORGET-ME-NOT CANDY The Candy of Quality You may personally make your choice from our large stock of the purest chocolates as well as our varied assortment of delicate Bonbons. The hard nut and chewy centers, all kinds of cream centers and that delicious toffee, have won a reputation for themselves. Call at our home or phone 286. Packages will be packed ready for mailing if desired. No extra charge. Home of Forget-Me-Not-Candy 333 N. Ith street

I Will Appreciate Your Support No. No. 18 R W / 18 Democrat ||i| .... . J l)c »’'i'i < '« at Ballot g Ballot Arthur E. Voglewede Candidate for Prosecuting Attorney 26 JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, ADAMS COUNTY Political A4vt.

• fifth authorized to provide for a 22.4 I per cent Increase in enrollment | during the past two years.. 11 The original class of ton boys 11 has grown to the point where a 11 national survey last fan showed it. IL with the eighteenth largest toI tai enrollment among American ’ universities and the third largest extension enrollment. Tho survey showed 6.122 different students registered for resident study during the year and 5.152 extension classes, total 11,871. The following Adams county stui dents are registered at Indiana university this semester: , Herne: Barbara Speicher (nurses' training school, Indianapolis). Decatur: Marcella Brandyberry (nurses' training school, Indianapolis), Robert Coffee, Ralph Crili, Janies E. Engeler (medical school, \ Indianapolis), Robert Holthouse, John Moyer, Richard Parrish, Rich!ard H. Schug (medical school, Indianapolis), Edwina E. Shroll. Geneva: Dale W. Anderson, Warren D. Munro. Monroe Helen M Bluhm. -0 :— REV. LOZIER FROM PAGEJTNE) Sunday, May 17. Rev. Dozier was born in Bremen, where he attended the local schools. He was graduated from the Evangelical Seminary at Na,>-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 4, 1936.

ervlUe, Illinois, in 1918. His charges since that time are: Portland, 1913 to 1915; Grayville, Illinois, 1915 to 1918; First Eva.ngellcai church at. Louisville, Kentucky, 1918 to 1925. South Bend Broadway Evangelical church, 1925 to 1932; Rochester, 1932 to 1931 and Indianapolis Broadway Evangelical, 1931 to 1986. He has two daughters, Naomi, who is a missionary in the Red Bird miwlon tn the Cumberland mountains in the eastern pun of Kentucky, and Huth, who will complete her sophomore year In an rndianapMls high school, before coming here. Tho three active former Decatur Evangelical pastors were returned to their old charges. Those we: the Rev. I). O. Wise, Oakland Avenue Evangelical church at Elkhart; the Rev. R. W. Loose, Wabash, and the Rev. C. L. Haney Huntingburg. The Rev. J. 11. Rilling, a former pastor here, has been retired for two years and now lives at South Bend. Indianapolis District D. A. Kaley, superintendent. Atlanta, Wilson Parks; Berne, M. O. Herman; Bippus, C. W. Spangler; Celina, M. W. Sundermann; Celina circuit, E. O. Habegger; Columbia City, to be supplied by D. R. Hell: Dayton, F. 11. Willard; | Decatur, G. 3. Lozier; Defiance, W. H. Freshley; Elberfeld, H. F. Hasewinkle; Evansville First, William 'F. Hill, Evansville Linwood, E. F. ißoesti; Fort Wayne First, C. P. 1 Mass, Fort Wayne Crescent aveInue, Leroy Geiger; Huntingtingburg, C. L. Haney; Huntington, I. G. Roederer; Indianapolis First, R. |H. Mueller; Indianapolis Second, F. C. Wacknitz; Indianapolis Beville Avenue, F. G. Kuebler; Indianapolis Broadway, Edward Bailsman; Kokomo First, M. Heimer; Kokomo Zion, K. L. Handschu; Linn Grove, F. D. Stemen; Logansport, O. A. Overholser; Louisville Zion, J. H. Arndt; Louisville Trinity, R. M. Holdeman; Markle, Clyde ■ Walters; Phillipsburg, L. K. MeI Kinley; Portland-Ridgeville, Geo. ■ (locker; Portland circuit, C. W. iWalmer: Pership, Stephen Gubi; > Rockport, to be suplpied by Fred W. Grieseiner: Royal Center, Wai- ■ ter Adams; Van Wert First, F. I. IWillmert; Van Wort circuit, E. C. Kunce; Wapakoneta. J. F. Stedcke. Arthur H. Doescher, treasurer of superannuation fund. H. E. Eberhardt, superintendent of Wheeler 'City Mission. G. B. Kimmel, president of Evangelical Theological : Seminary. E. M. Kerlin. Bible teacher and evangelist at large. Quarterly conference members: Berne, E. 11. Baumgartner; Dayton. Arthur H. Doescher. B. E. Koenig; Defiance, P. L. Brown; Elberfeld, J. H. Heidi; Fort Wayne, F. C. Berger; Indianapolis First, S. H. Baumgartner, H. E. Eberhardt, C. F. Hansing. E. M. Kerlin; Koko-

Ten Years Ago and Now T . r -►" krt*, «e**"3T ■ ' • - 1 - " J K iI ' IR H r- 1 PF m < r* ; ’ > « d J?.*- XB: ISw/W*. t - J SSk_ These before-and-ofter pictures show the miracle that modernization can work. The room “before” finds its counterpart in thousands of homes in our country. It represented the acme of fashion a number of years ago. The "after” picture shows the room after dull, dark woodwork was removed or painted over, the fireplace and mantel changed for a new fireplace, and the walls repapered. The Modernization Credit Loan paid only for these structural changes. The charming roont is a sample of what may be done through the use of the Modernization Credit Plan of the Federal Housing Administration.

