Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 232, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1936 — Page 5
*K MS ARE W F OX’S BEST 1 offering Wr. owel More Suitable for « < u ,, rt Outfit Some as (»-■ u «<>" in Diameter. tai! KW* l " ° U ‘ y , U "' Mi*""”’ " W,,Ull ‘ be . “ invelv flowers are “ s ’ nuc!l A,. us violetr "*- .cirlieot oues are small, m uU tha they »■>’ bP aK iH?;nche» iu diajneter. and a bloom »'** n,nl '*' a ac They are par- ■ suitable tor costume 1K„„ tl and no flower >" more than >He chrysanthemum .H.I See for yourPg ~- lIP . football games. thousand years of < hrysK.u>iun»" '‘“'JlU ”e an interest W..., (or a story. V\e hear of far b,uk iu hi!ituiy a " They iU ’ e natlve 10 and still grow wild >» the . ht . . al'hough the name a two Greek words u.dd and flower. Truly. ■ ~ld. i'. flower, in wealth K have developed them, so that we find munis of varying Hgt'.n'l'.r flower of much value is We have had them ■La-Jn f-' several weeks, but ■i' !>: .11.01- a-. ray of rainbow J|^K, S will :v main for another Tiny an all-purpose with as much value for Ut uli .. ...lor:.11 •nt as for arrangeThey are probably the m.iqct to .airy for fall wed v.a rail lie particular tn .hoi. . t c’.ad.olus. beeau.se many types and colM that one t > lit ‘ai.li occasion be found - ami araoters superior MLdi. althou-h they .ire by no small ' ompared to the ;i oft a : w . eaiv ago. The a-id . .impact tvpes --x H- : boutonnieres for tailored woman.tX'glUUlUg to bloom freely -Mid c.m be had There are still a pilF'iljjl !HV Ir < _ X J- /■ ' — ■I IS all right to keep a ■careful watch when ■you're driving, but even ■then, an accident will ■sometimes occur. The ■w/e thing to do is |.€TNA-IZE ■ A policy with the Atna Cas■ualty and Surety Company of ■ Hartford, Connecticut, can be g *::ttcn to protect you for ■ every msurabk motoring risk. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Inj. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. SITTLES-DDWARDS CO. Agents Secatur, Ind. Phone 353 llliiiitthiiilll WAKE UP YOUR UVER BILESlilWl Caleßel—And You'll Junp Ou! of Bed :a the Mondei Karie’ to Ge i,P? .'■’*? shonJ4 ki-js cot tiro pound’ M K. k "' into rour&jwels dally. If thia bite gawssfe ... J’ W ? t ® n > to poisoned and you £e»l«our. tonk and the world looks punk. tJ£J a ? vei Bre ? n, y makeshifts. A mere uko. 71? vement get at the cause It SUMhow pod. old Carter® Little Liver Sutiw these two pounds of bile flowing y * n< J make you feel “up and up”. Harm■l2? A r Carter's Little Liver Pllte by Stubbornly refuse anything aba. 26a. transportation SPECIALS S Dodge Coach 6cy| 599.0® uon V hvv - t’oach ... 599.00 11 - 9 Ford Coach .. . $99.00 Liberal Trade and Easy Terms. r Save At “■ A. Kuhn Chev. Co. Decatur.
