Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 63, Decatur, Adams County, 15 March 1937 — Page 5
JjJ A WILL JmlO COLLEGE Manner O' JWoHeHd U.iseonI'niversit v „,. ■*;,. •.' ,A 1 jHU--w .i, W. office H< »ai<i he ■■ ..■ kuw' 1 -’’ he!;’; HH'L' in**' - ' ■•■■■•'! Vr.f mKe ■ ■ ■: ;•■ fSW ' ■ ' '" <i'M’ ■»mi ■ - ■ ftbw’y «k." ' ' 1 r .- :*•' .■ secrets |Sh)l( PAINS ■ ' ; h er M Drug stores. «®oni?hi & Tuesday flßkniia- Mu.'icd! Corned} ' ■ “WHEN YOU’RE J| LN LOVE” jß&ice Moore. ( ar\ (.rant. Cartoon. 10c-25c I Thurs. -- Merle Oberon. » 1 'e-ne ' Beloved Enemy." show Wednesday at 6:30. —o—c— Sunday—Marlene Dietrich. Boyer. "GARDEN OF in Technicolor. I <®l> Jfonight & Tuesday See It Agam and Again! B'AN FRANCISCO” •‘■'Caoie. Jeanette MacDonald. ■ ,T' cer T racy. Jack Holt. ■ 150 ~ Cartoon. 10c-20c ■ , o—o Bl! S c V ~ A new Hop-A Long ■*’«y Super Western! ■ 'BORDERLAND" BfcX S o ‘" 1 w ay ~ 2 Fe ature Hits! ■ T R ° £ F GOES TO COLLEGE" y Wanted to Marry." ICORT ■Tonight & Tuesday ■ Mmes cagney I “GREAT GUY” Coined}' and News. lOc-25c Bori« k *•*'• - Thur. “CHAiTat _. w amer Oland AT THE O p ERA" , Friday *”'nee r Chance N ' te " -10 c _ FtWay starting at 1:30. loi>iinj_ —— '■The P r l °’ Brie n hth 6yh i , Great O'Malley" ' J a»on, Humphrey Bogart
the Chicago city club mwl Los AnKeleH city club, commissioner of the Loa Angeles department of , witter imd power, and president of > the International Association of , City Managers. Wisconsin regents hesitated to approve Dykstra at first because of ; * this alternating in educational and ! administrative work. They empha-i sized the need of scholarship over administrative ability in their list of qualifications, but withdrew ■ their objections when they heard of Dkystra's desire to resume edu- j rational work Dykstra announced his accept- ' ance after conferring with regents Harold M. Wilkie and Clough Oates and John Callahan, superintendent of public instruction." CHURCH SURVEY (CONTINUED FRoy PAGE ONB) this week In active chaifte of the direction of the survey. Dr. Kernahan will arrive in De I catur Sunday morning and will take care of the Sunday schedule, ; which will be announced later. He will personally direct the visitation evangelism campaign next week. , ! - o - HUNDREDS DIE i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i war material, allegedly of Italian manufacture, sent to Madrid for exhibition. Loyalist observation planes reported that the Aragon road from Madrid to Soria, north of Trijtieque. was teeming with ambulances transporting nationalist wounded to field hospitals in the rear. Government sources estimated that more than 700 Italians had • been killed or wounded in the three days fighting since the loyal-1 ists turned back the onrushing i 1 nationalist columns at the very outskirts of Guadalajara, last .Ma- s drfd outpost on the northeast. Thirty-one more Italians were repotred taken prisoner on the - Guadalajara front, on the north, in ■ official army messages. Biarritz. France. Mar. 15 -<U.P) The loyalist government radio at Valencia asserted today that gov-; ’ eminent troops had captured Cor-1 1 doba. capital of Cordoba Province ■ in southern Spain. There was no , confirmation from any other ' source. r | 0 1 BANGS BOWS TO 8 (CON FROM ' >NF » I consumers are disconnected.” ! Discoiuiection of 580 residential ■ customers and 92 commercial users may string out over 20 days, under Bangs instructions to the board of public works. It marks the first actual con- ! cession by the one-time professor ! of international law in his five-year | fight with the power company, launched in editorial columns shortly after he obtained a local newspaper, the Huntington News. Under the most trying circumstances he had carried on the tight. When power was cut off to his newspaper "he had the type set by hand and Jacked up an old automobile to provide power for the press. Elected in 1934 on a platform pledging a municipal electric utility, Bangs had workmen stringing lines within two hours after he took office January 1, 1935. A temporary injunction the power company obtained that same as- ! ternoon sent Bangs to jail for 101 I days in the summer of 1935, from which he finally was released byposting appeal bond to the supreme I court. I —: o—- •> * Adams County Memorial Hospital I* ♦. Dismissed Sunday; Howard Cash rout 1, Pennville; Edward Ringger, i , route 1 Berne. Diemiseed this afternoon Mrs. Leland Kay. route 6, Decatur. Admitted Sunday morning: Miss Ruth Elzey, Monroe street; Herbert | Lyons, Pleasant Mills; Mrs. Robert Lehman, Berne; Mrs. Christina Harb, Rockford, Ohio. Admitted this morning: Otto Ehlerding, route 1. PUBLIC SALE 80 - Acre Farm - 80 | The Albert Pontius Farm 1 mile West and *4 mile South of Geneva, Ind., on Saturday, March 20 at 1:30 P. M. 80 ACRES of good Productive Soil; Gctod 8 Room House; 2 Good Barns; Poultry House; Hog House and other Outbuildings; Good Well of | Water. Terms—CASH. POSSESSION within 30 days. Sale is made by order of Adams Circuit Court. Farm will be sokl on the premises. Arthur Pontius, Executor Roy S. Johnson—Auctioneer i Nathln Nelson—Attorney,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1937.
