Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 279, Decatur, Adams County, 24 November 1936 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

- niiiMwti ■ ««■— ■»—»i ■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by ?HI DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. fetor-ad at the Decatur. Ind., Post Office aa Second Class Matter. I. H. Heller President .V R Hotthouse, Sec y & Bua. Mgr. Utck D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: dingle copies * .02 line week, by carrier .10 Dne year, by carrier 5 00 One month, by mail .25 Fhrea months, by mall 1.00 gii months, by mall 1 75 [)ne year, by mail 3 00 Jne year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted art within a radius of 100 miles. Elsewhere 33.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER, Inc. |ls Lexington Avenue, New York. 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Defiles. Get your name on the Red Cross, list. The Red Cross membership renewal campaign will close this week and those in charge will be greatly disappointed if we don't go over the top. Mrs. Wally Simpson, by preparing things "tit for the king to eat" with her own hands is being followed in a rush by the socially elite of London, which is another feather in her crown. Your last call to be a Red Cross member this year. If you don't do your part, the world soon knows it. If you do, its easier all through life to get along. This is really a great cause and deserves your earnest support. Farmers who raised beets this year are very well pleased with the results. The average is nearly ten tons to the acre and the price will be good. It's a splendid '•rop to rotate with and should be increased next year over this. This is that Indian summer you have been waiting for. Any way its probably as close as we will get to it this year. Prognosticators, say that the coming winter will be longer and colder than last. Well it will be interesting to see how that can be. —— _— Indiana and Purdue fought it out to a tie and the crowd got so many thrills they are still playing the game over and over with each side using “ifs" to show how they should have won. The game at Notre Dame also gave the fans plenty of opportunities to yell, but the Irish took an early lead and were never headed. Let's plan tLo most convenient parking lot in the country as a builder of good will for the com-. munity. It will cost a little something but it will pay for itself many times over. Naturally people trade where they can be best cared for. A parking lot with rest rooms and other conveniences would draw hundreds of new shoppers here. When one crosses the equator on his first trip, he is given a razzing by those who have been there before. Today President Roosevelt was accused by the mythical Davy Jones of negligence because CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For exampie: 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.

he failed to carry Maine and Ver- , mont in the recent election. You my fee! sure that none of those aboard had a better time than the President. t A reception, banquet and dance in honor of Governor Paul V. Met Nutt Will be held at the Claypool. Hotel in Indianapolis, Tuesday 1 night, December Sth. Plans are being made to serve 2,800 at the I banquet Governor McNutt will I make the principal address Mrs * Marie Zaharakos, Room 206, StateI i house, is in charge of the ticket ' bale. The price of the tickets is ' 32.5 u • ach. Governor McNutt will I retire from office January 11. Drivers of automobiles are beading for some legislative regufitions that may not be pleasant, due to the fact that so many are heedless and carelesss. The list of casulattes this year will far exceed , any previous year and the report for Indiana is particularly startling. Some regulations seem neces sary and Governor-eleet Townsend has announced he will give this problem some real attention. After all there is nothing as important as the lives of the citizens. Thursday Is Thanksgiving and in every home, the preparations are now under way. It's the season for family reunions, for happy hours, for an hour of prayer in which thanks are given to Him who makes possible the good times, the good crops, the good of the nation and the world. In this country it should be a happy day but that is not true in many of the countries where war is imminent and where revolution and disorder I and unhappiness is apparent on every hand. More than six hundred million . dollars in dividends have been declared the past week by large companies. due perhaps to the new ■ law which., makes it necessary to pa-y tax <>n reserves. Whatever the cause it is certainly a fine thing to get this money in circulation and as a result it's expected that Christinas buying will be increased at least twenty per cent. It is the opinion of experts that before the end of the year, divi- . dends will exceed four billion dollars. Some one seems to have had an idea of how the proposed new law will work. On every hand the evidence is indisputable that America is iu the midst of an unprecedented prosperity. that recovery is here and I that the Roosevelt program for increasing and dibUibuting the purchasing power of the masses has been successful. Even through the smoked spectacles of the pessimist, these tacts are true and it will be a long time before we hear the distorted complaints of the political office-seekers. A new era of good feeling has come to America and Indiana, thanks to the main-, tenance of sound government, is prepared to enjoy every day of it. —o - # STAR SIGNALS | -BY- 1 OCTAVI NE '! For persons who oelleve that »«• man destnly is guided by the planet, •he daily a noted astrologer. In addition to information of general interest, It outlines nrormatlon <-f special interest to persons born on the designated November 25 Those affected today by the plan- ■ < tary influences are likely to have > oirthdates falling between March 21 and April 20 General Indications Morning—Bad. Afternoon— Rash. Evening—Very good. | The day fe unstable until the ’ evening. Conditions look optimistic ' ! late at night. I Birthdate If your bir'hdate falls on Nov. 25 you should be a 'over of the fine I arts and make a goal architect or I, engineer. ( June and September. 1937, should ■ steady your life and you should [.make progress in a conservative way. Eklerly people and old reliable ! concerns should become prominent ! Danger; avoid rash actions or I rpeech from March 15 through .May ■ 12 aud again from Aug'iet 10 I through 19, 1937.

