Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 132, Decatur, Adams County, 4 June 1937 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DAILY DEMOCRAT DECATUR Published Every Evening Except Sunday by INI DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. filtered at the Decatur, Ind- Post Office as Second Class Matter f H Heller President A. R Holthouse, Sec'y. & Bus, Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-President Subscription Rates: Single copleel .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier 5.00 One month, by mah.3s Three monthe, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mail 3.'JO One 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 BCHEERER & CO. 115 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive. Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Now, we shall see if the Duke has his way always. With ambition to be a queen you have a chance of becoming a Duchess. Numbered among the busiest places in the country these days are the farms. The ideal weather the past week has been of great help and the farmers are working day and night getting the soil in shape, ready for planting. Congratulations are offered to the Decatur Catholic high school graduates who will receive their diplomas at the graduation exercises tonight. May the coming l years be as happy for them as were their school days and always of greater service and accomplishment. Commissioner Roop, the street . and park departments are getting Ilanna-Nuttman park in shape for the big Boy Scout Camporee a i w-eeK from Saturday. About 400! Scouts are expected here and it will be an outstanding event of the season. The presence of that many real American boys should help step-up any community. Several of the European countries might want a war, but finances won t permit it. Russia, Germany, Italy. France and Spain are short of food and commodities ' and history shows that armies. must be clothed and fed. Then anyway, after they have a war and finally get it settled, it will be the same over again. On this side of the Atlantic ve really believe in peace. The beautification of the grounds at the City Plant is progressing, although delayed a little on account of the heavy rains last month. Work is being furnished a crew of WPA workers and the ; terracing of the east side lawn and planting of ornamental trees and flowers will make it a show place. With a few year’s developing and nature doing the rest the place will be a beauty spot of which all will be proud. The city has passed a new ord-. inance regulating the tearing up ol sidewalks, streets and alleys.: Passage of the law was done in the public interest. Streets and; alleys must be maintained and after once improved, it is a job to! get them in shape after excavations have been made for sewer, ■ water or gas lines. The nominal cost to be charged for making re-

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 1

| pairs after the streets are dug up . ' will enable the city street depart- | ' in ent to do the work, those who occasioned the expense paying for J it. t The International Harvester company will build a large truck manufacturing plant in Indianap- ; oils. A 75-acre tract of ground southeast of the city has been , selected and a building, together I with equipment will cost about I i four million dollars. The state is I J forging ahead as an industrial ' , center and an expansion program i is going on in many Hoosier towns. ' ' The Indianapolis factory will give ' employment to 3,000 men and add to the automobile production in. ! this state, at one time being next ; to Michigan in auto output. Decatur and community is in-1 deed grateful to the General Elec- I trie company for the wonderful' recreational building, built in con-! I nection with the local plant and l to be dedicated tomorrow to the' employes. It is modern in every | : respect and has facilities and ; I equipment for healthful and wholesome recreation. The clubhouse I will be the scene of many happy I ' gatherings of employes and in all 1 I respects will contribute to the ' building of civic spirit, as well as j mental and physical development' of those who gather there for play. A leader in the industrial world. , the General Electric company i never quits in its determination ' i to provide better working condiI tions for employes and the construction of the recreational build- ‘ ing is one of the finest and most unselfish steps ever taken by any ; great industry in any part of the I ' country. ■ In the past 20 years the gener-1 1 ation has seen a world war, stock market boom and collapse, the 1 j death of a president of the United i States and political landslides. It also saw the abdication of a king j of the greatest empire on earth. ' I who preferred the woman he loved to the power and pomp of the . throne. And yesterday it saw this 1 former king, now the Duke of Windsor, by royal decree, marry Mrs. Warfield. American born wo-1 man and no story of the past two decades seemed to hold the human I interest as much as the ceremony j at Monts. It will have its page in j history as one of the greatest < I romances of time. The world no doubt wishes the couple well. s . They have sacrificed and suffered for going through with their bargain and it would be unkind to J : wish them anything except good. However the world doubts the ! , permanent continuance of the marital contract, for it would seem that conditions from which Windsor escaped for the moment will I haunt and may lead to a breaking I of the tranquil understanding be-' tween him and the woman for whom he declared his love. But anyway, long may it last. . 0 t” TWENTY YEARS *! AGO TODAY I From the Daily Democrat File | June 4. 1917.— Francis Howard, who fired the first shot that sank j a submarine on April 3rd is here j on a 9-day furlough. Final orders that militia men! [ need not register for military ser- ’ vice. E. S. Christen unanimously elected county school superintendent I by the township trustees. , Fire does S4OO damages at Mar-, tin's restaurant. Marshall Melchi reports but one ■ | arrest in the past thirty days and that was for automobile speeding. ’ Will Adler is with the heavy aruuery at Fort Thomas, Ky. o FIREMEN PLAN tCONTINUED FROM r>tl ' Own, | i friends and relatives are expected I ; at that time. Members of the Decatur Junior i Chamber of Commerce, which is sponsoring the convention and the f.fth annual Anthony Wayne Area Boy Scout council, are making plans for the firemen to stage a contest or demonstration for the boys who will be located at the Hanna Nuttman city park on Saturday and Sunday, June 12 and 13. „ o i p Trade in a Good Town — Decatur' b

’ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937.

