Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 5 October 1936 — Page 5
IleSicitv ' USEGROWING EL. p President Points ■ To Growing Use Os Electricity ■ points oi,t tbai u,e of el r fit klty to now B reß,er ,han ever J«r K« ,nd I" continuing to grow, Ger“wope president of the General KiPdric Company, in an »<’<"■«* ,0 KLes attending the World Pow K Conference declared that wo are Kwbere near the end of this conEcnictive development. ■.-Growing u-se of electricity is beBLilng apparent in almost every BX “ he said. - The use of elecBricltv * no*' greater than ever beBore at* l •* continuing to grow deste the long continued depression. ■ “Here in America, private com B-nie, m whose hands is most of K, generation and distribution of Blectricity. have, ou the whole, Kade very distinct and significant Bontrlbutlona to Its wider use. The ■total of kilowatt-hours used in the Kmc during the first six montlw* ■of this y ar was 35 percent greater Ban in the first six months of 1936. ■which was the previous peak; while ■the total dollar revenue from do- ■ mreti- consumers was only eeven ■ per cent greater. In other words. ■ the selling price per unit of elee- ■ tricity, or kilowatt-hour, has. as ■ these figures show, lieen greatly reIdueed in thia period. “Largely <because of the public utilities' progressive work in lowering rates, the use of electric appliances in the home for the first six WHY SUFFER? Rheumatism, Neuritis, Arthritis, Periodic Pains. Lumbago, and all other Aches and Pains are quickly relieved with Alfa Compound Wintergreen Tablets. Positively guaranteed. Price 91. Sold at all Drug Stores.
Public Sale 2 DECATUR PROPERTIES and Household Goods In order to settle the estate of Grace M. Everett, deceased, the undersigned Administratrix will sell at Public Auction, each side to be held on the Premises at the hour herein designated, on the date, of SATURDAY, October 17, 1936 10:00 O'clock A. M.—What is known as the George Everett property located on Winchester street at the South Corporation line of Decatur; 7 Room 2-story frame house, enclosed back porch, cellar, drove well, cistern, small barn, one acre of land. A -eal suburban home for some one. 1:00 O'clock P. M.—at 322 North 11th street, Decatur, Ind.. 5 Room House. Semi-modern, full lot, garage, property in good repair. Immediate possession. Can be inspected on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. Will also sell: 3-piece Overstuffed Living Room Suite, good; Walnut Dining Suite; 2 Metal Simmons Beds, complete; Chifforobe; 2 Rockers; Library Table; RCA Electric Radio; Axminster Rug 11.3. x 12; Rug 6x9; Axminster Rug 9x12; 2 Dressers; Chiffonier; Kitchen Cabinet; Oak Drop Leaf Table, Glow Majd Range Cook Stove all white enamel, new; Ice Box; Cupboard; Heatrola Heater; 3-burner Gasoline Hot Plate; Lawn Mower; Garden Tools; Many articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—On Real Estaie, 1-3 cash, 1-3 in 6 months. 1-3 in 9 months. 6% interest on deferred payments. Personal Property will be sold for cash. CHARLOTTE B. EVERETT. Admix. Estate of Grace M. Everett. Roy 8. Johnson. Auctioneer W. A. Lower. Clerk. John L. DaVoss, Attorney. Youthful Afternoon Dress with Ruche Neck of Simple Smart Lines for All-Day Occasions * .j&r By Ellen Worth V I h.s charming simple day dress !s the type you can wear right through an entire day and al- iK s fed so comfortably smart. ■» fcFjahM t s made of black jacquard $ HIUMsBRMCS *■ crepe. The ruch neck is lined with deep violet-blue crepe. A jf 1 matching blue velveteen bow is / Posed right under the chin. The tied front girdle repeats the blue eaQf'i BiW/.' <’3 frcpe ' This model is very distinctive , ')X black woolen with large em- > broidered dots. 4fiß<pSn3wWF Satin-back crepe, velvet, vel'■eteen, etc., are other mediums / for this easy to sew dress. * \ Style No. 1848 is designed for Be? U •tees 12, 14. 16, 18 and 3) years. SNwSO Size 16 requires 4 yards of .19- fSrSBK S V inch material of one fabric. fa Our new Fall and Winter SI Fashion and Needlework Book is B I out 1 It i, j u ,t erammed xßESstvrl. ?■ 'I full of lovely dressmaking de- rBgFHKB '. J/ O signs for yourself and the chil- Mfijawih ffiifll 17 • 'Yi dren, embroidery designs for g gjgKl WQ2 ’ ■rocks and household articles and I Bra A i knitting patterns of dresses, suits. K MSf Brot Sc A sweaters, etc., in your correct g Bl I ’ i size, accompanied by knitting in- ■ HBi B ■ \\ \J/ structions. This book is worth I HHB ® ® C ; many times its cost, which is only If K** wX 10 cents. Send for your copy to- ( > ) day. 1 I \ Price of BOON 10 cents I \ Price of P ATTERN 15 cents ’ i '"’V (coin is preferred). NEW YORK PATTERN BUREAU, Decatur Dally Democrat, 220 East 42nd Street. Suite. 1110. NEW YORK. N. Y.
