Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 108, Decatur, Adams County, 5 May 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SCHOOL CIRCUS noNTTNUED FROM VSGPJJNE) *— Tumblers — Profesionals to say the least. 10 Lady Zanarhelle and her group of untamed animals- Every unknown specimen alive. 11- Sumantha, the mysterious Cuban Gook —Can add, subtract and Udi your age. 12 Magician act — Watch for the miraculous transportation trick. 13 Nancy, the Siberian ostrich -“Has a keen appetite for jewelry. 14 The Plantation jubilee singers Bailhay Ringless circus stars. 15 Esthetic dancers —Featuring the world's most beautiful girls. ' Please note -acts subject to
FLOWERS for Mother’s Day
I SPEAKING ABOUT I THE WEATHER— It’s Always Springtime in the ADAMS THEATER. 9 Our Giant Air-Conditioning and Cooling Plant is in » Readiness for Instant Use! No matter how hot, sticky 9 and uncomfortable it may be outside, it’s just like I Spring in the Adams! a 35,000 Cubic Feet of Air Per Minute |S can be delivered by our huge fans. You are HB thereby assured of a constant, changing supply 9 of pure, clean air—scientifically controlled and 9 washed free of all dust, heat or bad odors. ■ REMEMBER LAST SUMMER’S HEAT? |B Sure it was hot—but the temperature in ■I the Adams never went above 72 degrees! i A WORD TO PARENTS S Now that summer vacation is near, the children naturally will want to go to movies oftener. Keep IZ them safe and healthy by sending them to the 9 Adams. Entirely fireproof—plenty of aisle space and exits—the same courteous treatment that is 3 accorded adults—a member of our service staff alB wavs on the floor to give them attention — pure. S healthful air, washed clean and sanitarv —THESE 3 ARE A FEW OF THE REASONS YOU SHOULD SEND THE CHILDREN TO THE ADAMS! B For Superior Entertainment and Comfort Go where the Crow ds Go— I I Crystal I I Clear I ® ICE S Granite Hard—Clear as Glass gj S Ample capacity for hot weather. S We insist on full weight 1 to every customer. g H You pull your own coupons. J 5 Ice made from only pure w W pre-boiled distilled water. w . Delivery in Waterproof Bags. | I Phone 770 I I Carroll Coal & Ice Co I
change without notice. Guide to Ride shows: t—Ethiopian beauty — A direct * I descendant of the Queen of Sheba. > 2--Marvelous museum — Ground hog, swimming match, grave dig p ger. red bats and many other precr loua articles. 3- l'ongresß of freaks Fatman, , Siamese twins, tattooed man, the I bearded ludy, and others. 4 Snake charmers — Featuring Lois. world's famous snake charmr er. s—For men only —Your guess is 1 as good as mine. ti For women only Strange anil Impossible . . .p — ■ F. 1). R. SEEKS • _____ ■ -!£- < ?. N J. 1 .^ t .' K . n .a g J? 0N r L. filiation. The budget tax bill to finance farm relief and the bonds has passed the house and is under fire from business leaders in senate finance committee hearings. It may the senate floor by May--16. All of the appropriation bills, excepting the $2,300,000,000 relief-de-ficiency measure, have passed either the senate or house in one form or another. Some have passed both in different form and are in
’ ' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1936.
