Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 140, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1937 — Page 5

TSksio <JtE PRINCIPAL lltiiili i<‘ks (liven 1 * s ( ontract ’■*■ u Fort Wayne ■. v , < Jy<l. W i,- i 11 1 ' SB'; ' . ;'y bool : y I. 11l ?Jir I"> th.' I'l } . I. I upon ■ , 'l'll'' > ; j H increase in s.ilH.:A in Willi til' gH'„ , - 10 l le.lcll llll'l m ' ...nil I the sysl. in. |K,'...h: s. *h» was placed pi ■p. ip.il-hip id the Hai inar hool last Januarj ■ •.: ui .'..:;.y relieved of 1,,M . w . . ks ago on all' "I whipping a pupil the 11. .1 * .. charge lit in the fall. , , tin Mom I m Adams county. ■“ - I ■ lIREMEN ( LOSE ’B) ,!N Ll* I'lll'M PAGE ''NEi seconds. . i I o jmlg. s for the contests. <|. legal 101 l < . coupled with Hi. Sal'll liny night shop,,in and visitors to the Hoy ''l 111" lily Saturday - the largest crowds in I nt months. free act Saturday night climI the event, which was proiced one of the most enthtis- j and successful iu the history association. ■ (Hl RUH PICNIC IN UED FROM JA-jE ?N p, : \ high school. ’ <- llll'l ■ ci,ll 101 l ;., B TWO MEN ARE LlloM rytK ONW of the truck was left ;<!'■ i hauled a load to market, th. finally broke down and i at Louis villo. I< • : i ■iky for flll. I I' k. a large one mid on.

I 1- • * „ , . T |Xm Education and liSl B improvement ' fc 0.,„ Library 1_... 3 n A TEN INCH BOOKSHELF Education—(continued) f Biographies N „ r(h .nd South Pol* SURNAMES— Dictionary ol 1.000 common family names; their meanings and I ADMIRAL RICHARD R. BYRD—lnclude* accounts of North and So U nationality. 10 cents. wrltlna I „ flights and flight to France. 4 cents. rharacters and their author* WRITING FOB MAGAZINES-Constructlon of plots, technlau* of writing I O DETECTIVES OF FICTION—Brief accounts of characters manuscripts. 4 c«nts. I — »ho h,ve achieved suu css in f'ctlve crime 1 .■ # , chlevf( j f ame in Science ILI FAMOUS DETECTIVES-—Brief puimnier. o nd Billy the Kid. 4 cents. ASTRONOMY—Facts about the earth, sun, moon, planets and stars, ‘ cent*. I O mSo3£mb2S£& leaflet on live, and work* of the world. □ BIRDS ANTARCTIC «“ un ‘ oI w ™ DDel - ,nd FAMou°s e DE C TECTIv r ES—Brlef lo sketches of men who have achieved fame In CRYrTOGRA°MS—Ciphers and codes with methods of solving them. 4 cent*. famous PIRATES-rcaptaln ®dd, Morgan Mary ad and o'n * O PLACER GOLD MINIMHo to find m “ )nnel . Be)f 4 cent*. 8 Booseve.t and O LINDBFRcn'cHAs' A—Facts about hts career In aviation, his family and U Q and'X’rla... of -Th. Utt!, Cor- -"on iX^lo’r^V^&n.'££ 0 PRESIDENTS 4 U. S—An account of Presidents, their wives, families □ and lallacles about the weather. 10 cents. and careers. 10 cents. Hundred outstanding Radio Per. How to Order O RADIO STARS—Brief hlographlc. of One .. leaflets'constitute a home reference library of authentic former.. Orchestra and Anncmn . v women of th. These boolrjets * nd .. to parents and children. Many queklon* arising at SCREEN STARS—LU. stories of thirty-four popular men a information equally valuable to parein. de , nsed pub u c(l tlons ol our Washingscreen. 10 cent.. ? 0 o ™Be‘rvlce Bureau Th?y are written, edited and printed by our Bureau, and ■ 0..»« — •' »• — S'r.= □ British'’’parliamentary Great e ßOtJ"m ,U 4’cents arl “ “ ch -A,’ ’leaflet/’hav* four large pages packed with useful facts applicable to r , ment and the re.pom.lbl* cabinet •’««“ “on? etc. 4 cents. ,™’ e’tuauJn. They sell for 4 cents each; 10 or more. 3 cent. □ - * ™ YOU P JuF AMOUNT AND Fmt OUT ini the constitution. ParliamcnUry law. P d W ritina. self-educa- CHECK print YOUR FULL NAME AND ADDRESS ON THE ° «i’ u n " d cl p u h ,^e. rU lO*-eeS" ‘°° T “ ENVEUSPt “ ' □ manual ?or US debate'rs, for arguments, refutation — [JBRARY or „ booklets AND 33 LEAFLETS. ,1.7.. □ ma.cuUn. and femlnln. first name* J , _ . IND{^VA r M B^- a A nd ba m ndb n ook R os Persona! name, from North Amer.- WASHINU TON SERVICE BUREAU. D. D. D. n “ n Indlan NBll !. n .'!.£U d and social correspondence, sample term., Thirteenth St. N W, D letter WRITER'S GUlDE—Business and soma , 10 ce nts. D C subscriptions, signatures and correct oHlcmf am er way tQ prepare Washington. D. . MARKETS for LITERATURE— A treatise on t , übmlssloD to publisher*. Booklet.- and > forLeaflet., manuscripts, drawings, songs * nd “ u,l l c o Enclosed find Ifor Booklets, ano and suggestion, lor finding a market 10 cent. phra ,„ 4 cent , p NICKNAMES and PHRASES—A dictionary of ’ ord ’" a f D meetin gs. 4 cent.. U PARLIAMENTARY LAW-Rules for the orderly eonauev namb 8 • h *" ,or ,OT “ e ; ™ and □ REIMTf THB Ce wOBLD-HOW varlo'l. denomination, were estab.lshed. cm □ STaWd screen WRITING—Hints tc author, with Plot and d!.!o. con- |_ .fraction, 4 cents.

