Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 15 October 1936 — Page 5

|XING’S FRIEND -«KK 1! " ,1 — •’■" SK Mr, Simpson: None. Il «T1 -J,...,1 any suggestion JKeI, .ngin m<"‘> >«»** h '""’ WF.duui.a,.. and It •- BHp, Hi..' mnrnitgo is übso|Bß out "I •m** 110 "- SB S.mp-m " IS Wlf , e W “ V “ tukm UP roßl ' "gZ m n-ilajld Terrace. WB ink mid husband BB<:ui.id> Hub. II was nn' l *' l ; |H3’!. spent lhe day with friends IWS king ~ai Buckingham Sltmllv lie will go to 'he !■■...■,■. Sandringham io .. a .lose friends, in probably Mis. Simpson BjJXi,... Simpson is not defendKS C rU it it was possible to it frtuii Ixmdon. where ■K little Ipswich. g T!i . it the assizes which beK)l N D AT LAST for muscular aches and W hen due to rheumatic dislumbago, etc. Prescrip, has helped thousands of when many other remedies Try a bottle today. Kj|| SI.OO. We suggest you try > while using Q-623. HL SMITH DRUG CO. MW Decatur, Ind.

I w I WvW uwiYdt KF ~ 1 v , x^~i —>W ’ i u «SIK » I * A ;® wl Hr Jt —- ■ . I w. rtw* DEMOCRATIC RALLY Saturday Night DECATUR October 17th ! big Parade at 7:30 P. M. bands and a Lot of Democratic Pep I ADDRESS HON. HARRY H. WOODRING Secretary of War ADAMS COUNTY IS HONORED IN HAVING A MEMBER OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELTS CABINET AS HEADLINER FOR THIS BIG RALLY. ONLY ADDRESS TO BE MADE BY MR. WOODRING IN INDIANA. SPEAKING PROGRAM AT CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM, 8 O’CLOCK FOLLOWING PARADE. S FORWARD WITH DEMOCRACY 8 win with ( . .. . I w,n w Roosevelt Everybody Welcome Townsend Political advt.

Kin late this month, Mr. Justice I Hawke, formerly attorney general | to the then Prince ot Wales, will hear it. It was expected that Mrs. Simpson would testify briefly and then that probably two witnesses could I bo called to testify that Simpson i 'niscondiH'ted himself with the coI respondent cited in the suit. I There In only one ground for di--1 force in England. A very brief summing up would follow and then the divorce. Mrs. | Simpson, aa the plaintiff, may move at the end of six months for ■ a degree absolute. That granted, I she would be free to tnagry. an would Himpsuii. — - o———— THOUSANDS JAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) got bow sick they were," he ob- , served as the audience howled and cheered. “I have their fever ■ charts. 4 know how the knees of all of our rugged individualists were trembling four years ago and how their hearts fluttered. ■'They came to Washington in great numbers," he said. “Washington did not look like a dangerj ous bureaucracy to them then. Oh, no, it looked like an emergency hospital. All of the distinguished patients wanted two things—quick hypodermic to end the pain and a | course of treatment to cure the disease. We gave them both. And 1 now most of the patients seem to Ibe doing very nicely. Some of | them are even well enough to I throw their crutches at the doct-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1936.

» 1 or." I The Chicago address was inter--1 preted as a peace offering to business men at large. It held aasur ■ anee that in the future there would 1 be a minimum of legislation aimI ed at them unless it were for the 1 pm-|>oae of correcting known ahu»•es. The president emphasized that "the people of America have no quarrel with business They in I sist only that the power of con- • centrated wealth shall not he abus- ' ed.” Mr. Roosevelt cited Accomplish ■ ments of the administration's em- * ergency spending program and explained that business “did not get out of the ditch itself—it was hauled out by your government." He detailed chronologically what . the businessman wanted the government to do for him in 1933, and I what hie administrate) ndid. Hie ■ I outline: I "I—Stop deflation and falling k prices—and we did it. "- —Increase the purchasing power of his customers who were in- ,: dustrial workers in the cities—and we did it. “3—lncrease the purchasing pow,i er of his customers on the farms ■ —and we did it. I ”4 —Decrease interest rates, pow- . er rates and transportation rates . —and we did it "5 —Protect him from the losses I due to erime, bank robbers, kidnaping, blackmailers — and we did I it." ' In all, the speech was an ac- ' counting of the stewardship of the