Black Snowball! OHB y MHMy

, Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the [ Test Questions printed on Page Two 1. Turkey. 2. Clinton. lowa. 3. A fertile spot s-urrounded by desert. 4. Golf. 5. Soo to rhyme with zoo. 6. Bull dogs. 7. Dairy husbandry. 8. No. 9. German painter. 10. Good Friday. . ° TWENTY YEARS ; AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat F lie , November 24. 1916.—Mrs. Fayej Smith Knapp returns from three weeks trip during which she gave reading "A Tale of Two Cities ' in twenty high schools. Friends are boosting H. L. Con- ’ ter for the Democratic nomination for secretary of state in the next

F'lames Send Three to Death in Atlanta Blaze a * ■: ■" ■ WdfiKryMi I IF 1 < ? r M»y Sim *WI MH ' z4r OR JLMMp MM r ' ““ r “- These graphic ifiu'tos. t*o of the most spectacular eever made ot a fire, were taken as flames ravish.xl a five-story building iu'fhe heart of Atlanta, sending three to then death and causing proirerty damages estimated to exceed a quX'ter of a million dollars As firemen struggled to get rhe b'we under euntrol. leit their ieilow Uie-lighter- 'recovered the body >f B.tty Ma tin. who together with her fiancee. M f. Evans, went to their -death ou .lhe.eve of their wedding-when trapped on the fifth floor where they were ( shopping for a radio to furnish v £heir uew home.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1936.

campaign. Miss Grace Coffee makes grade of 100 per cent in penmanship examination and is given a threeyear license. Mrs. F. M Schirmeyer gives description of Grand Caynon at the Euterpean meeting. G. A. R. presents picture of their members to this office. Henry Thomas ships lO.OfiO John Adair eigars to Currie, Nebraska. o- * • Household Scrapbook | By Roberta Lee . — ■■ —♦ Breakfast Food A good breakfast food can be made by drying some stale bread thoroughly, browning it in the oven, then grinding it very fine with the food chopper or the rolling pin. Serve with milk or cream. Cut Lemons Cut lemons can be preserved by smearing the cut surface with either the yolk or the white of an egg, then setting it aside to dry. Making Buttonholes An improved method of making buttonholes, that will outwear the ordinary buttonhole many times, is

[to baste a strip of cloth on the underside of the hem. then cut through both the strip and the : hem. Cut away the surplus strip. o Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE » • Q. Would it be good form to be[gin a letter "My dear Sir" and [close it with "Cordially yours?" A. No. The beginning and the [ending of a letter should show the same degree of cordiality. "My [dear Sir” is formal, and it would be better to close with "Respectfully yours.” Q. What age should a young girl be to have "Miss" before her name on her cards? A. Sixteen. Q. When there is but one girl attendant at a home wedding, is she called "the maid of honor"? A. Yes. r 'W;H Eczema. Athletic Feet. Pimples. All Skin trouble. Try B. E. Ointment 50c Box AT YOUR DRUGGISTS

CHICAGO LABOR ( CON TI Nt lED FWOM PAGE ONgL union were believed responsible for many of the violent outbreaks between rival factions of truck and automobile drivers. His stormy, career as an organizer apparently, was broken with election of Thom- j as J. Courtney as state's attorney at the time when powerful gangs ruled Chicago's underworld Courtney, in his successful cam-i paigu to drive gangsters from Chi

I c PHOENIX HOSIERY' I ■ * ■ i i r~v / i //n i :ml/A "w 11118 4 : thread cl <» I W W ever y The stock- 1 Wfe v * s enouji I ■fe Ajt' QHH t° b 6 Jittering yeti I W 1 wear. i I W t AMI W Wh ' lc '7 "I ? I W QB a ‘ :; I ■ at a bargain. | I % 1 t°° — f° r £erv ' ce ®i I A** At ’ sports. S • See the New Autumn Shades. HARDWARE FURNISHING! - — NEVER A VALUE SUCH AS THIS-A BEAUTIFUL Bed Room Suite i \ Selling for I'M'- WALNUT FINISH. ( ONSM'ING OF PIECES. FINE CONSTRI ( Tl"\ 1 Q UALLY STYLED. A BEAUTY IN ANY HJJ V™ «..> _ YOUR INSPECTION U ILL BE MOST WEM’’ 1 Beautify the Kitchen r - * ° i ’ 11nJ fl I OPEN I I Er" 1 * EVENINGS I B 11 ' —Z;Fi ■ 41 P(jr I NAPPANEE and BOONE KITCHEN Newest sty les . . variety of ■ Breakfast Sets to n ’ alt colors . . . convenient and .be th ,n c in any 9 I Q kitchen "M *1 Stucky 0 Co Monroe, Ind.

cago, declared Galvin's anion an "outlaw." Detectives and state's attorneys officers broke up dozens of meetings at which Calvin ati tempted to carry out his organiza pion plans. Galvin walked down Weal Madi I son street last night apparently I without knowledge he was "markfed" for death. An automobile sped up behind him. slowed down and i approached the curb. There were i two men in the front seat and two in the hack seat. Shotgun muzzles

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