I host of garduu Mowers, such as marigolds, calendula*, and zinnias. i The de!phinium»s are making their last stand, and should bo available j iu quantity for a tew more week*. I They can form a part of almost 1 any arrangement. When you go to your florist, don’t think you muat buy a dozen stalks of tieveral flowere for an arrangement. He will be glad to let you have a half dozen or even less, and will lend you his expert
Mormons Sponsor Plan to Aid Needy Members ~ — zx r~ [~Mortnon temple | ♦ i I i Br A 1 W > " M M I>>fwL 1 * ■ ■* wkr~ r f-- r- r - ic. i > JGpk g*r js! QO O'- * r ' r IIS h Un H r icL jgW "I Kr FME.Pr Bfll r | A .. Jr. !«Egw*3ti w kkJwßHKnSbti > >:: ~| Aerial view Salt Lake City"
! Vith the approach of winter, the Mormon church laces the first decisive test of its plan to take care of all needy members of the church without resorting to direct relief. In line with this aim, Heber J. Grant, president, has enlisted all church units in a campaign to accumulate fuel, clothing and foodstuff in anticipation of winter needs. The plan is
War Front Peace Front K> "*PBi • S VA7 HL 2&H ■-. Mb.' — -4 WHATof Europe? Will Spain'* civil war become ORE than forty full time staff correspondents i w •* » • *> ‘ »M- kJ K Jig the Sarajevo oi 1936? J in Spain are covering the Spanish civil war for tne - F~-- & JH , ~ . HMMiMHMHipF' 3 ' ’ The answer may be tn Spam, but behind that United Press. edward w beatt.e W ■ ZfeWF Richard d McMillan , , < tJ . • . TB „, IM MHHH* / > ■ at Vienna conflictanevengreaterstruggleisunfoldingWhen the rebellion broke out the United Press was ■ —.. ..,.». M .£§§». Europe s struggle for peace-in Berlin. Paris. Moscow, prepared, its big corps of reporters, supplemented by . .... - .« . ... |HHEh- A"- ■■»•?.;> S* Rome. Lonaon. Vienna. Geneva and Madrid. the news resources of 38 client newspapers in the ■■ —JMjg ’•/ - j*r. H* K~ 0H | ;''. ’ '-., j--J! Iberian peninsula. •-? • • ~ , , I-' ".“v-.’ / military leaders are trying to isolate the germ of war Eighteen men in the Madrid bureau, full time BR WMaMB in Spain. bureaus in Barcelona and Lisbon, correspondents tn jbHHK&lgaaW\C >' < «' X.7* JsF * MOL f_W n diplomacy and statescraft fail all major cities were ready lor the emergency. Staff cufford l. day '•'~s ’’ WALLACE CARROLL - . trmvnnH < : A?< ‘ at geneva The struggle for peace is more difficult to report, men from Paris quickly manned the French border ° harder story to write than war itself. It requires towns, important relay points. | jjjßMrw, , ~ , . - the most meticulous accuracy, an unbiased vie* Reynolds Packard, veteran war correspondent, | jK|p W <i| v«a> ” " point, experience, sound new* Judgment and lust returned from covering the fall of Addis Ababa ■ W wKBwEOHI W I " ; Ul B* ;,4m l ,xd constant vigilance against premature sensations. in Ethiopia, hastened to Burgos to report activities ot ' I . A.’ al . | HI Responsible men in responsible posts are reporting the rebels in the north. Correspondents from Madrid | • .•*, , z . . MFrT'fi . . . .. L- •* I '< <i 11 ““ significant trends, sifting facts from rumors, writing were assigned to cover rebels in the south. lester ziffben ~ jean Dcgandi , . , . . . ,_ _. .t uinmn ' at Madrid th* story ior the United Pres* in th* capital* of Europe. Gibraltar. Palma de Mallorca. Oviedo. San Sebas- at Madrid - ■- ‘ Their dispatches trace with force and clarity the tfan. Irun, Vigo. Seville. Bilbao, are other vantage j|Hk v v . j WS Jl® 1 Mln 1 maneuvers of Europe's ruler* at a time when th* l*a*t points from which regular United Pross correspond- > * ’W 9 £■ ~ 1 >VW * • Mi OB'* Zw misstep, or "incident," might be fatal to world p«ac*. •nts began filing war news. ~ » 1d J? 1 K«- uHH A , L . .„ □ u M to- 1 I A . wSH F United Pres* correspondent* abroad ar* young in Their eyewitness dispatches, carefully sii'ed by y" 1 k ildHk. . Sjfabtok. 4U . -k Tl> Mwr t y*ar*-oia in experience. The..- reports reflect th* veteran cable ed.tois m London and New York. |MMk W rfflk ‘ V- ■/ Hu T . . HMHkjMMHHHHBuJMMBBtedMIII II I i,b„Ui mAJWaMI traditional United Press accuracy and speed, present a concise, yet complete picture ot the day norman deuel Frederick oechsner Frederick kuh Reynolds Packard stewart brown ralph hslnzen , AT JiOSCCW AT BERLIN AT LONDON AT PARIS AT ROME V PARIS day snuggleUNITED PRESS FOR DOMINANT NEWS COVERAGE Carried In The Decatur Daily Democrat
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBBER 30, PJ3G.
