Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 4 February 1937 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DAILY DEMOCRAT DECATUR Published Every Evening Except Sunday by .'HE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter.’ J. H. Heller....- President R. Holtbouse, Sec'y. & Bus. Mgr. Pick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies 1 .02 One week, by carrier.— .10 Dne year, by carrier 0.00 One month, by mall — -35 Three months, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 Dne year, by mall 3.00 Vne year, at office— 3.00 Prices quoted are within a radius of 100 miles. Elsewhere >3.50 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 Dallies. Renew your subscription. We need you and you want to know what's going on in this little old world of ours. It may take several years but eventually the water in this country will be controlled so that disasters such as the middle west is now having, cannot be repeated. Hope some one suggests to the principals in the big motor car strike that it will be better for! every one to get together and go; ahead making 1937 the best year in history. They can do it it they! will and every one prolit accordingly. s Whatever punishment is given those who loot the flooded territories will be too light. Officers have been instructed to "shoot to kill" and it will certainly not be a safe pursuit for those inclined to enrich themselves on the misfor-l tunes of others. Perhaps the parents of that little nine-year-old girl down in Tennessee who married a man twenty thought he might get away if they waited until the girl was old enough and he had forty acres and a thousand dollars, which they say is not to be sneezed at in the mountains. You will do us a favor of course: by renewing your mail subscription to the Daily Democrat but you will also be getting more than your! moneys worth — the news of the world condensed so you can read it easily, the state news and the local happenings—all for less than a penny a day. Please do it now. Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh are discovering that the only way they can stay out of the limelight is to remain hidden. They started on a little trip to Cairo, Egypt, and landed in Rome to be met by a crowd of thousands who gave them! so much attention that the government had to issue an order that they be permitted to go about unmolested. America is not the only place where hero worship is a fad. Decatur Homesteads is now a part of Decatur, adding some 356,-, Odd to the tax duplicates and giving the citizens of that very beautiful addition all the rights and privileges that go with the munici-; pality, including rights to utilities, lire protection and schools. We extend a hearty welcome to these folks whom we have felt all the CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: 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.

'time were a part of the city and jwe are happy the legal action 1 necessary to make it a matter of I record has been completed. L j Governor Townsend will do every t thins humanly ami icgaitv poßlUd* i to relieve the sufferers in the flood 1 districts of Indiana. For the next I six months, a force of men will Ibe used in aiding in clearing the J debris and making the homes fit I'to live in. Os course it will cost J' some money and there will be J objections but a governor who >'hasn’t the love of his fellow men 1 at heart wouldn't be able to do 1 this difficult task very well. Remember the flood situation, while slightly improved, is still serious. Do you realize that in Paducah, Ky., and Cairo, 111., almost every citizen has been driven from home, that it will require i weeks and months to repair the damage, that In several cities and ' some of these iu Indiana, buildings j are collapsing as the waters re-1 cede. No difference how much , money is given in this campaign it will be insufficient to meet the needs and the demands. Roger Babson says that William B. Wilson was the greatest labor . secretary this nation ever had and ' he never failed to get warring factions together. He always found I some place on which the representatives could agree and worked from that point to complete agreement. I Labor difficulties are largely emo-! I tional and must be solved without i i hurting the feelings or pride of' | either side. To settle a strike j : without both sides satisfied is not to settle it permanently. — = The response to the appeals for funds to aid those in the flood dis- ■ tricts continues in Adams county .in a very satisfactory way. Withi out any blare of trumpets and just I , ! because our people are of the neigh- - i borly brand, the money has rolled l ! in from every section and is con-1 tinuing. President Wai Wemhoff, and Secretary Anna Whines have . a right to feel very proud over the . splendid showing made by their organization which has acted so i i quickly and so euiciently in this time of need. ! —-== The strike situation in Flint and I i Detroit does not improve as rapid-1 ly as the public wants it to, al- j though officials seem to be doing ' every thing in their power. The decision of Judge Gadola was not a surprise for few can see the I rights of the strikers to refuse to I leave the plants, regardless of the justice of their demands. The difficulty seems to be that those who are trying to arbitrate are trying to prove their contentions by facts and figures while leaders of the opposing factions can only be reached by appeals to the heart. — The "good neighbor’’ spirit; shown by Governor M. Clifford! Townsend as he has meted out re-1 lief to the flood sufferers recalls to [ mind a speech he delivered at Marion last July on the occasion of a homecoming or notification celebration held for him there. In i that address he stressed the need of more friendliness, more neigh- ! borliness in government. “Let us hope,” he said, "that people in other states will think of Indiana as the Home of Good Neighbors." And iu less than three weeks after, his inauguration. Mr. Townsend j had the opportunity to make good his wish. He has displayed the spirit of the “good neighbor" in working day and night to alleviate I the suffering of thousands of home-! less. He had said at Marjon: "Good neighbors aid others in the lime of stress.” Governor Townsend has become Indiana's first Good Neighbor. What greater tribute could be paid to him? 0 i Seasickness "Cure” Offered , London. —|(U.R> -—“Suggestion" is . the best cure for seasickness, Dr. ’I A. Rose, who has crossed the AtI lantic 80 times and survived cy- - 1! clones In the Caribbean, declares. ! I "Suggestion will cure seasickness > where all drugs have tailed," be ■ says iu an article iu the British ; I Medical Journal.

