Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1937 — Page 5
■v, TOWNSEND ! BGES PROGRAM: — —— —• I er nor Os Indiana. rges Cooperation In j, Flood Control city. N. Sept. 16 1 Governor M. Clifford I ,’ nd of Indiana Wednesday J the nine Ohio Hirer states to W lth the federal government 1 ordinate.! control program. | ; ki „, before the governors' < rpnce the Hoosier governor -I think we would be serving 1 wplp well if we could go to < ederal government and say, ' re nine states prepared to act , L to combat the many related -I t ß s of the Ohio River. We are t Lj to (. operate with you to i Wiest extent in this program, c legislanres will pass the lawt , t Commend, our various state t «ies will work with your agen « Bling the various methods I t lood c-uitro'. Governor Town-11 Mid. "But these are problems n ie engineers and land and wat- b
Public Auction undersigned will sell at public auction 1 SATURDAY, SEPT. 18, 1937 at 425 N. 3rd street, Decatur, the following: REAL ESTATE 1:00 P. M. io lots, number eight and nine, with 8 room semi-modern frame ise, located at 425 N. 3rd street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE o-piece Living Room suite; Velour Davenport: Library Table: 6 Ing Chairs; 2 hall trees; several small tables; Dining Table, Buffet, I i Closet: 3 Beds, and Springs: 2 large Mirrors: Kitchen Cabinet; en Table; Porch Swing; and Rockers; 2 Rugs 9x12; 1 Cupboard; m and Cooking Vtensels; 1 Dresser; 2 Clothes Racks: 2 Clocks; Jars: Cider Kegs: Carpenter Tools; Ijtrd Press; one 15 ft, one 12 adders: two Step-ladders; one Baseburner (Favorite): 2 burner*. Plate; Pictures; one Wardrobe Trunk: one Range Stove; one Soft Heater; one Heatrola; numerous articles not mentioned. __ .. , ■MS—CASH. j I II i
Friday and Saturday MARC SAUL MRS. LOUISA BRADEN PHONE , .!■ 3rd & Monroe s ( s> Greatest Annual September SALE of FURS fir NEVER before in our history have we been able to • offer such a large selection of remarkable values in £s. ■%* urs such exce H ent quality at such outstanding Low Prices. Choose from swaggers, smart Princess MBtfilESS * ine8 ’ coats and the very new .Jigger models. w/ We urge you to buy now when the advantage of exelusive st vies and substantial savings are available. SPECIAL SHOWING September 17th and 18th <OB SIO,OOO Sample Line This two day showing presents one of the most P comprehensive sample lines of advanced fur sashOfjy ? mmA ions ever shown in Decatur. Every wanted fur—every new style—in furs of the Finest Quality. M&Hkw jnLl ALL at very special Low prices for this sale. S£QSO VV up j / /1 [ Choose Your Coat Now — Savings at fa?! Least 20'< Below Regular Season’s M Prices. A Special Payment Plan may be arranged for your convenience without carrying charges.
er experts. Our problem as leaders of state governments Is entirely a different one. When the experts have developed a programm. we must be prepared to support It with legislative and executive action, "We need to remember that what | solutions we develop must work for tomorrow as well as today. Temporary remedies will not do. The dams must be able to bear the pounding of tons of water. Erosion must be checked to prevent the steady wash-I ing away ct the land. Fertility and growth must be restored to the' lands now wasted hy dust storms. , The water must be kept free from pollution. "The rivers of this nation can, serve the people if they are proper-1 ly controlled. Drinking water, moisture fee the soil and electric energy can be mined from the rushing river waters. "Man is himself to blame for the floods. He has exploited land and water resources by shattering the balance of nature’s forces. Through countless centuries, there had been built up a balanced, fruitful relationship am-.ng waters, soils, grasses and forests. ‘‘Sometimes individuals and cer-j tain interests have been deliberately greedy in their exploitation of j nature. Usually, however, the fault I has been in a genet a! attitude of
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER TG. 1937.