1110 Zion. J. M. Lantz. E. W. Feller; Louisville Zion, 1). E. Zechiel, Leo .1. Ehrhardt; Pership, M. L. Scheldler: Rockport, F. W. Griesemer; Van Wert, J. O. Mosier. o AMERICAN AND (CONTINUED FROM PAGE pNE ) . miles across the city. The messengers could nrt get through. Finally, to get hits apical through those four miles, he had to send it thousands of miles i>y radio. Uy radio he asked the state department in Washington ‘to have the British send them "a Lewis gun and a. few sikhs” — Indian fighting troops who compose the British legation guard. Washington telephoned the request to London, which was unable to relay it at once because it had lost its windess contact with the legation in Addis Ababa. “The situation is getting worse. SeveraJ direct shots have been fired at the legation building, including the radio station, since this morning. Two native women in our servants’ quartet's have been seriously wounded.” At about the same time, the French minister wirelessed I’ariu that the natives were attacking his legaxion. Several persons inside were wounded, but the minister said the French and British

Vote for WALTER JOY BOCKMAN I ' W *• T| - .yC. L Democratic Candidate for COUNTY RECORDER I will Appreciate Y’our Support No. 20 on the ballot. Political Advertising

i would be able to stand off the 1 attacks until the Italians arrived. British newsnte reported over the government wireless that 10 foreigners had been killed so far and that much of the city had been burned by the natives. The vanquished Haile Selassie, meantime, boarded the British cruiser Enterprise at Djibouti, French Somaliland. The cruiser will itake him to Palestine. There it wa expected he would tarry a whil.e praying in the ancient cptic church, and later probably proceed to London. Foreign Minister Anthony Eden ' informed the British house of commons that the Negus has renounced all pretense at directing Ethiopian affairs —which means to all practical purposes that he has abdicated. In Rome, with the hour of complete Italia.il triumph close at hand Premier Benito Mussolini told the chamber of deputies that he had ordered a mobilization of all fascists for an unspecified time at which I will make the announcement you are exporting”—the occupation of Addis Ababa. The president of the chamber, Costango Ciano. told the cheering deputies that the “Ethiopian empire is now at the mercy of our . armies." Every capital in he world recognized that fact, and even those 1 governments which had opposed Mussolini hoped his legions soon .would arrive in the capital. Until | they march in, it. appeared there I would be no hope to restore order land safeguarding white lives. o THREE PERSONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) bers of the gang whom Brady identified as Lee Jackson, James Williams and Elmer Martin, the latter having been wounded in an Ohio gun fight. . ■ 0 _— Company Sends Check For Tax 1., ■ — 1 The Northern Indiana Public Service company, whi h serves this | community and which is one of the largest taxpayers in the state, today completed .payment of $558,713.til in spring payments of property taxes. In a number of instances, the payments were- made in advance to ; enable some taxing units to meet 'payrolls and other expenses. The w.mpauy sent checks to the i various county tressureis as folhows: Adams $1,741-40, Allen $53,|537.51. Benton $2,872 63, Carroll SB,i 700.19, Cass $5,(02-61. DeKalb $3, I 493.88. Elkhart $24,669.90, Fulton j $998.55, Hiinington $541.51, Jasiper l $999.15. Kosciusko $10,975-31, LaGranbe, $4,645.43, Lake $174,323.21, 1 LaPorte $54,848.63, .Marshall sl4464.50, Miami $7,048.52, Newto'n $4,1 466.23, Noble $Bl4-89, Porter $22,1279.15, Pulaski $3,969.87, SI Joseph I $48,789-91, Starke $3,430.28, Stem i ben $5,700.22, Tippecanoe $284 69, I Wabash $3,214.35, Warren $140.96, I Wells $2,264-94; White $17,227.81 land Whitley $1,297.21. —— — -— Gigantic Structure 1 Herodotus estimated that lOfyOOO men were engaged for 20 years In I Minding the Great pyramid.

