Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 248, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1936 — Page 5

I .kri ~ ■*• «.- are moving ■ «d* era of social anil 11 -in w , n ■ 1 ,yl . „,. tood <>n the brink ■ otar " kl ‘ h '" UI , "" ' ) l“> ■J?'. o-mlinu ■ lj‘ u| «..uM have been K o ’ Cotistitttasking to ~t Thomas ~ ~ u ; s amend- .... . IO the ! 'Io feel that tin,, Man) states hav< i: ;":"om.l < .invention* „.;ii-s ami written entirely I— England— on" K. . !’he ( ®n ernntem K « m>t ex. n have I cc '"• |, • u- look at the picture ;i , itself in 1932 when ■, ■ H■V! I left the White ;j ou i t> return. K, : .-y-ti-nt had broke»|o«ii Tim solvency of every yg], tie country was qucK d Th deposits and life sat jms f tia people were endanger4 bankrupt. Wheat

i Calls Coughlin Wasteful I 9fe* HreSßk- w - | * J»W W-. "' Fl ■■ ’bsr v’S* .<■■ . J< z ■ MW Wsi ■t w twlkv' ' f ’ffi***M*"*^9* > A -:3k JjS»?Fjy< x VuJL ft- -jau 1 -or Bfewfc WF ■ 1 I '7. I I < ,IK ffiPrWf • >s '<; m» Sp ' <&5 * z SwyC "* wbr M * r -‘ ■ ■ Mie above photo of the Rev. Charles E. Coughlin (left), and John H. ■Donnell, of Pittsburgh, taken at the recent National Union for Social convention, shows the radio priest making a careful check of ■Donnell's credentials after the latter cast the one dissenting vote Mainst Coughlin candidate for President, William Lemke. O'Donnell Ms asked ouster of Coughlin and six trustees of the Union for “wasteful K dictatorship” and “causing losses” in excess of $1,000,000. ■ Soybean Crop Jumps in Value ■■: 5 Z ‘ ... «.-.; ;,4 ■'■ ■ .. : ■....>■: ■■ ■ ’ ■•• -•■:* , '^'2\^ : j[ N'Vheun field TEaEjlgK - -f Jq. .' t -As: ■ JISRSb - I N DAK. 1 ienry Ford | I I I MINN. ~V I 5 DAK J f WIS. y r — -- [' Y 1 ) MIcH N£B \ IOWA \ T**^* —r i r I i ohio A |' "Soybean belt" (LL | J ‘ 1 KAN MO Recent action of the Chicago Board of Trade in admitting the soyean as a trading commodity officially calls attention to the growing importance of the crop Recognized almost 5.000 years ago by 'he Chinese as an important plant the soybean today ranks above rye and barley in importance to U S agriculture More than 6.000,111 acres were sown to soybeans in United States last year yielding iwturui® purposes, and as a valuable oil in many procuction processes. i

"'Hing In my state for twenty-five eenta a bushel. Corn for ten cents. Amt ajl other agricultural products i tn proportion. "Unemployed men by the tn itHon women and children crying lor bread. "Foreign commerce hail disup- ■ poured under Hoover. “Domeatic commerce at the low- ' est ebb in the history of modern America. Industry everywhere paralyzed. "Transportation disrupted, and all railroads in the ba.tids of receivers or in danger of bankruptcy ' "Ont in the heart of the agricultural midwest- a conservative farm section of our country tnolibs were stopping foreclosures. Judges in the lawful discharge of their legal duites wore threatened Roads were being blocked and barricaded; milk and other food products being -seized and dumped on tlie highways. "That is tlie place from whence we have come, my friends Does anyone want to return? "Where are we going? And what is it all leading to? "Well, let's see where we have gone, Wha.t is our condition today'' Not all that we plan or desire it to be we ate willing to admit. There is much to be done. Hut compared with what it was before we left the place where we were to come to the place where we are--it is inded Heaven on earth' "Agriculture is aga.in on the road to recovery. Prices approaching normal. Business of all kinds prosperous. The manufacturing industry booming The automobile industry at a peak even above 1 !«2't Commerce increasing Bank deposits mounting Ca.r loadings on the increase. The hungry, the destitute, the unemployed, being fed Income tax receipts and other federal revenues mounting beyond the estimate and expecta-

DECATI’R DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. OCTOBER 19, 193(5.