| i advice on trimming, container and : color harmony. Make use of his •| experience; it will bring you more j i J beauty at less cost. o Policeman Wants Sheepskin Fort Worth, Tex. (U.R) — Charles i . I Coffey, Fort Worth polkemmi. i i j decided he’d rather Lave a sheep i skin than a badge and flat feet. I i So he turned in his uniform to I ‘ enter Texas Technological Col-, lege at Lubbock, Tex.
also supplemented by an extensive building program to provide jobs for unemployed church members. More than 70 buildings are now in progress and construction under way totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Mormon plan has attracted nation-wide attention and is being watched with considerable interest. ’ 1 C > 1
ANDERSON BIDS I (gONT INUKD FHOM PftG E ONHI > I the Hecaiur girls' band, directed by | Albert Sellemeyer, local baud tnutructor, a'*o furniwbed music. Mrs. ('haliner Porter .presided over the afternoon session. After | special miiwlc by the high school < i chourua, Mrs. Whitten talked on | "How to Achieve Parent Teacher 11 Ainw".
CLUB YEABOOK (CONTINUED FROM PAtiE ONE) Elberuon, a prominent member, both of whom died during the last year. Succeeding pages cover the various departments of the club: music, dramatic, literature, art, civic, junior arts associate. The members are listed, programs announced and committees named. A copy of the constitution, which was revised this year, the bylaws, the by-laws governing the civic department, the constitution for the junior arte club, the bylaws for the junior arts division close the book. The year book was published in the job department of the Decatur Democrat company. ■—o PRESIDENT OPENS (CONTINUED FROM I’AGE ONE) form of government; that Thotflas Jefferson planned to set up a guillotine under a French revolutionary form of government: that An drew Jackson soaked the rich of the eastern seaboard and planned to ’surrender American democracy to the dictatorship of a frontier mob. They culled Abraham Lincoln a Roman emperor; Theodore Roosevelt a destroyer; WoodrowWilson a sell-constituted Messiah." Mr. Roosevelt did not complete this chain of thought; nor did he name the “individuals and groups" who “desperate in mood, angry at failure, cunning in purpose, * * * are seking to make communism an issue in an election where communism is not a controversy between the two major parties.” A White House statement, a few weeks ago denounced publisher William Randolph Hearst, without naming him, for accusing Mr. Roosevelt of accepting communistic support. The issue also has been publicized by John D. M. Hamilton, Republican national chairman, and Frank Knox, Republican vice-presidential candidate. . "Here and now, once and for all, let us bury that red herring, and destroy that false issue,” Mr. Roosevelt said last night. “You are familiar, especially iu the state of New York, with my public service extending back over a quarter of a century. For nearly four years I have been president of the United States. A long record has been written. In that record, both in this state and in the national capital, you will find a simple, clear and consistent adherence not only to the letter but to the spirit of the American form of govern-
I ment. | “To that record, my futures and the future of my administration - will conform. I have not sought, . I do not seek, I repuiate the supl port of any advocate of communism or of any other alien ’lsm’ - which would by fair means or foul : change our America:) democracy. “That is my position. It always t has been my position. It always -' will be my position.” Mr. Roosevelt said no difference 1 existed between Democrats and Republicans on communism; the difference, he continued, was in how 1 they dealt with communism. The Democrats “have been realistic 1 enough to face It. We have been intelligent enough to do something 1 about it. And the world has seen the results of what we have done. “In the spring of 1933 (continued Mr. Roosevelt) we faced a cri- | sis which was the ugly fruit of 12 years of neglect of the abuses of economic and social unrest. It ; was a crisis made to order for all > those who would overthrow our • form of government. Do I need to -1 recall to you the fear