Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 1 March 1937 — Page 5
■Swain ■p.H WINDSOR ■n RETIREMENT ■ul-.nn A.MI Monihly Ex-KinK ■ - ■r‘' '-'rx; B IB l '" 1 h'us w'— ILI 1,1 * ' \\ ■ )llin ■ • ~.c twin r JIZ ■. month for hfo ■*-, ~..p..ru .1 ■ X .apn.- " M* . M-. W.. - *«*«• ■£« love the »6r«e■r ■>>"< "■ sa,is - BK;. ,h. ;.»• ■‘ ! ' ,;s Si '” p - nio-nii to marry w h-n IHthV'»' 1“ : ' P’lrolv !■. so -I’.O •'.• ' " |H 1,,j w ■ ■ ' '' : ' »■ >'• ' '* lk " ■ - |Kg’ [; h. ! -Vo ■ 1 IK . " " |Kn (»hw>. a porto‘l soxoral Kb- ' • '''! ' l,;v '' ■K ■!’■•■ I'-""'- ■' ••''• :ir : |K ;o hv< • oi.-i 1... tbo . as' . ■ ■ ■K;- . . .•’• :■ IL:•> 1. :.< ... K |M&iiSt.-u or Ih. Kia ra. ■H Reach Settlement Hm .
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9 SALE ■ I!LM'AR S Roy S. ■Johnson meer , Hktutur. Ind.
HKhirn your sale date early as 1 ■id booking sales every dad'. Rg. . McDaffee, 1 mile |Bu ot LaOtto on No. 3. |Bhr 4 — Paul Bohay & Son. 1 West and 1 mde North Nine ■> House, closing out. —Decatur Riverside Sale. - Dr. .iu.ii dt. 1 mile Boston. out sale. closing out Dairy cierd. —Austin M Mu hauls and Mauller. 5 miles east of on the Piqua road. —l. A. Mat tax. mile of Wren. Ohio. ( losing out 10—Hinton. Smalley ami r ; 5 mile South. 2 mile East Krgi>i.,,.,| Holstein 12 ~‘' lls - John Dailey. >, 4 North of Tocsin. ( losing out ■■• r. 13—Marion L. Eox. North ■jragton st.. Van Wert. Ohio. out farm sale. y le Allison. 1 mile ■* a «d 2 mile South of Edger- 1 Hampshire Hog sale. ■*r- 16- Asa McMillen, i, ot I’leasaut Mills, dosing |B ■> r li -George Scott, first farm U ll, closln S saltl- - Gardens, East Br~~-- yn^Bii <losing 0111 * ale
I WANTED B B«ef Hides. Sheep Pelts ■ and Tallow. te also buy Rags. MagaBon ’ Ai e i'' spapers ’ Scrap Ktbri /^ uto Radiators, ■L . les ’ Copper. Brass, Kan Ul ?’. and all grades of metals. I The Maier Hide low h Fur Co|L ~lonioe Phone 112
As Deputies Ousted Chicago Strikers With Gas < ■’.' ' a,' >■ yt Jl * * bmmib aRMw ■n i W ; Deputies load guns during "attack*’
Ninety bedraggled sitdown strikers were driven from the Chicago plant of the Fansteel Metallurgical Corp., after an army of 125 deputies had barraged them with poison gas bombs and hand
. the financial future of the Duke iof Windsor. an authoritative source said today, but details remain to be worked out. Basis for agreement was said to have been reached between the duke and his financial adviser. SirWaiter Monckton. who visited him at Enzesfeld. Austria, last week. Complexities in the duke s financial situation and not any otherdifficulties have delayed a settlement. ii was said. One of the matters on which Monckton consulted the duke, the i informant said, was some form of I guarantee that would protect'the royal family and the government I against any memoir writing, newspaper writing or appearances . itt public by reason of the duke s expected marriage to Mrs. Wallis Simpaon. , 0 HENRY HITE IS (CONTirntED FROM William. 'I liad and Mary Jo Hoffman of Chicago; Mrs. Virginia Hite-Atkinson, Robert Henry and Jane Hite of Detroit. One greatgrandchil, Kathelen Atkinson, of | Detroit, also survives. Mr. Hite ! was the last of seven children. He was a metnoer of the Methodist Episcopal church at Maples ' and the Masonic lodge of this city. Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock it the home. These services will be concluded with Masonic ceremonies. Burial will be made in the Maplewood cemetery. The body will be removed from the Black funeral home Tuesday morning and ma. be viewed from 2 o’clock Tuesday afternoon until time of the funeral. CHAPMAN TALKS ornMTTNI’Fn rm MT r>.-o: nv«-> do with it," Chapman said. Humor was injected into the program by "Duety" M-illor, well know n Ohio newspaper publisher and lecturer. Mr. Miller spoke during the afternoon session in a humorous and philosophical vein- He stated i he had no title for his talk. WAYNE COY IS .eOKTTNt’En FROM MK-.E ON'ED ward Brennan, state budget director, They said Cancelli and Coyhad been discussing a senate bill establishing merit standards for ' county welfare department employes when the fight occurred. They quoted Cancelli as urging that Coy use his influence to delay the bill. Witnesses agreed individually that Cancelli first struchk Coy in the eye, breaking i his glasses and then struck him in the stomach Caneella was fined in a Marion county court last year for attacking Tipton Blisli, reporter, whose newspaper had published records of the attorney's arrest several I years eat Her. F. D. R. PLANS (CONTINUKn Fltot.- fAQy QNWt. a later special message to Congress. Today Mr. Roosevelt scut to con- ' gress a special message remocmending enactment of a sugar | quota system and legislation to ■ restore effectiveness of the prinI ctiples of the Jones-Costigan law. Benefit Payments Washington, March 1 — (UF) — ! President Rooosevelt in a special message to congress today recommended legislation to continue the sugar quota system, together with provisions for an excise tax of .75 ‘ cent per pound of sugar, raw value, i estimated to yield to the treasury
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1937.