careless indifference, toward nature. Our resources were so great and apparently so Unlimited that there was little effort made to find out how to make the beet use for all I time of our resources.” SETS CALENDAR (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB) motion for new trial, damages. Oct. 21 —Alvin Th/.'tnpson vs Mkhel E. Solon, motion tor new I trial. H, O. L C. vs. L, Charles Jacquel ■et al, foreclosure of mortgage. William E. Wybornn, administraj tor, vs. Herman L. G. Miller et al, i tv.te. Oct. 22 —George L. Kern vs General Ice Machine Inc., account. Martin M. Shady vs. Elmer Bryan et al, note, foreclouere mortgage, appoint- , ment of receiver. State of Indiana on relation of Charles E. Marshand vs. Henry Dehner, et al, mandamus. Oct. 25—Van Camp Hardware company vs. Ben R. Farlow, check. Karl W Nidlinger vs. Irene Nidlinger, appointment of administrator. Pauline Habegger vs. Daniel Hab I I egger. annullment of marriage. Lee Custer et al vs. Burton FulI ler, et al. quiet title. October 26—Solomon A. Lehman j vs. Oscar C. Ewell, contract. I Frances Foley vs. Sara Fisher 1 estate, claim. Bertha Sheets vs. Sara Fisher es- J tate, claim. Farmers and Merchants Bank of Geneva vs. Louis Frainzer et al, HELP 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES To Flush out Acids and Other Poisonous Waste Doctors say your kidneys contain IB Miles of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the blood and keep you health y. Most people pass about 3 pinta a day or about 3 pounds of waste. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning shows there may be ao ma th mg wrong with your kidneys or bladder. An excess of acids or poisons in your blood, when due to functional kidney disorders, may be the beginning of nagging backache, rheumafic pains, lumbago, leg pains, bias ol pep and energy, getting up night*. aweUing, pumnea* under the eye*. headaches and dizxinesa Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan'a I ”I*. used success', illy by million* for over 40 h, PPy reJi » f “fsi win help the 15 Mum of kidney tubw flush out poisonous vast* from you* blood. Get Dona'* I'illa.
foreclosure of mortgage. October 28 —Flret State Bank va Charles E. Magiey et al, two caHK note, to set aside fraudulent conveyance. Floyd Schindler vs. Edna Schindler, divorce. October 29—Peoples State bank vs. Nancy Hoffman estate, claim, , two cases. • J .soph M. Pease vs. Della Pease, divorce. Actober SO—State of Indiana on the relation of Sam Barger vs. Adams county commissioners, complaint on drainage bond. Nov. I—Departmentl—Department of financial iiwtitutl'»ns vs. William S. Bowers, | et al enforcement of stockholders’ liability. Reparment of financial instltut'ons vs. George T. Burk et al, enforcement of stockholders liability. | Nov. 2 —Chalmer Walters vs City of Decatur, damage*. Daniel C. Hofaver vs. Halden Hunter. motion for new trial, account and wages. Nov. 3—Peoples Loan and Trust company vs. Clement L. Walters et ■ al. demurrer, note. Jesse F. Teeple vs. Ida May Teeple estate, claim, two cases. Nov. 4—Pearl Stucky vs Joseph Stucky, divorce. Isaac Beer vs. Nicholas Rich, set aside judgment. Nov. s—City of Decatur vs. Gerhard Manbach, damages. JAPANESE AND ; and asserting that they hoped to draw the Japanese into the hilly | interior and annihilate them 1 Cholera continued present in Shanghai. A Japanese army ; spokesman admitted 200 cases. 1 and 60 deaths, among Japanese soldiers. Apparently this was a partial list, as a spokesman yesterday announced the death of 65 Japanese soldiers from cholera at Paoshan alone In Shanghai pro per 649 cases had been registered since the beginning of t hb out- j break, mostly among poor Chinese. There was a suspicion of cholera in the death today of a British soldier. Troops Retreat Tientsin. Sept. 16— <U.R) —The Chinese retreated nn all fronts in Hopei province today In the face of savage Japanese assauls by infantry, artillery and air forces. The next Chinese concentration . probably will be at Paotingfu. on the Peiping-Hankow railroad southwest of Tientsin. Distant air raids, including attacks on Loyang, in Honan province, and Paoting in Shgushi, indicated augmented air j forces which give the invaders ' tremendous advantage. The Japanese military operaDr. Eugene Fields Dentist Nitroua-Oxid-Gas Anesthesia X-Ray 127 N. 3rd st. Phone 56 / \A WW R 3 fflnf I $4 Good looking shoes help your appearancs more than you imagine. These two styles are unusually trim. NICHOLS SHOE STORE