months of this year, compared with the same period last year, increased greatly. For example, 30 per cent .! more household refrigerator and &o I per cent more electric ranges have 11 been sold. .More economical generation and distribution of electricity mean lower rates* to the consumer. ’ As 1 have already aald, lower rates for electricity, made possible by tlie public utility companies, have made for constantly greater use of . labor-saving appliances in the home. , Thus, the manufacturer has been . able to produce In quantiles, which of course means lower cost and ‘ selling price* and the consequent ' availability of electric appliances to an ever Increasing number of fami ' lies. “The day-to-day results of the scientific and engineeiing work that is now being done here and abroad make it apparent that wc are nowhere near the end of thia constructive development In which you and we are so intensely interested. ” DEATH TOLL IN CpN’HNVKI* PROM f*A<»W ONWi Injuries suffered a week ago when his cattle truck was struck ’ by a New York Central train near Elkhart, were fata! to Henry I’. ' Granger. 27. Goshen. Robert W. Simms, 55, died from injuries suffered when struck by a truck near Evansville. Injuries suffered Sept. 21 in an automobile-truck collision in ind--1 ianapolis were fatal tp Joseph H. • Kline, 44. Kenneth Williams. 32, Bowling ’ Green died from injuries suffered I when his car crashed into a tree on the highway near Linton. ' Edward Shepherd, 49, was killed • near Madison when struck by an ■ Automobile driven by Robert Stocki da'e. I Lawrence Olinger, 22, White Pigeon. Mich., and formerly of Greenfield, was killed in au Elkhart trafI fie accident. ' I Three Dunkirk glass workers '' were killed when their automobile ' hit a truck. The men were George i Rohlfing, Clyde Garvin and Roy I Henry.
' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1936
Hoover Confers With Landon; Announces Speech ‘~~ - ? ',- v HH Im! K — Jmlßlnß B I 111® - . |t I giili M 1
Gov. Alfred M. Landon Following a conference with Gov Alfred M Landon in Topeka, above, former President Herbert Hoover announced he would make his first speech in behalf of the Republican nominee for president
BANDIT TRIO <CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I , the hold-ups, while the other two . boys held up the victims. Three ’ , 38 special revolvers used in the forays were confiscated by Sher-: . iff Brown. Bragg thought today that he did not get a “fair split” In all of the hold-ups. He said that his partners told him the driver did not take as great risks and therefore was not entitled to as much money. The five additional crimes admitted today were: Anderson: Avalon Gardens , where S6O was obtained. Sept. 18. Alexandria: Ault’s Beer Parlor, where the cash register and S2O were stolen, September 12. Andrews: Service station attendant robbed of $35. Sept. 26. Greentown: Highway Case robbed of *25 or $26 on September 18. Marion: September 28. where Joe Kocher was slugged with the butt of a revolver after he called ■ for help at his service station. Nothing was obtained. Only Wajker and Carey took part in this affair. Bragg said today that “three guys and a girl were arrested in Peru and charged with the Andrews job but we did it.” FASCISTS ARE (CONTINUED FROM PAGEJ)NE)_ preparation for the outbreak of civil war. Bishop Bourg offered to open any church or convent for inspection. The fascist forces suffered a damaging defeat yesterday. •ol Casimir Francois de la Roque, chief of the fascist Croix de Feu organization, mobilized his men to prevent communists from holding a gigantic demonstration in the stadium at the Parc Des Princes in the extreme southwestern section of the city. Twenty thousand police and mobile guards dispersed* 25.000 fascists after a series of tights in which many were bruised and 1,400 fascists were arrested. Only those men found to possess blackjacks or other weapons were kept in custody. La Roque, in a communique which reflected his anger, praised his followers for “preventing a communist parade despite the’ savagery of the police anti the poHead one.’' He underlined the words "police alone" to contrast them to the crack mobile guards. ■ It was notable that during the j demonstration yesterday, the fas-' cists cheered the mobile guards even while they were being pushed back — another indication of i their startegy. The socialist newspaper Popu laire charged that in a speech at Laßochelle, nationalist deputy Jeazi I Renaud, addressing 2,000 fascists, said: "I will command the firing squad that shoots Blum.” Blum is the socialist premier, Leon Blum. Temper of all right wiug ele-; ments was violent. Typical oi out-; bursts after the defeat of yesterday was that in today's newspaper Echo De Paris, which, in attacking the left front government, charged "the mobile guards were put at the service of the communist cause." There was a second defeat for the right wing elements during the day. Marshal Philipps Petain, war hero, looked upon as the choice of all pro-fascist elements for their
Herbert Hoover in Philadelphia, Oct. 16. The meeting between Landon and Hoover, above, was the first between the two since March, 1935. Hoover is expected to make several campaign speeches.
