Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 218, Decatur, Adams County, 14 September 1936 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. idDtered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Oilice an Second Class Matter. H. Heller President A. R. Holthousc, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller -Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies ......... I .02 One week, by carrier — .10 One year, by carrier 6.00 line month, by mail .35 Three months, by mail — 100 Six months, by mail — 1.75 Dne year, by mail —— 3.00 Vne year, at office.....— 3.00 Prices quoted are within a radius of 100 miles. Elsewhere 13.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc. |la Lexington Avenue, New York. 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana league of Home Dailies. Hear Cliff Townsend, Democratic candidate for governor at the Shrine audflorium in Fort Wayne tomorrow evening at 8:15. He will tell you the real issues. Governor Landon has looked Indiana over and says he likes it. but he has the right to change his mind after November 3rd if he wishes to, and probably will. There is nothing new in the preelection promises of Governor Landon. but remember that he can t possibly do any thing without a friendly congress and there is no way be can get that. The first night football game will be played here next Friday evening at Worthman field, with no other opponent to Decatur high than the old rival, Bluffton. You ought to enjoy it a lot. Good for Pete Lehman, who has achieved a state record for selling one cow for *1.650. highest price ever paid in the state. And the buyer knows it was worth it to own such a champion. The Progressives have announc- ■ ed support of Roosevelt, because; they know what will happen if the old conservative crowd again gets I in control. The decision cinches several western and middle west states. Merchants can take advantage I of the fact that on Mondays and Saturdays, there are not many dis plays in this paper, giving you an advantage. Try running an advertisement on one of these days and watch the results. The McMillen plants in this city are going on and on to greater accomplishment. The organization deserves and will receive the sincer and 100 per cent cooperation and support of the people of the community. The future looks very wonderful. Are you qualified to vote? You must be properly registered and if you have moved or if this is your first vote, you should go to the county clerk's office and see that your card is properly filed. Unless you do, you will not be able to cast a ballot on November Trd. You have until October sth to look after this, don't put it off. The Democratic campaign is just opening and within another CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers arc requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: If you change your address from Decatur R. R. 1 to Decatur R. R. 2, instruct us to change the paper from route one to route two. When changing address to another town, always give present address and new address. I
■ two weeks you will be hearing i plenty of speeches over the radio, from platforms and receiving the information that should lead you to vote right on election day. Cliff Townsend has a message that , every one in the state should hear ! 1 tor he knows what he is talking about and will deliver what he | promises. Cliff Townsend will speak at Fort I Wayne tomorrow evening at 8:15 at a fourth district Democratic I rally and you will be welcome of course. Mr. Townsend has a clean ■ and clear and fearless message to give you, be has a splendid record. has ability and will serve you well as governor. Hear him to-1 morrow evening at the Shrine auditorium. According to a survey made by * the New York Sun, and it seems to have been a very exhaustive one, there are now 25,600,000 peo pie at work in this country. There are probably less idle men now , than there were in 192*. Why?’ Because of the work provided by i the government to stop the depression. That has started business' ' going and if Mr. Roosevelt is per , j mitted to guide the ship of state, | they will continue to prosper. Tile laboring man who now has a good job, the farmer who is show -j ing a profit for the first time in a dozen years, the merchant who is having the best business in years,' surely these will appreciate what has been done for them in a brief three or three and a half years by Mr. Roosevelt and wail not vote a return to those days when we lived from "hand to mouth" and from day to day. Another four years will make this the best country in the world in which to live for a long time. It s not pleasant to think of wiwt j was happening four years ago but I it is probably wise to do so. Then 1 300 families were losing their homes each day and a like number were losing their farms, banks i were closing, business was failing, hundreds committed suicide and it ' was about as near the jumping off place as was ever known. The, New Deal changed all that in about I three years. Who will vote against i it now because a few millionaires and billionaires are complaining < i about taxes? The election of Roy Hall, Chi eago business man and financier, i to be president of the Central Sugar Company, does not mean the retirement of Mr. McMillen, but I comes so that this dynamic man ' may continue to give more thought and effort to the rapidly growing concern. Mr. Hall is one of the outstanding business men of the I middle west and will aid greatly in the continued growth of all those units which are combined under the McMillen management. Decatur welcomes Mr. Hall and assures him of cooperation to the very greatest extent. — CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE: With heavy hearts we record the death of one of Decatur's outstanding business men, civic and church leaders and best known citizen. Charlie Voglewede. For many years we have known him intimately and called him friend and tre-, quently we advised with him on business affairs relating to the, i community, in which he was always deeply and earnestly inter-1 | ested. The news of his death Saturday 1 j evening shocked every one and I came as a surprise since it was thought until a few hours before j that he would be able to win his bat He. . Successful in the shoe business 1 and other mercantile lines, head , of a chain of stores under his name, member of the board of directors of the Citizens Telephone Company, trustee of the Adams County Memorial Hospital and otherwise active. he found much time to devote ,to community enterprises and to 1
' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 11. 1936.