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* Answers To Test Questions Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two * 2. Daisy. 3. No. 4. it lies partly in southcentral ! Virginia and partly in north-central ' North Carolina. . 5- Famous English painter. 6- Andorra-.'a-Vieja, capital of the | Republic of Andorra. 7. Alezandre Gutstave Eiffel. 8. Princeton and Rutgers in 1869. 9. Mount EverestI 10- An imaginary line roughly fol--1 lowing the 180th meridian at which dates change on Trans-Pacific voyages. 0 - Modern Etiquette | By ROBERTA LEE | •— ♦ Q. When one is leaving, after making a call, is it all right to say, “I am afraid I have stayed too long”? A. No. Remarks such as this show self-consciousness. It is much better not to over-stay the required period; then, even the I thought of an apology will not ocj cur. Q. Is it all right to ask for a second helping of soihe favorite dish at a luncheon? A. It is better not to do so, as I probably the hostess has planned j for only one hleping. This would 1 cause embarrassment to both. , Q. Please suggest a few gifts : of paper to give a couple who are observing their first wedding anniversary. A. Books, stationery, subscripI tions to magazines, playing cards, i , | TWENTY YEARS | AGO TODAY | From the Daily Democrat File | ' « g February 4, 1917 was Sunday. o ♦ ! Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee • —: « Shoe Lining When the shoe lining inside the i heel wears through, cut a piece > of adhesive tape, warm it slightly, , and press firmly over the worn part. The Clothesline A dirtydorhcsline can be clean- ; ed by wrapping it around the washI board and scrubbing with a brush i and soapsuds. Storing Eggs Eggs can be packed for keeping as follows: Dip the eggs in a solution of two ounces gum arabic to one pint cold water. Let them dry, and then pack in powdered, wellburned charcoal. A Sewing Hint When stitching silk, or any other very thin goods, on the eewing machine, place a sheet of white paiper beneath the material and It will.pre- . vent drawing or -puckering. The pa- | per can be easily removed when

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 193/.

I the work is finished. Cooiing Hot Dishes A dish of any hot food can be cooled quickly by setting it in a pan I of cold water, to which a good meaI sure of salt has been added. ,I Insect Bites Lemon juice applied to the bites of insects often relieves the irritation. i. 0 : —~ Reich Bans Stamp Export Berlin.-<U.R)- Postage stamps arc money and therefore cannot be exported, the German foreign ex1. change control bureau has decided. I Consequently, it is illegal to use I them to evade the foreign ex--1 change law. whereby the ban on ! the export and import of German '! currency is enforced.