(leader in event they attained powI er. in a speech at St. Quentin re- 1 i buked alarmists. I "The air at pre»eCT is too heavy , with threats," he said. "Minds are overtaxed. We talk too easily of internal war—as if the social prob ! ; lems that divide us, however com- j plex they may be, cannot be set-| tied except by a fratricidal struggle. There is no need for fight-1 I ing among ourselves.” Gen. Join J. Pershing and other | officers of the American and BritI ish armies heard Petain, who spoke . in celebration of the 18th anniverI sary of the recapture of St. Quen ~ tin from the Germans. EIGHT PARTIES I < CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I ——— i Beadle, clerk. The commissioners faced the; task of determining whether the, Socailist party of Indiana. Inc., or ■ , its rival faction, the Socialist par- I ty of Indiana, by Powers | Hapgood and Charles Rogers, will i represent that party on the No-1 vember ballot. Another question confronting 1 the commissioners is whether the designation of presidential electors by the Communist party har I been done properly. The party . did not name two electors at t large and one from each district, 'as did the other parties, but I named all of its electons at large. Party officials contended such a. procedure was proper. Judge I Spencer would not comment, advising that the question would lie discussed by the commissioners. Gubernatorial candidates of the I , various parties include: Democrat —- M. Clifford Town-; send, present lieutenant governor. , , Republican—Raymond S. Springer, i Connersville. Socialist paj*ty of Indiana. Mario Tomsich, Gary. Socialist party of Indiana, Inc , I William Getzel, South Bend. Coni- j ; munist — Wenzell Stocker. South ! Bend. Socialist-Labor — Charley I Lynch, Fort Wayne. Prohibition I — Harold Mason, Huntington. The ! Union party filed no state ticket. LOYAL FORCES £ONTTNCED I'ROM PAGE ONE)__ vera De La Reina, who interview -1 ed Gen. Jose Varela, comnia.uding ; the Toledo front, quoted him as predicting that the insurgents would be in Madrid within a month, despite any resistance the loyalists might make. Only a few days ago, jubilant over their capture of Toledo, the rebels were talking of being in Madrid October 12, the great national holiday commemorating i the discovery of America by I Columbus. | Varela. In Ins interviews, seeniled to envisage an attack on Madrid that would be thoroughly planned and would be forwarded with great deliberation in order that however stoutly the loyalists resisted, the numerically inferior but well trained regulars, foreign legionnaires, and Moors of the ; rebels would be irresistible. I It appeared that the febels had encountered a setback in the, north. They hoped to take Eibar.! ■ important munitions town between • San Sebastian and Bilbao, with little resistance. It was reported ■ j today that loyalists in a (surprise I attack routed the besieging force , and moved on into territory the ■' rebels had captured. Asturian miners, repulsed iu oue t. tierce attack on the besieged r I rebel garrison, were reported 1
planning another for today, with hopes of finally penetrating the city whose garrison has resisted, them since the outbreak of the civil war. Q Republicans Fill County Ticket The county Republican central committee filed the list ot nominees for county offices Saturday, completin gthe ticket for the fall election. The list of nominee®: coroner, J. Jerome Yager, Berne; treasurer. Ralph E. Kenworthy, Decatur; sheriff. Robert Hil>, Decatur and commissioner. second district, Homer Raudenbnsh. Decatur route 6. The other candidates were named at the May primary. o Writers Continue Race Around World Athens, Greece, Oct. S—(UP)5 —(UP) — j Dorothy Kilcallen of the New York ; ■ Journal-International news service 1 and Leo Kieran of the New York ' Times-Nana service, racing around the world against M. R. Ekin® of the New York World-T. e’egram and other Scripps-Howard newspaipere, landed at the Phaleron seaport, near Athens, at 5:30 P. M. (9:30 A. M. j CST) today. The fliers, aboard a British Imperial airways plane, left Brindisi, Italy at 1:35 A. M. local time (6:35 A. M. CST). They will spend the night here and continue toward Alexandria, Egypt, early tomorrow 0 ; North Sacramento, Cal. - -(UP) — Fortune tellers and crystal gazers should take a second peep before deciding to come here. The city fathers have imposed a license of $l,(X)0 a week on them.