/?/ -t.. J Jfea WsJ 1 ' IM — j 'Ek '■ O W v I If \ I/ r -TriurK9V \\ J;- \\ I .. >■ —EtJRiG.HT’ WRAP 'EM UP. JOHNNIE. WE'LL TRY 'EM ALL
church work. Os fine personality, keen business judgment, energy and progressive ideaa, Mr. Voglewede made good. That he will be sadly missed goes without saying. His home life was perfect and his excellent family, including Mrs. Vogle-j wedc and eight children, have the sincerest sympathy of every one here. . Evidence of the high regard in which he was held is evidenced 'by the fact*that business will cease during the funeral services tomor-. row morning. Hearts are heavy today, because of the passing of a good citizen, a man who made his own way, lived uprightly aud deserved the success he attained, j His place will be hard to fill. o f —• Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee • —> Removing Splinters The next time a splinter fe run into the finger or hand, try this: Fill a bottle with real hot water, pour out the water, then press the often neck of the bottle tightly over thb splinter, holding it there for a minute or two. It will draw the I splinter to the surface wliSre it < an be readily removed. Separating Eggs The whites and the yoMta of egga are not difficult to separate if the
Blazes North Atlantic Air Alail Route _ Srrivittg at Port Washington ] 1 a. QSWH„ .ii I
Another important chapter in aviation history wajs written ’ when the German flying boat Zephyr spanned the Atlantic from the Azores to Fort Washington, N Y ■ in 22 hours and seven minute*, 1 '■ ~
egg is broken into a funnel held over a dish. The white will pass through the funnel into the dish, while the yolk will remain in the funnel unless broken. Stuffing Pillows Cotton batting, cut into smal .squares and heated in the ove®, will swell to twice its size and be as fluffy for stuffing pillows as down 1 or feathers. o . 4 • Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE | « -+ Q. How late at night is it proper for a young man to telephone a gir l at her home? A That depends entirely upon the custom of the girl’s family, and their usual hour for retiring. Probably ten o'clock should be the latest. Q How should the knives, forks and spoons be placed at the plate? A. In the order in which each' piece is to be used, the first piece j of silver farthest from the plate. Q. Which is the correct form, "My D ar Mr. Wilson, ” or, “My dear Mr.! Wilson"? A. "My dear Mr. Wilson" is cor-j rect; the <j should not be capitalized. —-Q i n ■■■■ TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File I ♦ * Sept. 11 —Strikers wreck five street cars in New York City. Simon Brandyberry And family moved to Fort Wayne. Republicans carry Main by 12.000
blazing a trail across the ocean for a commercial air route and making the flratTion-stop flight from the Azores, a total distance of approximately WO miles. • •
I and both sides claim it predicts I i November success in the nation. i Miss Frances Dugan is visiting in : > Evanston, ill. 11 Mr. and Mrs. Lew Colchin of Chicago visit here. i .Mr. and Mrs. John L. Albers of Toledo visit at the J. T. Merryman 1 home. 0 ' . Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two ♦ -» 1. Ithaca. N. Y. 2. Louisa M. Alcott. 3. Emperor. 4. Saturn. 5. A spiral needle for drawing together the gaping lips of wounds. 6. English writer. 7. Red. orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, arranged | in the order of the spectrum. I 8. Yes. i 9. No. 10. 1636. 1 Zachary Taylor. 2. Santa Fe. I 3. A whole number which leaves : a remainder when divide dby two. 4. Rudyard Kipling. 5. Twenty-one. 6. Tennessee river. i 7. 1927. | 8. Germany. 9. French poet and critic. ' 10. Only two—by birth or by * naturalization. Mrs. Avon Burk aud daughter Ei'ecu visited in Fort Wayne Satur- > i day. ■