national government In the past three and a half years from the viewpoint of business. Mr. Roose- : velt verbally embraced the majority of the businessmen of the naAlon and found fault with only those "malefactors of great wealth" who "operate at the expense of society." “This concentration of wealth and power,” he averred, "has been built upon other people's money, other people s business, other people's labor. Under this concentration independent business was allowed to exist only by sufferance. It has been si menace to the social system as well as the economic system which we call American democracy." "There is no excuse for it in the cold terms of industrial inefficiency. "There is no excuse for it from the point ot view of the average investor. "There is no excuse for it from the point of view of the independent business man.” '1 have always believed, and I will always believe in private enterprise as the backbone of economic well being in America,” he declared. o— ——• TAX QUESTIONS (CONTI NU ED FROM FAGg ONE > Kraner, Geneva. Union: Adele Hoile, Otto Hoile, John Blakey, Margaret Blakey. Decatur, Root: Amos Gerke, Henrietta Gerke, Henry Auman, Matilda

Auman. Decatur. Preble: Rosa Werling. Albert W. Werling, Marie Buuck, Otto fluuck, Preble. Kirkland: Albert Goldner, Lydia Goldner, Hibbard H. High, Ruth High, Decatur. Washington: Frank Heimann, Veronica Heimann. John W. Parrish, Dolly 0. Parrish, Decatur, St. Marys: Samuel Bentz, Lena Gay, Albert Mauller, Adah Mauller, Decatur. Blue Creek: Pearl Dellinger, Frajik Dellinger, Jarvey Sipe, Mrs, Mary Sipe, Berne. Monroe Twp: Homer Winteregg. Irene Winteregg, Ida Nussbaum, Henry Nussbaum. Monroe. REVOLTERSFORCE (CONTIRUEpJTRQM PAOjß.p.Njl) would he no race toward the capital but that the advance would be a deliberate one which, when started, the nationalists would intend to constitute a steam roller moving slowly and irresistibly. eSeven Persons Burned As Bomb Is Exploded Marion, Ind., Oct. 15. — (U.K) — Seven persons suffered burns and shock last night when an aerial bomb, fired during a political parade, dropped and exploded in a crowd of bystanders. Wilson Hempieman, Connersville, who was reported to have fired the bomb, was arrested on a technical charge but later released on SSOO bond.

Road Improvements Nearly Completed 1 j Indianapolis, Ind., Oet. 16—I UP) j i — Resurfacing, surface treAlment and oiling operation* on more than 1,000 miles of Indiana highways will - be completed within the next few weeks, James D. Adams, chairman of the state highway commission, ■ reported today. Most of the summer detours will ' i be lifted as the work te completed, i Other portions of s’ate highways ! are being Improved by construction .! of high type pavements, Adams I raid. The highway commiasion'a program this year has included, in adBeware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creornulslon. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomulslon, which goes right to the seat . of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm i Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creornulslon and to refund your i money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Oet Creornulslon right now. (Adv.)

ilition to improvement of surfaces and construction of new pavement, the erection of h cores ot bridges and grade separations, installation of flasher signals at high-

J*™* pretty O comfort hIU lor / / Sleeping f ' I • od Lounging 18 ™ J Lf 1 Very Cozy, these new Balbriggan pajamas and night-gowns by Munsingwear . . . attractive new designs in pretty color combinations. The fabric is great,—washes well, wears long. And the prices are reasonable. Let us show you now! HAR D WARE W HOME FURNISHINGS

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way and railroad Intersections, desrignation of non-pawing zonse at N curves and grades where sight dis--i tan< e is limited, tbe widening of ■ shoulders and rfglits-of way.