pujlf ton type, has been confl I i. . Ute hour today, had not confessI Implicated In Others 1 rl '" Mexican is also believed to have participated in (>tl „. r thefts, among them the thieving of grain mid sheep in Wells until Jay counties. •' The fact that the men were seen I 'together in the truck on the dav of J the robbery has led Sheriff Brown J to believe that the white man was .also present at the robbing. jl (hand larceny charges have t |been filed against both of the men* Jll Adams circuit court. The fact! that more evidence is being j i sought may delay their arraigni ment for several days. Q 1 I ; POLICE WOUND . WANTED ROBBER I p Elmer Foster Seriously Wounded By Officers Near Peru — I Peru, Ind., June 14. QJ.R) Elmcrl i Foster, 17, Knoxville, Tenn., want-; |cd on charges of kidnaping and I robbery, remained in a serious con-' I dition in Dukes memorial hospital* | here today suffering from a gun-| i shot wound in the neck received | ' yesterday when he attempted to I escape a police trap. Foster first was recognized by officers when he stopped at the police station here to inquire the way to Santa Fe, near here. After recognizing Foster police ordered him to halt but instead the youth ran outside, jumped into an automobile and escaped. The local officers then notified j Sheriff Robert Tillett of the incident. Sheriff Tillett with a deputy. ! Eddie Roberts, laid a trap at the home of Ted Faust, a distant relative at Santa Fe. Foster drove up in front of the I Faust home shortly after the officers had surrounded the house. Foster was ordered to give himself up but instead lie turned and j started to run. After firing sev-l j era! warning shots which failed to I stop the youth the officers then! shot the victim through the neck.j Mrs. Myrtle Foster, mother of I the victim, and two brothers and a sister were found in the auto mobile. They told police they had been to Toledo, 0., and on their ■ return had picked up Foster at i Kirkling, Ind. 0 OBSERVE FLAG bers of both the Legion and Elks. Chairs will be placed on the lawn * for the convenience of those in attendance. S

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1937.

4-H ROUND-UP AT PURDUE U. 1 Seventeen From Adams County To Attend Annual Round-up Adams county will be well roproJsented at the I|| club round up to be held at Purdue university, June lb 18. Twelve club members and live adults will be In attendance. Eleanor Johnson. Linda Marbach land Marjorie Dilling won the trip I for superior achievements in the ■ Home Economics projects. Cathj mine Mosser will represent the I calf club, winning her trip on her achievement in third year calf club work. Chester Schwartz, Stanley Arnold ami David Mosser will comprise the dairy judging team, (lien Griffith is the alternate. Otis I Sprunger and Elmer Nussbaum j will put on the demonstration, I “characteristics of a Laying Hen." | which won first place in the connjty contest at the duh show list I August. Leßoy Schwartz and i Warren Harden represent the | crops' cttlb hoys. i All of these young people have j been outstanding in their project I work and have taken an active I part in their club organizations, j The adults who will attend are | County Agent L. E. Archbold. I County Club Agent Helen E. I Mann. Miss Mildred Worthman, vocational teacher from Decatur; | Sanford Frazee, dairy herd im-I provement association supervisor; and Boyd Stepler. Mr. Frazee has been training the cattle judging team. The club folk expect to leave Wednesday morning and return Saturday morning. —o ANNUAL SCOUT FROM PAGE ONE) Franklin, superintendent of the M. E. hospital in Fort Wayne, and at the Presbyterian church, where the pastor, the Rev. George (). Walton. preached. Lutheran Scouts attended services at the Lutheran church, with the Rev. • Paul W. Schultz, pastor, preaching. The Rev. Father .1. J. Seim-1 etz, pastor of the St. Mary's Cath-' i olic church, officiated at services there. Saturday night, the court of | honor and patrol stunts, were at-1 tended by large crowds of visitors. Saturday afternoon, the Decatur girls' hand furnished the music for ! tile marching at the retreat ceremonies. Following the salute to the flag, Mayor Arthur R. Holthouse extended a welcome on behalf of Hie city. A demonstration of artificial | respiration through the use of in-■ halators was given the Scouts late 1 Saturday evening by a Haiti from 1

