Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1936 — Page 5
■jIEU P. fcilS ON VOTE W,.' To n ‘‘- HLiiine Vote For |M Presidency fIH i ~ rm.' i". ii i’i M ■ .1. I.'UULt- I.HII. "j , „|.n Io deteimine Hi I’residential 'll <■'" ■■' . M l.uii'li'ii of Kansas 211 |M votes. Tbe tour ■■ .Hid delegates .. ,1 • .1 i 11. Kansas I'-a'l-|M, ..a-uins delegates . I'lj'ik Knox. < 'hi. ago S Xrthur X |K r> iu of Michigan. ■■ 10l on r Si II. H i: ■■ . ,(.-!. gallon - li.io ~| i" nipt t" make Un||H ' ’’" l-"-’l •'■ ||H_ . ,A■ re 'loi coil-id. |||H . ■ I.andon :'ii Indi d Mg x , .liiiiuond. W. I'. G'ea l|M . I; l-'oi'Hinge, Eol |M. ,ose. I’eru . Janie|M m In -I. r. Irvin I.'|K ~n Hoemler. Ind H I Hinkle Hays, Sulli-' .ins.' associate of |K 1.. |. lierbel I Hoove’. id |M., nnmittee by 11. M. |K' . ...'l'l-cominiHi . solute ranks after Ivan ' io in.in. .iiilnliLiv
Public Auction FRIDAY, JUNE 12 - - 12 Noon Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Hogs mid Horses, Milch Cows, Bulls mid Heifers. rood Sows. Gilts and Boars, rappie Hay Fork and other farm tools. ft. How Boat and oars in good shape, newly painted. iscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR, Managers ison and Ooehrman, aucts. Public Auction 57 _ ACRE FARM — 57 be sold on premises, known as the Fonner farm, 4 miles North of atur, about mile North of Road No. 27, on MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1936 At 6:30 I*. M. I farm consists of 57', 2 acres 'and. 6 room ' 2 stor 7 house, small n, good well. Here it an opportunity for the man of moderate ins to purchase a farm home. With a little expense and some work lean be made an ideal home. Well located and is sure to increase ralue. Small farms are becoming more scarce each day. TO WORLD WAR VETERANS » not invest your bonus in Good real estate, which has been and »ys will be the backbone of the nation. Buy this small farm. It is ■fe, wise and paying investment. GET A HOME FIRST! 'ms of Sale: Cash; any one who has one-half of selling price, we I assist in getting balance financed. 'Roy S. Johnson. Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg, for further informa0 in Matter of Liquidation of Old Adams County Bank. CLARK J. LUTZ, Special Representative. f S. Johnson—Auctioneer FJiffHWWW I He I ’ Husky says you have L, w ,o eep up vitality ' T Hl gyOOD DIDN'T AGREE WITH you/j TASTE SO GOOD WERE ALL TIRED — if np IT. MY BROTHERS and SlsTtiC> J ' \[ <5/ ARE All GETTING WEAK AND SICKIvJ ys w y w Lx, .{ANO that TASTES SO GOOD M uEnmGhl STARTING RATION*.* 17 ! MORE.J I STAMIH6 I V \ MAKE 8100 D. BONE MUSCItS. / (>/ ft WyAT FEATHERS.J IfSWI Ks^^fsVhXs o for 7OU.W R«^' ME * T ' F| SH. cod liver meal! I! anc> to get K Hlok n! AL ' COD L,VER OIL AND I FOR you ano you witta good th,nSsJ % v^al,^7n O JwmCJ Vitality costs no more than ordinary feeds ai Deca tin* )nbob » feeds SUPPL "phone m
I his threat to reilgn. The delegate I baited at an organization meeting Monday night to elect Mrs. Grace Banta Reynolds, Cambridge fltv party leader' choice. ” . V’Pwed several prop* als which he will submit to the resolutione committee of thu convention. They included: Stabilization of currency on a fixed basis; discontinuance of the ' purchasing of ailver by the federal government; a strong declaration against eommuj/ism; registration of all aliens; opposition to centralization of power in the national goveminent and a declaration for "glv- ' Ing the states back to the epeople; vigorous support of a protective tariff. ' —o— Says Black Legion To “Get” Coughlin — i Detroit, Mich, —(UP) —Evidence i that the Black Legion put a spy into | the Union for Social Justice in an ‘ effort to "get" father Charles E. ; Coughlin wan in the hands of tpoJ lice today—supplied by the wife I of the night riders' “trigger man,” I Dayton Dean. Margaret Dean, the wife, made i the the charge to inspector John A. Wayne of the homicide squad, alleg- ’ | ing that Dean had been asigned to i "get" the priest and had joined ! the Union to discover "what it s all i about." "She’s not telling the truth " said Dean, held with 12 others for the kidnaping and murder of Charles ! Poole. o The work of a new rubbish incinerator is speeded and made ' more efficient by injecting a blast lof air to the flames and burning 1 materials.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE I 0, 1936.