conference. The relief-deficiency bill carrying the controversial $1,50(1,000.(too to augment a carry-over from the $4,000,000,000 work-relief measure of hist year Is expected to be brought up in the house Thursday and quickly passed. The other seven bills upon which action has not heen completed ure the interior department bill, the trensury-postofftce measure, the war and navy department supply bils, the agriculture department bill, the District of Columbia hill and the state, justice, commerce and labor appropriation feasures. The president has signed only three regular supply bills. These ure the independent offices bill, the first deficiency measure, ami the legislative hill. Speaker Joseph Byrns said he hoped to have all the "must" bills through the house by May 15. Adjournment wll then wait senate action on house measures and adjustment of any changes made by the senate. If House plans to pass the relief deficiency bill by May 12 are carried out it may be brought up in the senate ahead of the tax measure. The senate is in recess until Thursday, when the appropriations committee hopes to have the $531,648,000 Navy supply bill ready for consideration. TODAY IS FINAL (CONTIN UED FROM PAGE ing assessors for Decatur. Mrs. Ireta Fryba< k is also expected to aid in the work in the absence of E. A. Beavers, assessor for Decatur who was appointed court bailiff recently, according to the county assessor. All book work and entries are to be completed by May 20, and the reports sent in. Blank spaces twill be left for those unassessed, ■and entries will be made upon assessment. o SET STANDARDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)_ for each of the breeds. This will make it possible for the breeds individually to set up more rigid health regulations than those re- ’ quired for the general show. Ayrshire representatives indicated that the regulations for their breed would require that cattle entered in the show come from herds which had been tested or found free from Bang's disease. An alternative will be provided whereby i owners may segregate the show J animals and by maintaing them as a separate herd qualify them as ! disease free animals although the 1 entire farm herd is not qualified. Definitions of the extent of isola- [ tion necessary will be made later ■by Ayrshire breeders. ; H. P. Schmitt, general chairman ,of the livestock steering commiti tee, announced today that he will make a complete report of the live stock show, at the next meeting of the executive committee of the Centennial next Monday. FILE NEW SUIT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) a special session last Saturday. The complaint asks that these two matters of business be re-sub-mitted for a vote of the full council in which they shall be permitted to take part. ITALY COMPLETES (CONTINUED PAGEONE) I dingy business section which four j days of rioting reduced to ruins. Unless it has ibeen completely I destroyed by the looters, the new I palace near the crossroads would be the logical seat of Italy’s provisional government. It i» almost the only building of any modernity I owned by the former Ethiopian I government. Reoccupy Legation Washington, May 5— (U.R) —The ‘ American legation at Addis Ababa was reoccupied by part of the j American staff at 5 p. m. today, FOR WALLS 1 ) kESSSar AND CEIL,NGS v i Wallhide started "one-day painting" the new decorating method . that saves days of muss. Painters ' start in morning, you haag picI tures the same evening. The Vitalized Oil in Wallhide gives ’ controlled penetration, keeps | paint film alive far longer. 15 ; soft petal shades, 12 semi-gloss | colors. Per Qt 85c A Pittsburgh Paint Product Lee Hardware Co.
Youth Oppose Baldwin Regime HF L W * wißv - "t Ji ' EdenJ V Stanley Baldwin Neville Chamberlain Back of the current rumors regarding possible early retirement of ■ Stanley Baldwin, British prime minister, is the determined activity of the younger members of the Conservative party of which Baldwin is a leader. These “young rebels” are credited with backing the movement to displace Baldwin with Neville Chamberlain who is considered more sympathetic to the interests of younger party members. The junior faction claim they have been slighted and kept from important posts with the exception of the appointment of Anthony Eden as foreign secretary. Appointment of Baldwin’s successor, if and when that comes about, will be up to King Edward ViiL