—I Penguin Pete and a Pretty |
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Penguin Pete is a former resident of the Galapagos Islands, now lives at Redondo Beach, Cal., and from the way he looks he wouldn't go back to Galapagos for the world. They haven’t got anyone like Nan Gray, who’s holding him, in these lonely islands. Incidentally, Pete can perform 40 tricks—and he went through his routine for Nan.
LIVING COSTS i STILL RISING Living Costs In U. S. Showing Moderate Increases — Washington, Mar. 15.—<U.PJ —LivI ing costs were reported up again ■ today without any indication from 1 i President Roosevelt that prices 1 generally are approaching the reI gion where he would like to stabil- ' ize them. A cheapening of the dollar or an I increase in prices on all fronts has ■ been a prime new deal policy since | March 4. 1933. It has been a conI tinuing and effective policy as will lbe demonstrated by examination l of any standard data comparing ■ commodity and other prices today i with those prevailing during the I first Roosevelt administration. Some new deal insiders predict a lively business boom, which would i involve still higher prices, In the next two or three years and they are wondering what will happen after business hits its peak. Memory of the 1929 peak and conJ sequent depression is in the minds of Mr. Roosevelt's advisers as they survey a booming nation today. If there is certainty within the administration that existing control machinery would be sufficient to cope with another run-away era of speculation there has been no public intimation of that confidence. i Living cost data released today' by the national industrial conference board in New York reports moderate increases in all categor-; iesexcept food which was off .01, I per cent in February compared • with January of this year. The i board said, however, that it cost a wage earner .03 per cent more to live in February than in Janu- , ary. If Mr. Roosevelt's desired price levels are to approximate those of 1929 the cost of living still has a long way to go. Although the upward trend has been consistent, the board reported living costs last month still 12.5 per cent below I February. 1929. but 21.6 per cent | above the figure for April, 1933, i described as the low point of the I depression. Living cost figures, however, do I not reflect the most spectacular ' movements under the Roosevelt I higher price policies. The biggest i bulge has been in stock and com
New York’s Littlest Baby
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A half-ounce under one pound, this little baby was bom to Mrs. Max Post at the Park East Hospital in New York City. The relative size of the I eye-dropper. with which she's fed. and the baby’s head will give an idea *4 how she ii. Her father n a WPA worker. j
i modify markets. The standard statistics index bas- ■ led on 419 stocks shows that they have more than doubled in value in two years. The index for the week ended March 3. 1937, was , 131.5 as compared witli 65.0 for the | ’ week ended March 6, 1935. In that index 100 represents the normal which is the 1926 average. o •GHOST’ HITCH HIKER ! when a young woman, wearing . only a white satin dress and slip- , pers, walked out of a cemetery. She accepted a ride and entered* the back seat. Upon arrival at the Greenwood address she had given, "Miss X" alighted from the automobile, walk ed two steps toward (he house and vanished. The young men were startled. An elderly woman answered their I knock on the door. She fainted upon hearing their story. Tinmother had buried a young daughter in white In the Greenwoo I cemetery three weeks earlier. The , young men discovered two other automobiles had picked up the young girl and taken her to the same address, where she disappeared into the air. WEED CAMPAIGN (CONTINUED .FROM raOjß ONE) i has been prayed with sodium chlor- ! ate to show how control is obtained. (3) That European bind weed 'roots be potted in time to make a good growth before the next ser- . ies of farmers’ institutes and that I these plants be shown at the in- f stitutes so that farmers wimearn, to recognize weed enemy No. 1. The custom operated spraying outfits are run by the following men: Benj. D. Mazelin, Monroe township; Otto Bieberich, Kirkland township, and Floyd Baxter, Monroe. _ ... ■ —Q -.-- Aviatrix To Delay Round World Flight Oakland, Cal. March 15 —(UP) —i Amelia Earhart Putnam probably will delay her round the world flight until Tuesday afternoon, hethusband George P. Putnam said today. He added "under present conditions a start today might mean' head winds for 600 miles or more, and then beam winds for a similar distance west.”