tion of tax authorities. "Such, my friends, is the place to which we have < oQe 'Today, and from now on to election time we may expect a campaign of condemnation and criticism directed against Pres! dent Hooseveit and hfs administration, hour after hour, day alter day. To be sure they will deal only in generalties and statements of fear. They dare not be speclfk Not a, speaker — from Landon and Knox down—has offered a constructive program simply criticism of details. Landon offers all the benefits of the new deal on the one hand with no cost or expense on the other. "It yon would know where we are going I'll tell you where to find the answer. You'll find it in the most partisan papers — the most viciously Republican newspapers that you can find. Any issue will do yesterday's, today's, tomorrow's. Do not look on the editorial page—you won't find it there. Read the new items. Take the front page. Road such items as: Automobile Industry to New Peaks.' Steel Mills Unfilled Orders Highest since 1929'." "Look at the financial pages, and see ‘Quarterly Dividend Increased 50c.' So and So Corporation Out of the Red.’ Extra Dividend by <:-neral Motors.' Profits Rest Since 1929.' "There, my friends, will you find the answer to our opponents question "Where are we going." Wo are going on to continued recoveriy ajtd prosperity under Roosevelt. "Yea, our opponents today are trying 'Where ire we going with all these tremendous expenditures of the people's money.; with all these millions of dollars of debt piling up?' 'Why,' they cry, 'your son and tny son. and their sons and their eons — generations to come, are going to have to pay this bill.’ "What do they mean 'Have to pay the bill?' "Remember this —not a dime of the taxes to pay this bill will be nssessed against your farm, your home, your stock of merchandis- . .your business building, your livestock. your personal or real property. "The Federal government in Washington does not get its revenues. its tuxes if you please, to pay its cost of expenditure* and the money it borrows, from your general property. General property taxation is left to state, county, school district and municipality. "Not a dime of the taxes yon pay on farm or home, that you pay into the treasurer's office of your county court house goes to Washington to run the Federal government. "All the expenditures all the money that is being spent by President Roosevelt — is from funds collected from income taxes against, individuals and corporations; inheritance and estate taxes —■ and gift taxes - against wealthy estates and millionaires; from excess profits and capital , stock taxes against corporations; excise and luxury taxes against liquor and tobaccos. "Talk about balancing the budget. I have been disgusted with this constant cry to balance th" Federal budget. How could anybody since 1933 have balanced it and met the obligation to th" (people- the unemployed—to those in need of relief. How could any ( state —any governor, if you please, have balanced his state budget if his own state had to meet the total cost and responsibility to feed the hungry, the needy, the unemployed And yet may 1 tell you with a pardonable pride that 1 balanced the budget ot the State of Kansas in 1931 and 1932 in those dark days of Herbert Hoover. and did not have a dime given t.i me by the Federal government in Washington. No $58,000,0011 were sent to Kansas for relief while 1 was governor to help me balance the state budget. "I admit that no governor of any state since 1933 could have balanced his budget without Federal aid. Not even Kansas, without the total ot over 450 millions of Federal funds that have poured in there in one farm or another. No state could have balanced its

GREAT DISASTERS IN AMERICAN HISTORY Cherry Mine Disaster, 1909 , ■ (— ar-—SBSB v "--~ I.JM 1 ktuikOSSai . gS fesSs Tw ■? I E&gfl ® iSiiw i 4 '> 800 I AMERICA’S WORST MINE DfSASTBR WHEN DROP • ' ffll < *' S’TtC i RED 4 CS^& E SET ' ~~ Ot u\-^ £o MINE®. MINS ai HUI Wio. EXTINGUISH the BLAZE. THE "GREATEST MOTHER”,.