Blazing Arctic Trail . mil 'll l > ■" f Um*** -izwk ('KirECi \ Aw Wj F * -7 s’, v ■3. I. I>. p.ipanin and <>. J. Selinil’ltll sari ,KinM«>iWa - ~ * SoxHt l.ilior.itori t A.- J __ — " 1 : ? -■ ' ' rt t aA,. and I. T. Spirin "’'WzXww Wsßx-W 40C4U004 4WWWCMWOC&... . .', .?f

Those who marvel at the achievement of the Soviet Arctic expedition in establishing a base at the pole and pushing exploration of the frozen north are perhaps unaware of the scope of these operations and the systematic and scientific nature of the expedition. An organization was launched as far back as 1925 for the purpose of opening up the 10,000,000 square miles Russia has in the Arctic. More than 40,000 persons are employed in the project which is headed by Prof. O. J. Schmidt. Other important figures in the work include I. D. Papanin, M. V. Vodopyanov and I. T. Spirin. Eventually it is hoped to establish a commercial air course over the roof > of the world to United States.

the state fire marshals office. The lest of the day was spent in cooking meals and maintaining I the camp sites in good condition. Each troop was represented by I patrols of eight. Where two altj ernates were sent, they were I quartered on separate grounds. ! During the preparation of the I meals and maintaining of the grounds, no visitors nor troop officials were permitted in order that Hie eight boys might have tile entire responsibility for keeping the camps in good condition. Volunteer judges ate at every meal with tlie Scouts and filled out a blank on the quality of tile food and the methods used in preparing them. Scouts were required to post

menus in a prominent place and 1 to follow them. ;; An inspection made by officials ;at 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon, y ■ after the Scouts had left, failed to . ( find a piece of paper, pop bottle, B ’ or other trash not disposed of. (Inly indication that the boys had been in tile park was grass bent by the beds of the Scouts under ''l the tents. i-1 COMMENCEMENT (CONTINUED FROM . AGW? nvp > ( ship banners, emblematic of liav ing the highest rating in their re- ' i spcctive townships, excluding the three winners were: Preble, Paul Getting; Root. Louise Bristol: , Union, Lewis Brown; Kirkland ' Dwight Girod; Washington, Wai ; I lace Liniger; St. Mary’s, Robert i Holloway (Stanley Smith, who I won the honor, was unable to atI tend. The banner was given to ■ J the next highest); Blue Creek, .‘Oral Parr; Monroe, Millicent Lftwillcr; French, Viola Inch; Hartford. Leon I'eiinig; Wabash. Irene | Sommer; Jefferson, Esther Ray. | The respective township trusI tecs presented the diplomas to the I graduates of their townships. —o — School Record Nearly Perfect Happy, Tex. —(UP) —A tonsil opI eration caused the only absence from school in nine years of Eva Walter, who was graduated from Happy High School this year. Miss [ Walters was out a single day wh- ti her tonsils were removed, and not a single tardy mark was on her record. i 0 City Marks Fire Date Marshfield. Wis. ;(U.R) A golden jubilee will be held here June 2G-July 1 to celebrate the community's progress since a lire nearly wiped out this prosperous little city 50 years ago. The tiro which broke out June 27, 1887, burned 250 business and residential buildings. -—o — Opinion Costs $4 Philadelphia (U.P.) — It cost an Ardmore, Pa- man $1 to express an cipinion. Andrew Beck,23, tapped a patrolman on the shoulder in the early morning hours ad said: "Officer, I don't like the way you walk.” A magistrate decided a $4 fine would suffice. o - Shanghai Seeks Radium MONTREAL (U.P.) — The fame of Canadian radium has spread to China. Dr. J. Ernest Gendreau, director of the Radium Institute of Montreal, reveals that ho just received a request for “ a substantial quantity” of the precious sub- ' stances from one of Shanghai’s leading hospitals. z Q Cow Upsets Police Radio BOSTON (U.P.) — Cruising Pa- | trolnien John Devlin and Arthur I Job rt were puzzled when their ! prowl-car radio began blaring stat- | ie. Down the street, they found I the answer —a cow munching the I antenna that had been chewed oil! the rear of their automobile- *