YOUTH DROWNED AT INDIANAPOLIS Police Search River For Lad Pushed into Water Sunday Indianapolis. May 4. —(U.R) I’*>lice searched today for the body of 12-year-old John Payne who drowned in a swirling White river eddy with a wounded bird which he had tried to protect. Authorities also sought an older youth who jeered John for his tender heart, threw the injured bird into the river and then pushed young Payne over a five-foot bank into the rushing yellow current with the remark: "Maybe you'd bettor jump in an’ save it.” Companions of John, nis brother George, 8; Albert Hansbrow. 9, and John Collius, 10, were unable to identify the big awkward boy w-ith the long untidy black hair who pushed John to his death yesterday. They knew a companion of the older youth only as "butch" or "dutch." The four boys had been fishing at a dam in the river when they discovered the injured bird lying on the rocks beside the water. John stroked its feathers tenderly and wondered if it would live if he took it home, fed it and kept it warm. The boys were examining the bird when the two larger boys walked along the bank. "Whataya got there?" asked one

-'' ~ T •• ; ....... ■ , .... 1936 FORD V-8 Delivered Price QPQf? in Decatur mF W W Xlk h M fl r -".u inn liiuumwn«w»i!ini -■ EVERY FORD IS A FULL-SIZED CAR | w FORD V-8 DE LUXE i >X.X P "" $675 ‘ fl h- — - ■ i L IN EVERYTHING THAT CONTRIBUTES TO I PERFORMANCE, COMFORT AND SAFETY EVERY 1936 FORD V-8 IS IDENTICAL THERE is only one 1936 Ford V-8. appointments — richer upholstery Except for body styles and appoint* fabrics, two chromium-plated inents, all Ford cars are exactly alike. matched-tone horns, two tail-lamps, Each has the same chassis—the chromium-plated windshield frame, same V-type eight-cylinder engine— two situ v isors. Arm rest on left front the same 112-inch wheelbase on 123* doors, rubber mats in front and inch springbase — the same big-car velvet carpets in the rear. roominess (7 feet, 9 inches from The Ford De Luxe is a more elc* rear seat to dashboard in Sedans)— ganl car but the lowest priced Ford the same Center-Poise Riding ease ($5lO, f. o. b. Detroit) will give you — the same welded steel body — everything that any Ford will. Safety Glass in all windows as well as Ask your Ford dealer about the windshield — full-size 6.00 xl6 air- new s2o-a-monlh and y>% per balloon tires on 4-inch rims — four month U CC Finance Plans. ■■ double-acting hydraulic shock absorbers. Ln short, every structural ★ ONTHEAIR ★ and engineering feature that has pul these outstanding programs the Ford V-8 in a class bv itself SUNDAY F.VBNINGS — Ford Sunday Evroian Hour, lllC rOrU V O 111 a CIUbB l>y llntll* wit j | Kue ,t stars. Complete ( olumbia network. gFord De Luxe models are slightly Tuesday f.veniws - Fred w.rina and hi. Fannsylvanianw. i.omplctr Columbia chain. higher in price (never more than frihay evemvgs — Fr-d Warina and hi. c.nn. — . — v . .. rr« •ylranians. National Bruadcastiug Company com* $45) simply because oi liner piete uiu. Network. 1 AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS ’ .. '.-.-... u .......-... > v. > ... >> L'.g,aa>-aMaar- : \-.<> >m.v . i-XwX’WV'.v.- .v, ... .... ........ - -j..

PAINT UP YOUR HOME THIS SPRING A touch of new paint a,round your promises makes everything look new. Full instructions on preparing paint, preparing wood tor painting, repainting old surtacee, ooivring paint, paiutiug new interior woodwork, getting a natural finish, finishing floors, wall paint, water paints, staining shingle roots, painting metal, removing old paint, reflnishing furniture, spraying, painting unfinished wood furniture, und cure of brushes, is all contained in our Service Bureau',* I.OOV word bulletin HOUSEHOLD PAINTING. Send the coupon below tor your copy: CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. 386, Daily Democrat’s Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. 1 want the bulletin HOUSEHOLD PAINTING, and enclose five cents in coin or postage stamps, to cover return pontage aud handling costs: NAME - STREET and No - CITY - STATE 1 am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, lud.

roughly, and seized the bird. John pleaded for its return hut 11 the bully, resenting his concern, i threw the bird into the water. "Let’s see ift it can swim,” he jeered. The bully then examined a cat-j: fish John had caught. "If you’re so tender-hearted, we'd I' better put this fish back in the water,” he scoffed. I The 12-year-old lad protested and 1 he was pushed Into the water.. He reappeared in the middle of the eddy IVO feet from shore, screamed and disappeared. The hully and his friend escap- ' ed John's horrified companions unnoticed. 1 They described him as 13 or 11 ' years old and wearing a blue sweat- i er, green corduroy pants, blue . shirt and uo hat. ' i John's father. Frank Payne, a

PAGE FIVE

laborer, accompanied police in their fruitless search for the body of his son last night. . Meanwhile, the lad's mother, Mrs. Estclla Payne, waited anxiously at home with his brothers and sisters, Clarence, Frances, Robert, Marguerite, George aud Claude. ——o St. Mary’s Church To Observe Mother’s Day Mother's day will he observed at St. Mary's Catholic church next Sunday when the mothers and their daughters attend the 7 o'clock mans in a body and receive Holy Communion The mother® and daughters are requested to meet at the Catholic school building at 6:15 o’clock and march to the church. Congregational signing by the women will feature the service.