budget If the federal government ■ had not given it 7o cents for every 30 cents they spent on unetnploy- , merit relief. But m that admission 1 insist that no governor—no Repblican 1 no Democratic governor—has the right to accept the federal funds • with oiten hands — all the time ' asking and accepting more for his 1 state — and at the suntc time to criticize the federal administration to criticize President Roosevelt i for not balancing Iho federal budget. "Destroying the American form • of government? Who's destroying ' it? Balancing budgets at the ex--1 pense of human right* is not saving governments. ' "Where are we going? Oh, I’ll ' tell you where we are going. We are going into a fight—a fight on ' November 3rd for America. To celebrate victory—victory for your government. Victory for you—for your fireside, your home, your ' family. "I hope the people will bear ' this iti mind when they step into ! the voting booths on November 3rd. I "I also hope you will bear this |in mind. If you want prosperity jto continue for the t.ext four I years; if you want the social and : economic security to which you 'are entitled; if you want the <loi ntwrtic and foreign affairs of this nation satisfactorily handled in I i the nut four years; if you want ; courageous leadership capable of overcoming every obstacle and every doubt, you will vote for the ■ I man whose ability, knowledge, _ experience, and purpose have been ‘.thoroughly tested and who ha.s ali ready exhibited those superior , ; qualities of judgment, understand- j I ing. and leadership which we expect of a man in the White House. 1 ask yon—what better man to finish this job than — Franklin I). i Roosevelt?" 0 ROOSEVELT C ARAVAN I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tees is to reach the ears of 4."db,060 voters before election day. Schedules are so arranged that ' a whole list of communities in a ! county may be visited in one day j 1 The Roosevelt Caravan, with its" .portable stage, up-to-the-minute | , sound equipment and coveredj l I trailer, represent* the 193*1 idea • in political campaigning, for it j: . ; ca,riles the message to i-ommuiii-j ties which heretofore have been . j overlooked in presidential cam- : , paigns. At all places where th- ' . 'caravan has stopped, crowds have; . been attracted at once am! listener.-- have been pleased with the: . first-hand political information' i dispensed. — 0 — (I. 0. I’. PLANS i I - CONTINUED FROM J* *GE 1 ? rally of the campaign. A parade | 1 is planned. Last Saturday. Raymond Spring- , I er, Republican candidate for gov-1 ernor, visited Decatur for a. few | : hours, going from here to Bluffton to attend a county rally. Mr. , - Springer is not scheduled for an t address here. NINETEEN DIE worst he had experietidecd in 30 ! years on the lakes. "The Sand Merchant is an open-] hatch ship." he said. "Waves were weighing down the sand, so I ordered everyone into the boats. I > did everything I could to prevent loss of life, but the sea was too heavy. "1 stood on the bridge and gave the signal for the boats to be, lowered. At tftc same time 1 jumped without a life preserver, just : before the ship capsized." The life boats were capsized in | the launching by 20-foot waves. o REBEL FORCES j? 1 ? 9. e . 9 ■?'?.*-1 since July 17 and—more important I prepared to send thousands of ■ men fro mthe Oviedo area to rein-1 - force the armies investing Mazlrid ]

KING RESENTS INTERFERENCE Edward VIII Regents Interference In Simpson Friendship London. Oct. 19—(VP)—King Edward VIII, pressed by influential advisers to Maintain more secrecy about h\s friendship with Mi*. Ernest Simpson, refused today to attempt to gag British newspapers' desiring to report th- American woman's divorce court proceeding* next week. It was understood that King's secretaries asked him whether lie would send confidential messages to editors of newspapers and news agencies, requesting them to ignore or soft-pedal the Simpson divorce case when it comes up at the Ipswich Assizes The King, however, rejected the proposal A source close to Buckingham palace told the United Press: "His majesty is opposed to appealing to the press to suppress news of the divorce suit when it is heard l in court because it might otherwise convey tlie impression that his majesty is involved in Mrs. Simpson's ' private affairs." Tlie king’s action was in line with his steady insistence that his friend-1 ship with Mrs. Simpson is nobody's bniness but his own, despite the' surge of gossip which has prompted individual members of parliament to consider making representations to him on tlie subject. Tlie seriousness will) which these men regard tlie association is made clear by their -knowledge that the King has angrily rebuffed respectful intimations already made by tinArthbishop of Canterbury, supreme head of the church of England, and Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. As part of thejr tentative plan, the members of parliament concerned are even talking about the possibility of persuading the venerable Archbishop to approach the kflig again. Gosship spread fa t through London about the divorci suit, brought by Mi Simpson against Ernest Simpson, former officer in the King's own household regiui'-ntc and the Gossip, if discreet, was unfavorable. The more -oberminded men in politic,-, and men and women in the more quiet circles of society, are understood to have been shocked at the increasing Frankness with which the King has shown hie liking for Mrs. Simpson, already, a

Rodeo Smile for Boy in ?f Lung” I w " WfegQMHMMI I W / . ' ' 1 i- | — Since Eeilevue Hospital inmates couldn’t attend the rodeo performances in Madison Square Garden, New York, the rodeo went to the hospital. Here the cowboys entertain little Johnnie Barron, who’s been in this iron lung on and off for ten years.