grenades. This International Illustrated News soundphoto shows deputie sas they were reloading their gas fun preparatory to renewing their "attack" on the plant.
about $ 100,000,0d0 annually. The president recommended that congress protect the right of both new and old producers of small acreages of sugar beete and sugar cane to share the benefits of the program, and suggested benefit payments for tami’y-sixe farms at rates Higher than those applicable to large operating units. President Roosevelt's message did not fix quotas tor the various producing groups, but recommended, in order to protect the expansion of markets for American ex- ! port*. ‘ That no decrease be made in the share of other countries in ' the total quotas." o SEEK INDICTMENT — (CtiNTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) deputies but no disorders were reported. In Waukegan, 111., the Fansteel Metallurgical corporation went in- ' to court to tight John L. Lewis’ CIO when mass picekting prevented preparations to reopen the plant where tear gas broke up a nineday sit-down strike last week. Company officials abandoned a plan to send 100 non union workers into the plant at dawn to inspect and repair equipment. On the Detroit strike front United Automobile Workers prepared a four-point bargaining program ; for submission to the Chrysler ' corporation while General Motors; ' and union represiTitatives strove to conclude their post-strike negotiations. Father Charles E. Coughlin, opI posing "needless strikes" in a J radio talk, called on workers to ; petition congress for a permanent | "living wage." The Douglas Aircraft corporal ion's plant at Santa Monica, Cal., prepared to re-open with about halt of its 6,000 workers at their jobs while the others remain in picket ■ lines outside the factory. Across the Canadian border more.
Film Beauty Executed as Spy? / ~ sE - Clf- ' »»■*=- * jr —sSfef x X■' , % . — Koi.ita Diaz Death before a firing squad after a hasty Spanish rebel court-martial which found her guilty as a spy "as reported to have been the fate of Rosita Diaz. Spanish screen beauty who has made several films ia Hollywood. I ( f
| than 1,500 workers in at least 27 Ontario factories struck in response to a call by the furniture workers' union. Nine Toronto factories were affected. At Minneapolis prospects were i called bright for early settlement of the Northern States Power i company strike at Groton, Conn., ( rounding ouf a full week, appeared ' stalemated as union demands for recognition as an exclusive bargaining agency went unheeded. o Wrecked Plane Pound, live Persons Killed Sydney, New South Wales, Mar. ' 1. — (U.R) — Fve persons, including I William Fountain, New York archiI tect, were killed when the missing : Brisbane-Sydney mail airplane • crashed into the McPherson mountains on Feb. 19, it was reported I loday. Searchers found two pass- • engers alive. Wreckage of the airplane, last I seen at Gladstone, on the Macleary i 1 river, about 3:30 p. m. on Feb. 19, was discovered Sunday by a settler named O'Reilly. i; Knox County Reports Gambling Syndicate Vincennes, Ind.. Mar. I.—4U.RF-A 1 court of inquiry will be held next ; week to investigate the activities of an out-of-state gambling syndicate reportedly operating in Knox ' j county, Prosecutor Wayne Combs, l said today. Combs charged the syndicate operating with a tew well-paid agents ' has made a "mass intallation ’ of j slot machines in the county. "Through one suiTlle device or anothej this syndicate has planted \ gambling machines in many honest and respectable business places in the county," Combs said. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
TRAFFIC KILLS FIVE PERSONS More Than Score Reported Injured In Week End Crashes Indianapolis, Mar. I.—<U.R> Traffic accidents in Indiana claimed the lives of five persons over the week enj and resulted in injuries to more than a score of others. Herman Dowd. 25, a soldier at Fort Benjamin Harrison, was killed almost instantly Saturday night when struck by a hit-and-run motorist on state road 67 near the army post. Dowd was the 36th victim of traffic accidents in Marion county this year. Mrs. Anna Hood, 59, and her son Calvin, 13. of Niles, Mich., were killed in an automobile accident on state road 6, six miles south of LaPorte yesterday. The husband. Harry Hood, and three other sous. Alvin, 18; Ray, 20, and James, 16, were taken to Holy Family' hospital at Laporte suffering minor injuries. The accident occurred while the