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Answers To Test | Questions Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two 1. American Revolutionary War. 2. The system by which Claudius Ptolemy tried to explain coles-j tial motions. 3. The Indian Ocean. 4. No. 5. The name is applied to the islands of the Pacific Ocean. fi. One-hundredth part. 7. Florida. 8. 1904. 9. Yes. 10. Omega. o I Household Scrapbook j By Roberta Lee Candle Scraps Save all the short ends and scraps of candles, put them to- 1

Steel Strike Riot Victims’ Funeral > X. ■ tSSw |dN -W 4 * ■■ «WB USK^V x wW 7® MwlLHyvw 7 . . f ’jSh * ~ * v " ~ ‘ r*f «*3£ 'jy Funeral services for three of the seven “martyrs" of the sanguinary Memorial Day steel strike riot was nade th« occasion of a gigantic demonstration by C. I. O. and S. W. O. C. members and supporters. Top >hoto shows Interior of the steel workers organising committee headquarters during the services, and >ottom pho»o shows the huge crowd which gathered outside the headquarters (flag-draped building.) x

gether in a small cotton bag, and use on ironing day to keep the irons from sticking. Cleaning Cutlery Try using a large cork, instead of a cloth, for scouring steel cutlery. The cork will wear much. better and will give more satis- j factory results. Refrigerator The ice drain pipe of the refrigerator must be scalded thoroughly at least once a week to insure perfect sanitation. - o | Modern Etiquette |. —BY— By ROBERTA LEE > « Q When a man has a dinner engagement with a girl and is late should she wait for him, and howlong? A. It the man is usually prompt, the girl should wait for at least forty-five minutes, as he may have been unavoidably detained. Q. Is the art of correct speech

and intelligent conversation necessary to hold au envied place in society? ! A. Yes. Q. What does bueuf a la jardiniere mean on the menu card? A. Braised beef with vegetables. o TODAY 1 By UNITED PRESS Senate: In recess. ) ' Committees: Joint house -senate labor co'm.mit- , tee continues hearing on wage and hour bill, 10:30 a. m. House: Conducts memorial services for the late speaker Joseph W. Byrns. TODAY'S COMMON ERROR * ! v 1 Never say, 1 He continuously | ; j dropped his shoes on the floor;” I ; | say, “continually.” ♦-' ' —

DUKE, WALLIS ON HONEYMOON Famous Lovers Enroute To Honeymoon Castle In Austria Aboard the Orient Express en route to Arnoldsteln, June 4 CJ.R) —The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, most famous lovers of their age, sped tn a special car today across Switzerland and Italy toward their castle' in the honeymooners' paradise of lower Austria. Their train, passing through the long Simplon tunnel from Switzerland. arrived at Milan at noon and left for Venice and n scheduled three hour halt 10 minutes later. At Venice a motor boat was waiting in hope that the honeymooners would tour the romantic canals and lagoons as they did in happy hours they spent there years ago. At Milan the honeymooning couple showed themselves for the first time since their train left France last night. They looked complete-1 ly happy as they smiled from the |

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windows of their car at the 500 I odd people who waited at the train and shouted: “Long live the Duke and DuchI; ess of Windsor." They had remained in their com I partment since they entered the train. ‘ Guards In the honeymoon coach reported that the duke still was in his bright red pajamas at 11 a. in. He must have dressed between Stresa and Milan, for there he appeared In a gray lounge suit, | The duchess wore a simple blue I and white dress with diamond; clips at the shoulders. The duke snd duchess opened telegrams from the British royal faintly and friends as the train neared Milan. The first sign of life in the duke's coach was at Brigue. at the Swiss end of the Simplon tunnel. Curtains were raised and a porter took two dogs out for a walk. As the train entered the tunnel a porter took tea and ixills for one to the coach. A second waiter later took two scrambled egg breakfasts. Half a dozen Italian detectives joined the coach at the frontier. Boarding the train at Laroche, southeast of Paris, last night the I duke and duchess crossed eastern , { France under h full moon made

for lovers >p"" fortunate than w * r ‘ ■ tould which Emperor Halt - K'hiopla Is try,,, S "'”l Swiss authorfilwi llv ' > A few . W IH I vlila oft’;* l'* l ’ Af^a»l S tan 'Quietly at the lakealde 1° fl !"ue of relative, and fl .are reported to be e ,Z"| j fortune. WB Th " h‘>^yniooner 8 J warded from lhp <*■ <l<‘ Cande at Mont, were married ye.terd.y 1 gendarmes awaited th-n 1 roche station where t h« /'I the Orient expres* at today. So close w a . th, one ear which was P | W ,?J ,of theirs 1„ the tra j n M , beer in vain. J not permit even waiter, J . \ through corridors of the hJ | moon car. The duke delayed the nJ on-the-minute expies, , irtt J utes while he checked th. I gage. I Trade tn , G ood y Own _ I