COMING AND GOING cStX ~H&bdL' GIBSON FOR THE TRAVELWISE FWPIUANT GEM.MC». 1000 ROOMS WITH BATH Music For Square Dance, Tuesday Round Dance, Wednesday Ohio State Gardens, Middlebury I
F. D. R. PLANS WESTERN TOUR President Roosevelt May Start Trip Friday Night ITyde Park. N?Y~Oct 5 —<U.R>— Michigan's political situation occupied President Roosevelt today as* he mapped out the detaila of a swing through the west and middle west expected to begin the end of the present week. Cheered by reports of the results , of his recent excursion into the in- , dustrial area of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York, the chief executive received ' a report of the Michigan outlook J from Frank Murphy, Democratic , gubernaforial nominee, and also a i comprehensive survey from William Green, head of the American Federation of Labor. Both were on the calling list at
Radio Industry to Gross S 100,000,000 in ’36 F ' J * I BK z s >BbX w - • < '■ A I r 1 “ mA |Eleanor Powells | Bob Bums I ..ffijjjy KgPßßjl MBwwyiwy — b^w 1 — - Smhß MacDonald |
Recent estimates of radio experts that the industry would gross more than $100,000,000 in 1936 call attention to the amazing growth of the business Among the new trends is the rush of radio officials to enlist movie stars for their programs, reflecting an unwillingness to take a chance on new talent At the same lime, some newcomers have had
1 -■ —.— > Rustic Colonial . ,1, , . z ,*. . I -k- . _| ;.. I .1. Jill--.- I • • W j> M| yyy i - S j: • . ‘.-si ' - ’’’> \ ' ■ - ■ • A•* ■ '■ } \ y • ■ - - ; ~) bMB. I SI b -x'" i - Ai ** Lining room ' I I ' 1 • *-t U 9-o-«iP'-or | 7-6’»io-o" b—yj n i■< P LIVING ROOM ■ yi ■ BED ROOM p R;iu£ I B 12-IO"« 21-0“ xV A-U-f-sowN' lav'” i H I »iS-.Td.O* 1 ' I W| K. 1-Q2 ; 1 BEDROOM I | I—— to 3‘.i2 4" BED. ROOM | * FIRST FLOOR PORCH SECOND FLOOR i ■ — ... 11 ■ A northwestern cottage that combines colonial form and proportions with a suggestion of the rustic, is this house, built by Homes. Inc. The treatment of the porch and the use of perpendicular battens on the first floor snow the pioneer origin of the design. A further departure from colonial tradition is the use of double and triple mullioned windows. The blending of these various elements, however, forms a pleasing unit, well adapted to its environment. The plan, too, shows the influence of its colonial inspiration in the central hall and chimney. Tn this case, however, the central chimney is only minor. The main one rises outside the living room wall much in the Virginia style. The rest of the first floor arrangement is planned to suit the site without regard to precedent. The number of bedrooms makes this small house suitable for a good-sized family. The location of one bedroom on the first floor makes the plan flexible, as this room may be either study or library, if desired. A good feature of the second floor is the free open hall which simplifies the handling of furniture. This house was built in the state of W asiungton at a cost of $3-100. on a SSOO lot. It is financed by an insured Federal Housing mortgage of $2:800. on which mohthly'payments amount to $21.58. Thia I includes interest, payment on principal, and mortgage insurant*.
, Hyde Park and in the minds of political obssrvers their presence indicated that Mr. Roosevelt was giving the greater part of bis day to further considerations Involving i his drive for re-election together I with a study of labor's part in the campaign. Murphy and Green were lunch- ' eon guests at the summer white i house. While clone triend** declined to speculate ou the implications of their presence, it was taken for granted that they canvassed not ! only the Michigan situation but the national as well. It was understood Mr. Roosevelt ! would set out next Friday night for Denver for a major address ( | there. On the return eastward the president will stop oft in Omaha ' for another speech. He will reI turn to Washington tonight. i Spanish Casualties . Placed At 138,000 i Lisbon, Oct. 5.—KU.R>— Unofficial ‘estimates placed casualties in the l I Spanish civil war up to Oct. 2 as
phenomenal success, including Bob Burns, "the Arkansas hillbilly" Sports events, especially football. are being plugged for “commercials" to an increasing extent Jeanette MacDonald and Eleanor Powell are among the film celebrities wp*> are much in demand on the air waves because of their excellent "ether personalities".
PAGE FIVE
f followss Madrid governmental forces — t «3,000 killed and 9.000 wounded; f Insurgents, 76,000 killed and 14,000 t wounded. —o 1 Tends In a Good Town — Decatur Beware Coughs 1 t 1J from common colds : That Hang On l No matter how many medicines . you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation, you can ’ get relief now with Creomulslon. Serious trouble may be brewing and . you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul--1 slon, which goes right to the seat of tho trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even If other remedies have * failed, don't be discouraged, your ’ druggist is authorised to guarantee Creomulslon and to refund your 1 money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulslon right now. (Adv.)