I Addis Ababa time, after being temporarily abandoned, the otate department was advised by direct radio from the legation. The government has reminded Italy of her responsibility under the present circumstances for protecting the lives and property of foreign residents in Ethiopia, it was learned today. In reply the Italian government has promised that ’’all possible i measures" will be taken to protect the lives and property of foreigners in Add in Ababa, according to the "rules of war” as soon as the city is completely occupied by' Italian troops. Ends War Rome, May 5— (U.R) — Premier j Benito Mussolini announced to the I Italian nation tonight that htej' fascist legion had occupied Addis i Ababa and that the conquest ofl Ethiopia was completed, ending i the war. To some 15,000,000 Italians gath- - ered in the streets of every city ; and hamlet Mussolini proclaimed: "Ethiopia is Italian.” His speech also was broadcast in various languages to the world. "I announce to the Italian peo-; pie and the world that peace has i been reestablished,” the dictator declared. Refugees (Copyright 1936 by United Press) Djibouti, French Somaliland, May 5- —(U.R) —Ethiopia’s last high chieftains were refugees on for-1 eign soil today, the resistance to Italy was over in all theatres of the war. Emperor Haile Selassie a.nd his family were on a British cruiser steaming up the Red Sea toward Palestine. The emperor is going to Jeru-: salem, capital of his traditional ancestor. King Solomon. That the war was over was made plain yesterday when by special train arrived Ras Nassibu, commander-in-chief of all the eastern armies; Gen. Wehib Pasha, brilliant Turkish strategist who organized the defenses in the ea.st, and the Dedjazmatch Makonnen Abeba Damptu. They went from the railway station to the crack British cruiser Enterprise, waiting with the emperor, his family, and chief advis-. ers to etear: ’ Haifa, Palestine. 1.570 miles to the north up the blisteringly hot Red Sea and through the Suez canal. With the emperor were Ras Kassa, his strong man in the north; Ras Desta Demptu, his son-in-law: Ras Getacho, governor of Kambaia and Soddo provinces, and Blatten Getta Herouy, foreign minister. Ras Seyoum, principal field commander in the north, was expected by special train at any time. —oMARYLAND GOES .(UONTINUBD FROM PAGE ONE) him. Un Indiana, the delegates to the national convention will be named in the state conventions of the two parties. Interest centered on the comparative total polls of candidates for Republican and Democratic congressional nominations which i
may indicate, some experts believed whether the new deal can carry this state in NovemberBUILD GARAGES (CONTTNUEp FROM PAGE ONE) local concerns, contracts having been awarded to them. Mr. Fourland arrived in Decatur last week to take up the work of construction. Miss Marion Neprud, community manager in charge of the Homestead division stated the garages would be completed within the next two month*. o NEW EFFORT TO I (CONTINTED FROM PAGE ONE) 'of an appeal. ”1 think all these cases can be i reindicted and that the points , must be raised at a reasonable I i time either before or during the ’ trial,” Igoe said. EXCEPTIONALLY (ICONTINUED FROM PAG E ONH) second district, were unopposed. But, virtually every one of the I other contests involved at least one ' candidate championing the old age revolving pension plant. One of the strongest among the Townsendites was John Harry Browning. Elkhart attorney, apposing Rep- Samuel B. Pittingill, South Bend, for the third dtetrict Demo- | cratic nomination. Browning also I has endorsement of Fr. Charles E. Caughlin’s national union for social justice. Benjamin J. Brown, Kokomo, fifth district organizer for the Townsend movement, sought the Republican nomination in a field of four candidates. A three-way fight c.n the Republican ticket in the seventh district produced Stephen It. Burton, Washington, as a pension plan supporter. Burton was a candidate for the Democratic nomination in 1934. Herbert. Raden, Huntingburg, campaigned on the (pension iaeue in opposition to Charles F. Werner Evansville, the 1934 Reubllcan nominee in the eighth districtFor the more "organization minded” voters there were interesting in-tro-yarty fights in (both Republican and Democratic ranks. The Democratic fight, most vigorous of the two, revolved around selection of delegates to the state nominating convention and choice of precinct committeemen. Three candidates for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination— Lieut. Gov. M- Clifford Townsend, Hartford City; E. Kirk McKinney, Indianapolis, and Pleas Greenlee, Shelbyville —all claim to have delegate plates in moat of tfhe 92 counties. Ggeenlea, ousited as -patronagfe secretary to Gov. Paul V. McNutt because he became a candidate agaist the governor's wishes, offered himself as a relief from “bossism." McKinney, with the backing of U- S. Senator Frederick Van Nuye. campaigned along the same lines. Townsend, considered Me Nutt’s choice, was the target of both their attacks i