QUEEN MARIE SERIOUSLY ILL Dowager Queen Os Roumania Is Reported Seriously 11l Bucharest, Mar. 15 — (U.P) — Dowager Queen Marie of Jugoslavia arrived today to be at the bedside of her mother. Dowager Queen Marte of Rottmania, report- ’ edly seriously ill of an Intestinal disorder. The daughter, widow of assassinated King Alexander, had been ' notified yesterday of her mother's I Illness as were her two sisters, former Queen Elizabeth of Greece, al her estate at Banloc, Roumania. and Archduchess Ileana. wife of Archduke Anton of Hapsburg. who is at Sonnberger castle near Vienna. Foriner Queen Elizabeth was expected to come here but It was said unofficially that Archduchess Ileana would not leave Vienna because she was expecting a baby Marie, one of Europe's most colorful royal figures, has been ill for several days. Her illness was described as due to an intestinal disorder and was believed tn unofficial quarters to be ptomaine poisoning. Officially, it was said - she was suffering from “mild autointoxication." It was said officially early (oday that she was improved and was ' now out of danger. Earlier unofficial advices said that her condition was serious : though not yet critical. News that the queen. 61. a Britj ish princess who became war time : queen of this Balkan monarchy and married her three daughters , into three European royal houses, was ill was disclosed only yester[day. At the same time it was made known that her daughters had *been notified. SUPREME COURT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Southern Coal & Coke Co., case which the court last week accepted. The court decided only one 'case by opinion in its brief session. I The case was a ruling on the right of the federal goverinpent to impose income taxes on the salaries of employes of municipal water supply systems. The decision revealed an unusual and unprecedented alignment of the court. Two veteran liberals, Justices Benjamin N. Cardozo and Harlan F. Stone, joined witli Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, who bas divided between the liberal and conservative sides of the court, Justice George Sutherland, a coni servative who wrote the opinion, and (he other conservatives. Jus-
• ■■■ —-- - — - WHY NOT FOLLOW THE Signs of Spring? SIGNS OF SPRING cannot be overlooked, even by the most self-centered individual. They are too many, too varied and insistent. Birds that return, hedges that pop into leaf, and a restless stirring in human hearts. But there are other Signs of Spring that point the way to increased happiness along all the trails of Sum mer—the advertisements in this newspaper. Think of them as guideposts to value. If you overlook these signs, you will spend without adequate information about new things, better products, more beautiful and satisfying merchandise. These advertisements, truly, are the official reports to you hy the best manufacturers of the nation, who season by season combine science and art with vast resources to place better things at your disposal. And every time, the advertisements speak with authority. They are signed hy firms of standing and reputs. You can trust them .. and profit well by them.