of those days -i —the reports of those who piled f supplies in their basements, who I laid plans to get their fortunes ( across the border, who got themr selves hideaways in the country • against the impending upheaval? ■ Do I need to recall the law-abid-i ing heads of peaceful families who began to wonder, as they saw their ■ children starve, how they could ' get the bread they sa w in the bak- ’! ery window- • * • Do I need to II recall the powerful leaders of in- " i dustrv and banking who came to 1* me in Washington in those early •'days of 1933 pleading to be sav--jed? i “Most people in the United f j States remember today the fact 'that starvation was averted, that i ' homes and farms were saved, that , banks were reopened, that crop ■ prices rose, that industry revived. > and that the dangerous forces subi versive of our form of government were turned aside. i i "A few people—a few only—unwilling to remember, seem to have .'forgotten those days." 1. o 50-Year Club Expands i! .; Toledo.—(U.PJ -This city's Fifty- .' Year Club, which enrolls all citi- . zens who have lived in Toledo . more than 50 years, now is making . a list of all business concerns ; which have existed here for more , than 50 years. I' - o i New Hardiweave Suits for Fall on display in our South window. Peterson Clothing Co. ‘
REBEL FORCES “| (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB» lust ditch stand. The eemi-autu-uouious Catalonian government, ■ loyal to Madrid, also reg an niobilI king. If Madrid falls, Catalonia, com-! t prising the entire northeastern ! section of the country adjoining France, would coutinue to resist, i unlaw bought off by the triuni-! phant insurgents with the offer 1 of a separate republic. At Asturias miners in the north- ( . west also would be likely to re- ' . sist to the end, ae would other , left elements iu the south and in , otber scattered parts of Spain. 0 EARL BROWDER , (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the communist presidential candi- . ' date in jail until tomorrow at , I I least. I Secretary L. H. Quinn of the , 1 Terre Haute merchants associar , 1 tion, said: , I ! "The association will not tolerate the presence of agitators. We , will do all in our power to pre- , ' vent Browder from speaking ] , here.” ( Communist party officials yesterday threatened to institute court proceedings when President , ( Ralph N. Tirey, of Indiana State j Teachers college, refused them , use of the school's auditorium. , after the board of trustee* had granted a temporary permit. Tirey explained retraction of the invitation by saying that a school function had been scheduled for . tonight. Police ajso sought to arrest a man known only as Stanfeld, who was with Browder and the others on the Chicago and Eastern Illi-
flf W J!: •* s ya » ' ' i! C ° AL \ >db ' r TWCTKENTUCKY PRODUCTS BURK ELEVATOR CO. Phone 23 Decatur, Ind. ‘
PAGE FIVE
note train arrived here early today. He had not yet been Icoatffd, howoyorAppeal Tq Court Indianapolis, Sept. 30— (U.R> — An appeal Lu the court* is th® only recourse left to Earl Browder, communist candidate for president, and two companions arrested in Terre Haute, Gov. Paul V. McNutt said today. “I have no authority to order their release," the executive explained. McNutt agid he had not yet received a telegram reportedly sent by Browder protesting his arrest by Terre Haute authorities. Motorists Obey Yellow Markings Indianapolis. Sept. 30. — (U.K) — With ouly few exceptions motorists are obeying the yellow markings placed on Indiana highways to designate “no-passing zones,” James D. Adams, chairman of the state highway commission, said todav. The marking program, which was inaugurated several weeks ago, will be continued until all hazardous points on the highways >Ve indicated, Adams said. The yellow lines, placed parallel with the middle black stripe, warn motorists not to attempt to passing other vehicles while in the danger zone. The markings are being used at all "curves and grades where motorists have less than a 1,000 feet sight distance ahead. 0 — . New showing of Coats. Suits, Dresses and Blouses direct from the market. E. F. Gass Store. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