MUSSOLINI TO MERGE OFFICES Hero Os Ethiopian War To Be Given Three Ministries (Copyright 1936 by United Press) Home. June Hl— (U.R> — Premier Benito Mussolini intends to merge the ministries of war. navy and air under MarshaJ Pietro Badoglio, hero of the Ethiopian war. as his next move in a reorganization of the cabinet, it was understood today. Mussolini himself now holds the (portfolios. The expectation is that as soon as league penalties against Italy are removed and the country resumes its normal place in European politics, Mussolini will give up the posts. Badoglio, it is understood, will be placed in supreme charge of tile three ministries as minister of national defense, with under-sec-retaries to aid him. Under-secretaries, who are themselves officers of the respective arms of the services, now administer the war, navy ajid air forte offices for Mussolini. In envisaging the merger of the departments under one supreme chieftain, Mussolini will follow the examples of France and Great Britain. The new left wing coalition government of France, as disclosed by the United Press yesterday, moved within a few days of its accession to office to put Edouard Daladier in command of the fighting services as minister of defense. Just previously, the British government made a new cabinet porti folio for Sir Thomas Inskip, min- ■ ister for coordination of defense, 1 working with the secretaries of I war and air and the first lord of the admiralty. Mussolini’s reported plan differs from those of the French ajtd British governments in that he will have a fighting man, his country's foremost soldier, in the Isupreme command. o AVIATOR TALKS (CONTINUED In 1935 a modern transport, carrying 14 passengers, 1,000 pounds of freight, pilot and copilot, was capable of setting a faster pace, despite the added weight. "What unbelievable feat is to I come next?" he queried, "at the I present time the American Air | Lines are constructing 21 modern lair liners, with a wing spread of 135 feet, no hangar large enough to house them, with the exception of the factory building in which they are made and that had to be enlarged. "The new plane will carry 40 to 45 passengers by day, afford sleeping accomodations for 30 to 32 at night, be able to cruise 2,000 miles without refueling, have a crising speed of 225 miles an hour, and carry a stewardess and chef, so passengers may have hot meals aboard. "Mechanism plays the most important part in modern air traffic.” according to Capt. Cornish, who personally talked with Wiley Post after his record breaking round-the-world flight, recently. “Passengers, back in the comfortable cabin quarters, who picture the pilot struggling wifli the controls, in an effort to steer the ship to its desination, have formed
||lß||||)W||| Knockouts on the golf course win you nothing but lawsuits. /ETNA-IZE Write or phone for information on our Sports Liability Policy. Protects four pocketbook if you should injure someone or damage property in any form of outdoor spore Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 IlllniiSiiiiilll
Nation Is Honoring-Clark ft ' 'lit g ■E/di IflSKr mH tK' E/l/j Win ii 0 I wi .4. I mi . ' ' rpwls . t. J ’ .1 I I t I ■ SHr ■■’ | 1u.M1.U1..!. II 111 Ml ....a.. A heroic bronze statue of George Rogers Clark (above) stands in the center of the Clark Memorial building, to be dedicated at Vincennes, Ind., on Sunday, June 14, by President Roosevelt. The Memorial is the nation’s tribute to Clark and his associates, whose capture of Fort Sackville at Vincennes in 1779 led to the United States’ permanent acquisition of the Old Northwest Territory at the close of the Revolutionary War.