"****w. C 3 f*’ -i '?fay¥/ave l/ie Figures on this sales-speedometer show . 1/ a interesting facts on comparative busi- ftt/lcl IfOlx ness pick-ups. Jn the city of Decatur, people spend more than $564,000.00 annually for automobiles and accessor- " ies. While in the state of Indiana, the same number of people spend $206,494.00. Note the difference—s3s4,so3.oo. Here's Decatur's great extra buyingpower for automotive products. Buying-Power that's ■" —» '■■■" growing greater daily! ... . - s R J Annual retail sales in 'll <e’ A Decatur average In Decatur, the opportunity for selling cars ex- || / '■ -Fw/fßr citcqq n ora nn tends far and beyond your display room. Use big 11 $ 176,33 P<?r P er! ’ on - newspaper advertising—the city-wide shopping win- an amount $235.33 dow into which everybody looks. , . , /•* wRr higher than the $241.00 state average. Not in many years has the market for better pro- ..Jk ™., . .. ducts been so unlimited. You need only the sustain- i >' ed drive of steady newspaper advertising—to put your \ you’re doing business new model merchandise into high sales speeds — and L, % . keep it there. ,n a clty of supcr ’ (, 1 sa l es - Buyers have i the money — and you This is the second advertisement in a series to in- 1 have the cars. Newsform advertisers on Decatur’s Buying-Power in im- I minor uHvorHuimr portant classifications of business. Read and keep - these advertisements. *4--• your sales self-starter. Decatur Daily Democrat Circulating in the local trading territory.
family wuh enroute home from Phoenix, ArU., where Mrs. Hood had gone tor her health. The Hood car strucß the rear of a truck. Mrs. Susan E. Tilson, 64, wife of I Prof. Lowell M. Tilson, head of the music department of Indiana State Teachers college, Terre Haute, was ■ killed Instantly yesterday when hurled from an automobile in a collision at a street intersection. Prof. Tilson, driver of the car, and Mrs. Lawrence E. Eberly, passengers, were Injured in the crash. 1 The Tilson car was struck by one driven by Harold Certain, 19, West Terre Haute. James Boyd, Spicelantl, and Marshall Brown. 21, Straughn Station, were in city hospital today suffering from injuries received in u ’ truck-automobile collision on National road Lewisville yesterday. Lawrence Dill, 23, Logansport, was seriously injured in an automobile collision at a street intersection here last night. Durward Rose, 51, Logansport, Dill's uncle, escaped unhurt. James Trimbal, 49, East Chicago, was killed and Curti Leslie, 31, seriously injured when their automobile skidded out of control and ’ overturned in a ditch near Hammond. i Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
; Berne Physician Slightly Injured [ Dr. Amos Reusaer, Berne pbysl- . cian. was slighlty hurt In an auto , aeoldent Saturday evening, when i the car in which he was riding, i and driven by Miss Eleanor Dro, t also of Berne, crashed into a large truck on the highway south of that , town. Dr. Reumer was thrown under . the auto and sustained a severely ) bruised chest. Miss Dro escaped InL juries. The car was almost entirely demoliehed. o - ■— Safe blasted. $1,200 Loot Obtained Sunday Fort Wayne, Mar. I.—<U.R>—A cir- • cular, tubular safe, containing sl.- • 200 was blasted from its concrete ■ base at the Eckrlch Packing comI pany yesterday and carried away. WORK STARTED ’ f -SQy.-!.yJ*-- 1 -! ( f ’ N B - . the highest standards of sanita- [ tion, recently promulgated by state . and federal health departments. Increase Employment The larger production will mean II a greater market for cream for
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dairymen In this locality, It was pointed out today. When completed it will l>e necessary to employ at least 20 more persons. It Is estimated that remodelling of the buntter plant and new construction work will require about three months time. The Cloverleaf Creameries, Inc., is now the largest single churning unit in the middle west. American type cheese is manufactured here and distributed by the KraftPhenix corporation, largest cheese distributors In the country.
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 Set relief now with Creomulslon. erious 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 Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulslon and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulslon right now. <Adv.)