I lions thus far have resulted in 1 their domination of 100,000 square ! miles of North China, an area twice that of New York State or New England The occupied reg lons, however, are sparsely settled ■ and undeveloped The Japanese garrison said the' Japanese push along the Plughaii line had caused a general Chinese retreat southwestward after moonI light attacks and severe fighting,' i indicating a concentration at Pan- i ! ting. One Japanese plane was shot J | down during the fighting. JOHNSON SAYS (CONTINUED FROM si»de until they are satisfactorily' solved. “Any man or any party which ■ stands tor less can neither prevail nor even check the third new deal's inarch toward a one-man government. "Why?" "Because they are a necessity to our modern economic situation — because the country demands them — because they are right. "If there Is no other party to insure them, the new deal will prevail In spite of the hateful conditions of constitutional revolution which ft has tacked on to them—-
$ THE KITCHEN WALLS ( STAY CLEANER WITH L I J? I® <' i \ MY MODERN GAS RANGE! / I A j IKT \ 1 x / / MH W Hk' 9k > // 11 _ i ' 1 f BEL J ‘ W Mt ll» ■ 11 ■' ‘S F ——'W 'jitj — "' j JEST ' jMpIW / —f wWI / 1 I "wW / I • I 4 1 I "WATERLESS COOKING" IS THE ANSWER • • • because, since only a small amount of water is iMF used, there are no clouds of grease-laden steam released to deposit discoloring stains on the walls. The natural moisture in most foods, plus a little liquid in £ W the bottom of the utensil, furnishes enough steam to cook a suprising volume of food. It’s Easy on a Modern GAS Range This type of cooking isn't at all difficult. Any vessel ■ i ■ *’«th a tight fitting lid may be used. "Waterless cooking" can be done more easily on a modern gas range because of the flexibility of the new burners. See the stylish, thrifty and efficient new gas ranges at your dealer's or at our showrooms and try "waterless cook- • < > n g” the modern, clean way.
because for the sake of then* 1 necenHitlea and being not able to find them elsewhere, the country will take the new ueai—constituj tlonal revolution and all.” I.EA( H HEARING tcqNTtNttFn | Townsend in last years campaign, i When Reinecke finished bis direct testimony, asked and I received permission to question ! him. I “Are you authorized to speak for the department of justice?” Leach asked “Yes, I am," Reinecke replied ; "You have publicly and privately ! criticized our department and expressed derision of our men." “Thate not true,” Leach respond- ! ed. “In every instance I have the : greatest respect for your person--1 nel.” Leach asked Reinecke if it was ! not true that he called the department of justice tn November. 1936. ! and asked for the assistance of a federal agent in the "head and hands" murder of Harry Miller, retired Cincinnati fire captain, which i Leach ultimately solved. 1 "I dont know because I was In Detroit at the time,” Reifieceke 1 answered. "Didn't your office tell you that
I talked to one of your stents for I an hour and a half and gave him : all the material on the Miller kill- | Ing," Leach asked. “I don’t know because 1 was in 1 here,” Reinecke replied. Reinecke admitted that Leach ' had called him ’’five or ten times" ' , to discuss cases in which the 1 state police had held prisoners for federal offenses Askey by Albert Raab, a member of the state police board, if the department of justice now is get- I ■ ting co-operation from the state I police. Reinecke said he had been I "assured that the situation is nowtt
Public Sale HOUSEHOLD GOODS I will sell at public auction at my residence. 328 N. 9th street, i SATURDAY, September 18 at One o'clock, the following: 1 i Library table, dressers, book case, tables, chairs, daven'port, Morris chair, etc. Garden tools. Jars, fruit jars, iron ' kettle, and other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. I FRED A. PARR, Owner t Fred W. Busche, Auct. W. A. Fonner, clerk. ■■ ■s»»M^»si»e»»i»asasa»um l MiMai l M lM
PAGE FIVE
being corrected." ane that the FBI Is "playing ball” with the state police. At this point the hearing took a recess The state police board which is hearing Leach is composed of Claude Crooks of Lebanon, chairman; William Bell of Decatur; Albert Raab of Indianapolis, and Clarence Gramelspacher of Jaeper. o *• St. Louis. —(U.R> —The tuberculosis commission of the National Medical Association in convention here reports that 52,000 Negroes die of überculosls each year.