a wrong picture. The pilot of the modern air liner needs only to sit hack and make their recordings and reports, occassionallyt checking the numerous gauges and meters. The most important invention of these instruments is the radio compass. “Wiley Post personally told me. that without this instrument his flight would have been impossible.” He predicted that in a few years the fastest planes would be traveling 400 miles per hour or around the world in five days. The speaker extended a cordial invitation to members of the club and Decaturites to visit the Fort Wayfi’e airport. Clyde Buller, local garage man had charge of the program. The club also planned to attend the chartering of the Muncie cltffi on next Tuesday night. There will be no regular meetings here. A dance, with music, by a nationally prominent radio orchestra and a professional floor show, will be a feature of the Muncie meeting. SEN. STEIWER troNTiNTTEn fiw>w ” confidence. He closed on this note: "And now I ask the simple question-will America live or die'.' And I answer that America will live, because the people arc firmly resolved that our nation shall not die. When have we ever tested the full measure of the people's strength? Not in 17,78, sa.ve by the soldier whose blood stained tracks were left in the snow at Valley Forge. Not in 1863, except by those who dared to charge and those who dared- to stand at Gettysburg. Nor was it tested in full in 1918, except by those who dared to die on the fields of France. The full measure and depth of a great people's will is unknown, even to themselves. The secret lies hidden in the omnipotent mind of the Creator of all courage and all resolution. To Him lot our prayers be offered that an aroused America, casting out all doubt, will vindicate the faith of (he fathers. We shall not falter, but in new found strength will hold high, in the splendor of a bright dawn, the ba.nner of a nation’s liberties.” REDUCED FIELD ) y vey; Berniece Closs with 246,000; Rosemary Holthouse with 237,300, and, Miss Krick with 166,100. Others who survived the first cut are: Betty Macklin. Kathryn How er. Rosemary Miller, Isabelle. Odle, Marjorie Carroll. Lenore Teeple, Ruth Voglwede. Elaine Gaffer, Evelyn Kohls. Mildred Acker aud Alick Lenhart. Reducing the number to 20 contestants was an unusually tedious
labor as several of the leaders in the number dropped were only a few votes short of those who survived. COMPLETE WORK ON HIGHWAY 527 Beautification Os Right-Of-Way Is Completed By State The beautification of the right-of-way along state road 527, running southeast from Decatur to the Ohio state line, with plantings of shrubs, shade and flowering trees has been completed. Walter A. Cha.skel, iproject engineer, who supervised and directed the planting and right-of-way! work, announced today that the finishing touches would be completed Thursday. Beginning at the Decatur Country club grounds and extending southeast to the (thio state line, the program included the planting of 10.000 shrubs. 300 shade trees and 450 flowering trees. All except the shade trees are native stock, obtained from nearby fields and woods. The work started about three months ago and a force of 25 men was employed in doing the work. Approximately $3,500 was expended for labor, all of the men, except two. being taken from the relief rolls. Mr. Cha.skel stated that with proper care and attention, .the roadway would be one ot the most beautiful in this part of ftie state, giving the trees and shrubs a five year growth. The local project is one of many improved by the Indiana state highway commission. FILE PETITION (’CONTINUED FIIOM I'AUK ONM city of the bank and two parcels of real estate, the main item of real eslate being the bank building located in Berne and a dwell Ing house known as the Shoemaker property. A definite date tor the sale of the assets has not been set but. will undoubtedly take place within the next four weeks after proper notice has been given. Depositors of the batik were paid in full on May 13, 1936. At that time depositors received the balance due upon their accounts, together with the interest due on the accounts to the time of closing the bank. «i It is planned to make a distribution to the stockholders and close the trust at a very early date. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
MERGER PLANS ARE DISCUSSED General Synod To Open At Fort Wayne This Evening Fort Wayne, Ind , Juno 10. <U.R> A merger of the Evangelical Brotherhood and the Reformed Churchmen'a League was being planned by committees here this morning as final preparations for the national convention of the general synod, Evangelical and Reformed church opening tonight neared completion. The merger follows the union of the Evangelical synod of North America and the Reformed church in the United States at Cleveland in 1934. Unions of other auxiliaries will be launched here also. E. S. Frets, Collegeville, Pa., was chairman of the merger committee's meetings, and the Rev. H. L. Stretch, St. Louis, was secretary. The two brotherhoods have more than 600 chapters throughout the nation. Two of America's most proinin-1 ent churchmen were added to the I program yesterday with the announcement by Dr. George W. Rich-, ards of Lancaster, Pa., president of the general synod, that Dr. Ivan 1 Lee Holt of St. Louis and Dr. J. ' Ross Stevenson of Boston will ’ speak. Dr. Holt is president of the Fed- ’ eral Council of Churches of Christ in America, and will speak Fri-' day. Dr. Stevenson, retiring president of the Boston Theological Seminary and former moderator of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church, will address the convention next week. Much of the convention’s work will be aimed at formulating and approving a constitution for the new church. Final adoption of the constitution will not take place until the next general synod convention, probably in 1938. GRAIN DEALERS <£Ontinued fkom means raised in Indiana and nearby Ohio counties. Indications point to an increased demand for beans this year with a promising opportunity for farmers to build up their cash crop acreage by planting soy beans. Card playing and other entertainment has been arranged for the ladies during the afternoon. At 2 o'clock Clarence A. Jackson,