CYCLONE Laying House Supplies Modernize your poultry house by equipping it with modern and convenient Cyclone Products. a ■ Longfellow Watercr—- ■ This waterer is especially designed to give ample , watering space, permit full use of floor space, prevent floor dampness and allow for either pail or water system filing. The body is made of heavy galvanized iron, the legs of angle iron and the hinged grill securely welded of No. 6 galvanized wire. Waterer may be purchased with or without heater. Longfellow Feeder — | The Cyclone Longfellow Feeder is the result of years of experience in the poultry supply manufacturing. It is built to give a life-time of satisfactory feed and labor saving service. The body is constructed of heavy 26 gauge galvanized steel, the roost-proof hinged grid of heavy galvanized wire. Sturdy legs support the feeder 18 inches above the ground, which gives the fowls use of entire spaoe under feeder. Can be had in 4 ft., 5 ft., and 8 ft., lengths. REASONABLE PRICES Lee Hardware Co i"

GOURI HOUSE Petition Filed A petition was filed by the defendant for a judgment on the demurrer in the temporary injunction and damages suit brought by Aloysius Geimer against the Central Sugar i company and the Krick-Tyndall and company. Estate Cases An application was filed by the administrator of the estate of Mary Voglewede to pay\the premium on the surety bond, amounting to 385. ! It was approvedThe current report was filed, examined ana approved and the trust

continued in the estate of Chauncy Reinhart. A petition to make a partial distribution was filed, submit ted and sustained and order'*. . bond was ordered filed by tie , mlntatrator de bonis non, in the, amount of 3-’.OOO. Appearance Filed An appearance was filed by l. Lutz for the plaintiff in the salt to t estore sanity brought by Louis J'--tens against J. Gordon Meeker. guardian, and

PANTS • PANTS - PANTS ■ PANT SALE I .jpr| 767 pair of Work and Dress Pants on sale staniw B Friday. Feb. This sale includes our regular B a,,(l a ,ar R e purchase of salesman’s samples, Dress Pants are Wool and Woo! Mixed. ■ $6.00 Trousers, now B $5.00 I rousers, now ■ f FB, * r ° user!s ' n ° w 1 WWW Hi Trousers, now §3.33 ■ f ® $ 1 r(,users ’ now §9.93 ■ 11 $2.95 Trousers, now $2.43 ■ | ||.J $2.50 Trousers, now §9.13 1 WV SPECIAL! 29 pair Good Dress Trousers. 1 |h| ■ values to $4.50 n)l' UU E WORK TROUSERS «<»- V8 Lo "« ies « ■ ductions. Now is the ■ Heavy Sanforized Whip Cord Si-95 time to buy those school ■ Heavy Weight Moleskin sl-69 skesVrom FA I Striped W ork Trousers $1.49 28 t 0 S()C ■ Heavy Weight Covert sl-9 No c h ar g e f or I Heavy Weight Cotton Pants, semi-dress SI.OO alterations. B Vance & Linn | Attention Wise Buyers! I FURNITURE AtlFebruary Prices! [ ®rirwi t fl § MMfl Wo HU W|l i; MF' I ■ I m 111 W SAVE MONEY H Living Room Suite 4-Piece Bed Room Suite Breakfast Sets Nn4“ira Inner-Spring 9x12 Axminster Rugs We are open every „ cqQi evening. Il will pav l e lt base Rug, 9x12 S* 9 ’ inS n dr ! ve Electric Washer s33* i and buy from our n &n™ < ’ rt “'* !nl ° f Circulating Heaters S 2M " — Kitchen Ranges Stucky & Co Menroe, Indiana 6 Milcs so Uth o f Decatur •" hi ~

I here from Jay county. Real Estate Transfers First Joint Stock Land Bank to; Central Sugar Company, 757 acres. i in Adams county for 360,275. Martin Reiiiking to Martin Sch-j Iroeder et ux, 150 acres in Preble, i tov-nshlF /or 311.000. Joseph A. Schwartz to David L. ’ j Schwartz, 80 acres iu Wabash twp. ’ for 31. G. Remy Bierly to Florence Marie I Hierly, 8u acres in Hartford twp. for

Klor '"*'' ■ in. , „ twp. for 31. i Trarie ln a Gcod Town'_ l ■ ■■■ ■. 3B I I s: ‘> "The M Wf | | endorsed by svivn)) . |,rl ' ,)l,l >rale.| l, y bCjL