NEW 7 ASSAULT (CONTINUED FROM PAGEONE) ted processors to recover taxes In “the greatest legallted steal" In history, Claudius T. Munhlsofi, president of the cotton textile institute, Scott Kuesel and G. N. Dorr, also of the institute, told the Senate finance committee that* "The cotton Industry ’windfall’ was not more than $2U,000,000 after proper reductions had been made from the $272,000,000 taxes paid and accrued ut the time of the court decision. That "whether there la in existence any real wludafll from the standpoint of equity depends on I whether the Industry actually shif ted the amount of tax in whole or! par to its customers." Tha In a decade the industry 1 showed a “net loss In excel of 1 $100,000,000," and "in terms benevolence" takes rank as the leading “charitable institution of ail tlm- j es." That the windfall tax proposed by President Roosevelt and incorp orated in the $803,000,000 bill lays a so-called income tax on a diflcit Dorr suggested an amendment; so that no tax could be levied ex-1 cept upon mills which made a net profit for the year. Dorr said the cotton Industry. I in the five years selected by the bill as a period sustained a net loss of $176,000.- ■ 000. o — EXCEPTIONALLY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Arthur E. Voglewede of Dv< a’ur are Democratic candidates for prosecuting attorney. Two years ago in the primary the total votes for all candidates for each of the offices of joint rep resentatlve and Congressman were between 500 and 700 less than the total votes for all of the city candidates n each of the offices. Republicans are contesting only one major office, that of Congressman. There are three candidates: David Hogg of Fort Wayne, Howard S. Grimm of Auburn and Fred T. Robinson, of Fort Wayne. STATISTICS ON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE>) are cases where hanks, because of tight credit conditions generally, refuged to advance money, but where the owner has demonstrated a reasonable chance for making a financial success of the farm. FCA’s 200,000 crop loans are made for terms ranging from six months to a year in cases where the farmer needed the money Immediately—to buy seed, equipment, fertilixer, or other necessary materials —and was unable to secure the money from private sources. The loan constitutes a •lien against the coming crop. The total valut of these FCA loans is about $3,317,000,000. This figure, however, also includes loans to 1,200 farm cooperative organizations, to aid fanners in marketing their crops anil purchasing supplies. ResetUemen-t’e 600,000 rehabilitation clients all are farmers who were unable to make a financial success on their own initiative, and correspond to relief cases in cities. When they first appdy <o RA for
iji 1 ...and it asks no odds j of any car at any price V 1 i It’s hard to persuade Pontiac owners that any car could be more economy tAtisrr voufsuf w |,M I ALMOST .11 motorists who buy Pontiac, notice a sharp drop in lO mithino sirtM-* l l l J driving costs. So it didn’t surprise owners when Pontiac defeated g all entrants in its class in the Yosemite Valley Economy Run'--averaging 23.9 miles per gallon (no oil added), under American Iflgg Automobile Association supervision. It simply made official what they knew before—you can’t do better for all-around economy. Remember that when you buy a car. Over and above its smart K distinction ... its wealth of modern features . . . and its smooth, e conO m * £,( lively performance, Pontiac offers savings that are nothing less than phenomenal! It asks no odds of any car—not even for economy! •Liotpriooe at Pontiac, Mich., basin at MIS for the “f" andftlO for the "t" (•object to^ h A n f*^' n .vt‘'c Wf”*" 4/am on £»Luxa“o"artf''<*'. Standardfroupo/acceMoHesest™ Ottered on White & Zeser Motor Sales 248 Monroe St. asf|| INTIR PONTIAC’S NATIONAL ICONOMY CONTIST —FREI CARS-1*
Aid they are put on a direct grant basis, «Itu resettlement supplying sufficient cash for them to purchase 'the necessities of life. After a short period on grants, each rehabilitation client is placed on a farm, if he Is not already on , a workable one, and given a loan of sufficient money to get started. The lixin is made on condition that he must comply with a management program supplied by RA. specifying how he shall farm his land. ILA's rehabilitation program
’Pueblo i /fil Weave W| The beauty and individ- a Pf! I uality of the new Pueblo v . . 0 Weave will add much As H prestige to your Living A Roll ■ Room. and up B The finest of quality and LIVING ROOM K n striking design makes it I)LXIN(; ROOM ■ the “last word" in wall BED ROOM E covering. May we show KITCHEN I you this beautiful pattern M —and the other attractive I paners now in our stock? ■ Holthouse Drug Co | I tC" i | 3 See for Yourself J That Our Prices rMiM S d Are Very Low $1 If you *r e interested in n” ■ J funeral costs, we will wel- t I come the opportunity to take 1 • H you through our display '< t ■Q room, and show jou, clearly, U how modest Zwick's prices > c'J Q really are. : K ZWICK’S J VI FUNERAL HOME V J PHO N E DAY 61 NIGHT 800 - JON --C. " —--- nIY M
-1.;'::"*:,” J f ' ,r ih " I'roKfim """ " ,,s ! "" k “ rV wh> B - - B