For State Treasurer Hold* Pur»e String* Elr <-x - * * 11 4 PETER F. HEIN State Secretary of Treasury Proving himself a veritable ■ "watch-dog ' of the treasury, Peter F Hein, of Crown Point. Demo- j ' h ratic candidate for Treasurer of State is carrying his campaign for re-election to that office to the voters of Indiana. Mr. Hein, a colorful figure in Indiana political affairs for more than forty years, is waging a militant campaign and is going before the people with a record that speaks for itself. Thoroughly experienced in business and banking affairs, Mr. Hein has offered to Indiana, since Taking office, all the ability and efficient management that has come with his years of training. The people of the state are pleased with the manner in which his office has been conducted and their satisfaction will be expressed at the polls in November. The candidate for re-election is more than an able business man and office holder. He is a valuable citizen. He has always been willing to give generously of his time and efforts when worthwhile comhiunity projects are launched. A keen sense of civic pride has made him an asset to his home com munity as his honest, efficient administration of his offiod has made him invaluable to the state of Indiana. Although born in Chicago, Mr. Hein has spent virtually his entire life at Crownpoint, having moved there with his family when he was a child. When he reached young manhood he was quick to follow in the footsteps of his family in adhering to the principles of the Democratic party. During the administration of Woodrow Wilson, as President, Mr. Hein served his community as postmaster at Crown Point. After | leaving that position, he became, cashier of the Crown Point Commercial Band and secretary of the , Crown Point Building, Loan and Savings Association. For two years beginning in | February, 1533, Mr. Hein had the privilege of serving his section of the state as first district chairman of the governors commission on unemployment relief under the Federal CWA setup. He demonstrated his ability and his desire | to be of assistance to the needy in that position by working early and late to provide work for thousands of unemployed men and women. Firefly Fools Neighbors Fremont. O„ —(UPt—John Pow- | ers' neighbor saw a light flashing in ' his attic and notified the electric .power company. Investigating electricians found a firefly caught in a cobweb. o_ Dog Insures Sheep Profit Dunlap. N. M. —(UP) W. C.' Dunlap, Jr., says that the best in--1 surance for sheep profit is a good dog. Last year he caught 40 coyotes with his dogs, with a beet average of five in one day. MICKIE SAYS—/'/JEWS'/S' ' IT CO4T IMPROVE (F/77/ \ I AGE* SO IF you HAVE I SOMETUIIV' you WMJT I 70 SEE IKI -TU'PAPE/?, \PEEASE BRI ME fT /A/ MOW f Y • ; 3 fa fn- ' wa?X / w..
(c XV 1/1 fl IY n c l I W ftRAUN < { wZ © )•/hr i 'iafelif 'JAtn 1 am going to ask a question here on the consumption of gasoline, an it is considered in the speed your car ie traveling. When do you consume the least amount of g»*T tat At t>o mil'st an hour, because your are getting somewhere? (b) At 50 miles an hour? (ci 30 miles an hour? Statisciaus. have given this con-i slderable thought. Gasoline com panics report that a car which gets lit miltss pi r gaUon at 30 miles an hour gets only 13 miles at 50 and 10 miles at 60. Some of you «peedere who brag. about covering mileeage at unusual spit'd to the discomfort of pisiestriaus aud the passengers in your ear are doing so not only at an increased cost but also at increased hazards. Take it easy. Trade in a Good Town — Decatui
Quiz Daughter in Farm Murde® t Z He y •4SL’ . ;■ -o| Bw S X 1 " K I ■ [ Scene of murder I -I I j 'Z Utura CarvJ Discovery of the battered and slashed body of John Richardson, wealthy 63-year-old farmer of McEwen, Tenn . tn a field near Peons, 111., top, led to questioning of his pretty daughter. Mrs Laura Cury of Peoria, below. New Type Gang Leader Appears I T Us A z /Mr 1 Dutch Sebnitz 14 ; sjgsgjßggSDlL—k ■f LxJJP' I / \ T NOW ' Modern racketeering methods have brought about a r ‘ rA J''.'' lai ns gang leader who bears little resemblance to the old mob r “ ic nt j« such as Al Capone and the late Jack "Legs" Diamond or rc " departed Dutch Schultz Modern business methods have n ‘‘ duced into the underworld complicated organizations develop 1 * _ ne" tactics put into use The 1936 model of gang leader ope his racket much in the manner of the average business man. “ tains an office and staff and has a systematic way of conduce s f , nefarious affairs. _
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