tices Willis Vandevanter, James C. I Mcßeynolds find Pierce Bntler, to I rule that the income was not taxable. Cardozo and Stone joined only i in the result, however, and did noi . commit themselves completely on the bi-oad question of the right to - impose the tax. Justice Owen J Roberta, whose course on the bench has been more often with the conservative side than that of Chief Justice Hugher., wrote a dissenting opinion holding that the federal government could impose the tax. He was joined with the court's oldest liberal member, Justice Louis D. Brandels. This split left th<- court divided 7 to 2. 6,000 SIT-DOWN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) gives the defendant the right to Seize and appropriate *50,000,000 worth of property of the plaintiff and to prevent, but threats, any use of the property by the plaintiff or its agents." Word of the adverse decision 1 spread qniekly through the halls and to the streets where the union picket line marched. "Looks like there’s no use par- i ading here any longer,” a picket captain said. “The writ speaks for itself," B. I F. Hutchinson, vice president of Chrysler corporation, said. “We have no other statement to make." High union officials were in Cleveland attending a union executive meeting as the decision was handed down. Adolf Germer, C. I. O. director, and William Munger, research director of the union, smiled when they were asked for comment. "I have nothing to say," Germer ‘ said. He and Munger entered the ; downtown office building used by Chrysler as temporary offices to i. resume conferences with the company over union demands. At Lansing. Gov. Murphy, sue-1 1 cessftil mediator in the G. M. strike, called together the stirte ■ attorney-general, judge advocate general, prosecutors of three industrial counties, and other officers to discuss plans for permanent machinery to settle industrial dis putes. As they met some 80,900 workers were idle due to strikes 1 in Chrysler. Hudson, and Reo motor car companies. WILLSHIRE NEWS The M. E. Aid was entertained in the home of Mrs. Dale Cowan, with Mrs. S. A. Bruner and Mrs. Esther Strickler assistant hostesses Thursday afternoon. After -the business session a program of music and readings was rendered, followed by an appetizing lunch. Mesdames Herman Myers, Frank Cox and Harriet Colter and Miss Mary Detter were Ft. Wayne visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Stanton Dailey, east of town, are the parents of a
1 baby daughter, born March 4. She has been named Catherine Marie. Bom to Mr. •and Mrs. A. J. Bilderback a daughter, named Mary Katherine and to Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Stettler, aouth of town, a daughter, humed Bonnie Darlene. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Paaawater flnd 'daughter, Jdisa Virginia of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, were guests of relatives over the week end. returning home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kuhn of Ft. Wayne were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Byer. Mr. and Mrs. John Dellinger have purchased the Dave Debglt property and will soon move to town. Mr. and Mra. Rolland Detter and family of Waynesfield, and Delmas Detter and children of Ohio City, were Sunday guests in the F. A. Detter home. Mrs. Harriet Colter delightfully entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. William Rawley, Mr. and Mrs. Winston Rawley and daughter Arlene, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Rawley and children Jeanette, Marjorie and Roger Keith of Berne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fonner and Miss Martha Fonner of Decatur, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Myers and son Gene. Mrs. William G. Hoffer and Mrs. M J. Morrison were in Van Wert Monday. Mrs. Jacob Shell left Monday
LOOK YOUR BEST AT ALL TIMES! VkY W PERMANENTS ___ $1.95 yT' JT $2.50 - '53.50 -$5 ac hineless Permanents GLORIA HELEN BEAUTY SALON MISS JESSIE BIENZ Prop., MISS HELEN TEEPLE FOOS CORNER FIRST 4 MONROE PhnTID Next to Adams Theater * lIVIIL cv*V PRAIRIE FARMER W.L.S. HOME TALENT SHOW Waynedale School Bluffton and Indianapolis Road 5 miles South of Fort Wayne MARCH 18-19-20 8 P. M.—Under auspices Waynedale P. T. A. Impersonations of W. L. S. Stars—Uncle Ezra—Arkie— Lulu Belle—Skyland Scotty and many others Anyone wishing try-out apply at Wayne School, March 11 and 12 at 7 P. M. ADMISSION—ADULTS, 25c C HILDREN. 15c 5559
PAGE FIVE
s evening for California, where she . will vfaff relaMvea. George Smctters of Lancaater • fa the gueat of Mr. and Mrs. Jeaac . Spitler. i Mr. and Mrs. Russel Byer enter- . tained at Sunday dinner, Mrs. • Frank Cox and Mr. and Mrs. John Byer. ! Mrs. Finley Bryan of Salem was 1 a gueat Tuesday of her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. John Byer. Mrs. S. H. Place and Mrs. Thom- • as Passwater are on the sick list. Mrs. F. A. Detter returned home 1 Sunday after a few days spent in • Ft. Wayne with her mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Case, who is seriously 1 ‘ IL - ■ i ~ Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can I 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. i Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied vfth results from the very first bottle. I Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