ELEVEN KILLED IN ACCIDENTS Violent Death Toll In State Is Eleven Over Week-End Indianapolis, June 14 (U.R) Eleven persons died violent deaths In Indiana over the week-' end. most of them victims of traffic accidents. Three persons are dead as a re-1 stilt of a collision between an automobile and a truck near San Pierre. John Downs, seven-month old, was killed Instantly and his mother, Mrs. Evelyn Downs of Michigan City and his grandmother. Mrs. Blanche Schroeder, were injured fatally in the accident. Howard Mcßeynolils, driver of the truck, was arrested and charged with manslaughter. Sheriff Frank Lough of Starke county said lie was intoxicated. At Hammond. Grady Gilmore. Peoria, 111., was killed when the I door of a freight car in which he was riding swung shut as ho looked out and crushed his head. Mary Ann Cook, age six. of Bloomington, was killed near New Albany when an automobile driven by lier mother collided witli a truck. At Wabash, Daniel Fulton, 11, died of injuries sustained when ho fell off his bicycle under the wheels of a truck driven by Walter Rayls of Kokomo. At Indianapolis Gilbert Willoughby was killed when lie lost j control of his automobile and |

C. I. O. Faces Major Foe in Unionizing Ford

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Several factors, chief of which is the size and selfsufficiency of the industrial empire managed by Henry Ford, make the task of the C. I. O. in attempting to organize employes of the motor magnate the most difficult the labor organization headed by John L. Lewis has yet faced. Ford's River Rouge plant at Dearborn, Mich, is the largest works

Controversy Rages Ox er Jefferson Memorial

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Considerable controversy has be*m stirred over Uie design of John Russell Pop*. New York architect, for the proposed memorial to Thomas Jefferson in Washington, D C Criticism ha* been expressed because it copies the style of ancient Roman Pantheon, but others point out that it honor* Jefferson'S architectural triumphs at University nt Vir-

I crushed into a bridge. Julia Ann Owens, age 14 months, : was killed when she was run over by an Interurban car near Pendleton when she toddled Into its path as she followed her mother toward a canning factory where the moth- ; er worked. At Bluffton Robert Ifiinnl drownI cd while swimming with friends in a stone quarry pool. Manford Warden, 50, was killed ' instantly when struck by a bolt of lightning as he stood under a tree on a farm south of Kokomo. Frank Swarts, 34, died in St. Joseph hospital, South Bend, of injuries sustained when both legs were cut off by a New York Central switching train as ho was sleeping oil the trucks. o COMMITTEE ON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the drama of a high hour in constitutional history, the majority report set up the argument advanced by Hie administration in support of tile bill and then sought to demolish it point by point. It went, too, beyond that prov- , Ince gently to remind the supreme court that it must "take account of the advancing strides of civillizatioli"; that if the time conies, the nation by constitutional amendment may fix definite terms for judges or set a compulsory retirement age. But most emphatically, the committee majority insisted that the issue tossed into congress last February by the president must be met and rejected in a manner that would protect an independent judiciary as long "as this governj ment stands." I “This (bill) amounts to nothing

in the world, covering more than 1,000 acres and containing within its boundaries a score of complete industrial units. In addition to this huge plant which can function almost independently of the outside world, Ford has 17 other assembly plants scattered throughout United States and four in Canada. .

gima where he designed several of the buildings such as the rotunda. lower left, in the same man ner. Protest has also been expressed by those wh« fear the memorial wocld necessitate removal 01 the capital's famous cherry trees, but the planmerely call for transplanting them and increasinj Viwi numteii.

PAGE FIVE

more than the declaration that I. when the court, stands in the way r of a legislative enactment, the '• congress may reverse the ruling 1 by enlarging the court,” the ma--1 jority report said. e “it applies force to the Judiciary. It is an attempt to impose ■ upon the courts a course of acs tion, a line of decision which, without that force, without that I impoaitiou, the Judiciary might not ‘ adopt . . . constitutionally, the J bill can have no sanction. "No amount of sophistry can . cover up this fact . . . this is the I first time in history of our country " that such a proposal lias been so boldly made. II "Let us meet It. Lot us now set a salutary precedent that will never be violated. "Let us, the seventy-fifth congress. In words that Will never lie disregarded by any succeeding congress, declare that we would rather have an independent court, r a fearless court, a court that will 1 dare to announce its honest opin- , ions in what It believes to lie the defense of the liberties of tile peo- - pie, than a court that, out of fear ' or sense of obligation to the apL pointing power, or factional pas- ' j sion, approves any measure we ’ | may enact. * ' "We are not judges of the ' i judges. We are not above the ' constitution.” NEURITIS L « Rheumatism, Arthritis, Periodic L Pains, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and all • other aches and pains are quickly relieved with Alt’s Compound Winter* green Tablets. Positively guaranteed. Price |l. at all Drug Stores.