(divorcee in the United Stat-v. One story which is being related is that Hie king was seen in a west rend restaurant lately with hia anu i around Mrs, Simpson , o ■■ — Indiana Conference On Social Work Planned Indianapolis, Oct. 19—Plan* lor the forty-fifth annual session ot the Indiana conference on social work. ' to b- held in liidiaiiupolis NoveinI her 29th to December 1, have been - completed. II was announced at the offic of the state department of public welfare here today. Reprc-entative Joseph A Andrew Lafayet't . is president of this year - < onference. Andrew was a member of the legislative commit--11 -e which draftd the Social Security Act- enacted at the special session of tlie legislature early this year. Wayne Coy. acting adrntnistrator of lhe state department of public welfare, is secretary, and Murray A. Auerbach, executive secretary ot the Indiana Tuberculosis AasociaI tlon, is treasurer ot the Indiana i Conference. In addition to the usual program of nationally known speakers at the i g, neral sessions and division meeting-.-. a series of eight courses has been arranged to discus* questions of policy and technique under recognized leaders in various fields of social work. Four Crew Members Killed During Fire Palermo. Sicily, Oct. 19 -II I’) — Four Italian memheis ot' the crew .of the trans Atlantic liner Vulcania were killed during a fire which borke out in third cabin quarters early today. Two waiters were suffocated while fighting the flames lielow decks in the third cabin section ot tlie liner, which was enroute to New York A third man was asphyixated while taking a shower wheu fumes A Three Days Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomulsion. which goes right to the seat of the 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 authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your monev if vou are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now <Adv.)

penetrated th* bath. The fourth I victim ,wa« a member of the whip's t orchestra, reported arowned when i he became panlc-strlkeu and fell overboard. ■ —1 ■ ... ft— 111,1, ! Asks Supreme C ourt I Test Security Act !■ Wawhmgtou, Oct. 19— tUP)—The • supreme court todav was asked to . add a test of the New Social eecur- • ity act to its program for the iern> i when Edward F. McClennen. Boa- ■ ton, attorney, sough' to intervene I as a “friend of the court" in three ' New York State unemployment ini eurance law cases soon to be argui ed. i The court took no immediate ae-

c Movgan' Tn ins Back From Europe iWii 'to Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt Lady Furness Two of tne recent notable arrivals from Europe were Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, left, and her twin sister, Lady Furness of London, .shown.as they arrived ui New York from a aojoum abroad. Youthful Matron Dress with Surplice Bodice that Does Flattering Things for the Fuller Figure By Ellen Worth Here'- a grand w,>olen dreij tn /Tmg' T / disguise overweight without a f\ 4 L tell X velveteen ascot I | '/I - N. tucked in at the neck. J< -*,» ,7jV‘ - Dc-igne-1 along tailored sports / --x. \ lines makes it a dependable ><7 7 j I'. './-J..An;. *7' S' T --irpli. bo,': i- u /N. - 1 kind t-> the (tiller figure The j slender rkirt has an easib flared ' /b? **4* •at" 1 / hem. ..i T 4 » y ’ Rk/ Jacquard crepe, velveteen, rayon I •J * «. M : and wool novelties, etc., are other /y-~-1 *(??**] ' popular fabrics for this quickly 1 u I made dress. /"L I Style No 1850 is designed for (I ‘ * *• ' < 'l sizes 16 Is years, 36, 38, 40 42 I '» * 44 : 16 I vj requires 3’j yards of 39-inch ma- L • F ‘'K terial with vard of 39-inch con- I’ r■> hTy'l -'Q Our new Tall and Winter f v >lf. *i Fashion and Needlework Book I f * u<‘.4 out! It is just crammed full "t f “< /I (\ lovely dressmaking designs for I - , U A/\ i\ ) yourself and the children, cm- f * '* c* ' y c,‘ ' -/, broidery design-- for frocks and f ' 1 ~ fy" household articles and knitting f » f.- ' I r patterns of dresses, suits, sweat- f X C *»■ '»* / ers, el, .in your correct size ac- / * ♦ *** i eompanied bv knitting instntc- f "7 f k I tion- Thi< hook K worth mane I times its cost, which is only 10 / cents. Send for your copy today. I \ I Price of BOOK 10 cent'-. I / I / Price of PATTERN 15 cents I I \ (coin is preferred). / Izft ||/ NEW YORK PATTERN BUREAU, Decatur Daily Democrat, 220 East 42nd Street, Suite, 1110. NEW YORK. »•. V.

PAGE FIVE

1 non on McClennen’4 surprise move 1 It merely allowed him p;»rmt*.ston 1 to file a motion asking that the court consider the federal social security act. The move cam* wdhottf previotM warning at tlto clos- of a meeting t of the court during ’villch it rejected plea* that it review cult* iuvolv--1 ing two new deal law*, One of those 1 rejected m brief orders was the a'- ■ tack on the truth in Hecurltlo* net of J. Kwdard Jones, New York oil • participation certificate promoter. ‘ The other involved an attempt of the Alabama power co. and the Texas tttilltie* Co., to bring their atta, <>n the I’WA power loan and grant program before the tribunal at ome.