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j director of the unemployment coini penaatlon division of Indianspolls ' will speak on “The Indiana UnentI’ ployment Compensation Act." The I meeting will be open to discussion at the conclusion of his remarks. Kline L. Roberts, executive viceI president of the American Hituniinoiis Coal Merchants Assoelatlon ,of Chicago, will address the gathering on "Dangers Confrohting the [ Retailing Trade," after which the (matter will be discussed in'open j' meeting. The annual softball game be- ' | tween the Shippers and Receivers 'lls the next scheduled event but the 'golf enthusiasts in the party are expected to take advantage of the period to try their tnashies on the Decatur course. I Tlie informal banquet will begin at 6:15 with music and entertainment. D. W. McMillon will talk 1 briefly, witli the principal address ' of the evening being made by Chari les M. Newcomb of Delawara, 0., ■ I who will speak on "Wnat Are You 1 Afraid Os?" The formal program will end with his remarks to enable those coming from long distances to leave early but others are expected to remain and enjoy . themselves until a later hour. BATTLE OVER | tCORTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) . first passed a resolution that his platform would be submitted to ; the ccnvontion us a minority reI port if unacceptable to the coin- ■ mittee majority. ! In spite of White's conciliatory ' gesture, it was learned that the (resolutions committee had taken ’ -no action regarding Borah. This > appeared to stalemate a compro-' miwe plan to provide a “Borah day" at tomorrow's convention — constituting an opportunity for Borah to appear personally on the convention stage and present his ideas to the delegates. The spark that sets a convention afire was missing in the first quarter of Snell’s speech today. There seemed to be somewhat less pep and go among the Republicans than last night when tiny joined lin chorusing with Steiwer the | “three long years” refrain of his speech. Tiie hall was noticeably hotter and more uncomfortable than last night. The kleig lights were in blistering focus a;, Snell ; spoke. lie brought his audience to their feet chering with his blast at new deal tinkering with the constitution and a "thanks to ■ God" that no Republican president • had ever “tso violated his constitutional oath" as he said Presi- . dent Roosevelt had. The uproar
PAGE FIVE
■[was noisy but brief. It seemed to i lift the delegates out of their - lethargy and toon they were cheering again. The first demonstration began in the West 'Virginia delegation ami wan picked up by Florida before it wprnad through the hall. Sneil got a laugh from the delegates when ho read from tho Democratic platform of 1932 this pledge: “Wo condemn the improper and excessive use of money in political activities." His denunciation of the agricultural adjustment administration as “a fatalistic and uncoMtllutlonal" instrument passed with scarcely a ripple of applause. Party leaders were quick to approve the sentiments expressed by Snell. Snell inadvertently started a Steiwer demonstration when he used the phrase “three long years" which is becoming famous because of its sing- tong re-iteration by the temporary chairman last night. The crowd interrupted Snell to shout it* own version of the Republican refrain and ho smilingly bowed his appreciation. Snell conoluded at 1:09 p.m. ami delegates rose to their feet cheering and waving hats. The band joined in hut the demonstration expired in fewer tihan ten seconds. The liand offered "Hail, Hail tho Gang’s All Here" and tried to draw the delegates into their "three long years” chorus with a series of provocative strains. EX-PRESIDEM’ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) banner to carry again. Tonight HooVer adflntsses tho j convention, but another man already lias hi>i hands on the banner pole. Hoover’s address was scheduled soon after Mr. Roosevelt’s address at Little Rock. Ark., tonight. Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWitbMil Cskimel And You'll Jub> Out sf Bed io the Mwnint Rarin’ Is Gs The liver .hould pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowel, dsily. If this bile ißnotflowinafrvely. your food doesn't digest. It ju.t decays In the bowels. Ga» bloats up pour stomach. You get eonltipated. Your whole system la poiaoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. Laxatives are only makeshifts. A mere towel movement doesn’t ret at the cause. It Ukd those rood, old Carter’s Littla Liver Pills to Ret these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up". Harmless, gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 26c.
