Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 26, Decatur, Adams County, 31 January 1938 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DAILY DEMOCRAT DECATUR Publiahdd Every Evenlug Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Entered at the Decatur, Ind. Poet Office as Second Cluse Matter J. 11. Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec y. & Hus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies 1 One week, by carrier - 10 One year, by carrier — 5 00 One month, by mail 35 Three months, by mail — -1 00 Six months, by mail — l-»5 One year, by mail .... • 3.00 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 SCHEERER & CO. 15 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. Through newspaper advertising you can reach everyone, everywhere, at any and all times. Got a driver's license? It's dangerous to drive without one. Another cold wave is on the way ' but We have the satisfaction of , knowing that it can't last more than a few weeks. Renew your subscription to the' Daily Democrat and receive the home news in your home paper for three dollars a year. It's a bargain. The Berne lad who is suffering from measles the third time in his life probably will never believe that lightning can t strike twice in the same place. Are you using the radio program which appears daily in this paper? Many find it convenient. We will be pleased to receive suggestions of how it can be ..improved to your advantage. Sign the petition of the candidate i you favor in the coining primary. ; That s a tine thing to do, hut don't ' sign for the other fellow too. You really pledge yourself to support the one you thus sponsor. We have heard many complaints i about the new arrangements pro-' vided by the parking ordinance, it | is now possible to drive up to a place of business or near to it, j transact your affairs and get away, within the hour and the traffic | jams are now few and far between, j The Duke of Windsor and Mrs. Duke are scheduled for a visit in Miami soon which ought to be good news for the hotels down in that | land of sunshine. They ought to | prove quite an attraction after the j columns of free publicity they have received the past couple of years. The Good Fellow Club has made another complete report showing just how the money raised by popular subscription was used to j make a lot of folks happy. It’s a splendid work and the Delta Theta Tau members who sponsor it each year deserve the graitudc of the community. Attorney General Ja< kson has ruled that the state highway department cannot legally enforce a special speed limit for automobiles for week ends or holidays as suggested by the stale highway department. He holds however that they may designate certain parts of highways for limited speed. As spring nears, It will be well to arrange to keep the dog tied up or in the house. If you let him out he is liable to ruin the neighbors garden or flower beds and of course no one ’ likes that. If a dog is worth keeping and paying taxes on he is worth the attention necessary to keep him home from bothering others. You have heard of many different kind of “week observations” but it's probable that the one being celebrated this week has never

come to your notice. It’s the 300th anniversary of the discovery of quinine as a cure of malaria, ague and other ailments, it was found 1 , by the Inca Indians of Peru, South I America, and came from the bark 1 1 of the Chinchonu tree. 1 Whatever the real reason for t the filibuster on the anti-lynching bill in the United States senate is. > J the people feel they have taken 1 ) long enough time. There are some I ’ real things to be taken care of by >! . > the law makers and the sooner they > get at it, the better. Let’s be done J with marking time. A month of the year has passed and it’s time to get down to the real business of bringing around some 1938 prosperity. The first three offenses in violation of the parking ordinances j will not be so expensive, as the, total of the three reminder fines [ will be only six dollars. Surely the three times at the city clerk's j ' office on this kind of an errand will i teache the average person to be 1 ' careful and he can thus avoid any I thing very severe. The wise thing I to do is to make up our minds that , i we will not violate the ordinance 1 and thus save all the trouble for ourselves and the officers. | The Daily Democrat is now en- : tering its thirty-sixth year and long ago became an institution in the' community, for a newspaper that' lives that long must necessarily j stand for the good things- We have supported church and school' and industry, fought for those who ; labor or farm or just live here. J Just now we are trying to add a hundred subscribers to our list and we have hopes of doing it. If you have been reading one of the sample copies sent out the past two weeks, won't you send in your . order NOW? ' , Letters have been received lu re | on the old racket used a few years ago. signed by Luis Garcia and' dated at Puebla, Mexico, staling j that he is in prison for bankruptcy ' but has $285,000 in bills in a trunk ' in a custom house in North America. The recipient is asked to say ( he will meet L,uis and pay the ex-' pense that will lift the embargo I and rcover the trunk. Os course i it's a fake and a couple of years ; ago several men were convicted i for complicity in the same kind of ■ I j a deal. Don't waste your money | i even replying to the letter. Prof. Banta, an Indiana Univer-' ) I sity scientist, has discovered by 1 experimenting on the Daphnia, a tiny fresh water animal, that it's 1 life can be extended by giving it I little food when young and plenty to eat after maturity. That’s just i J the opposite that has been advised for centuries for humans and the professor thinks perhaps he has hit on a plan for living under ’ ( this idea, so that the average age j ’ of man will reach 100 years- If | j that's so he will have to continue 1 i his experiments until he discovers'j how the same guy can earn a living all that time, when the maxi- c mum age of employment is thirty- , five to forty-five years. While the average citizen regrets the necessity of spending the vast sum of $800,000,000 as proposed by President Roosevelt to I 1 improve our navy, it seems there I i is nothing else to do. Early in ' the Harding administration a con- i fereuce of all leading nations was i held in Washington and a limita- • tion fixed on armaments which if carried out would have saved every nations many hundreds of millions of dollars but some of them, led by ambitious rulers, have now declined to renew such a pact and of course other countries must keep up with them. Since that is the rule there is only one thing for the United States to do and that is to [ have the best navy in the world. 1 ► * TODAY'S COMMON ERROR ' ,|’ — - | i Never pronounce advertisement : | ad-ver-tize'-uient; say . * ad-ver'-tis mcnl

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Radio Programs (All Programs Central Standard Time)

STATION WOWO — FT. WAYNE VfOMIAY. JAM .uh 31, 1038 r. m. 7:30 Grand Hotel 8:00 20th Century Serenade 8:30 Ja< k Tilson Orch. 9:00 Behind Prison Bars 9:30 To be announced 9:45 Bob Wilson, news 10:00 John Hackett, sports 19:15 Bert Block’c Orch. .39 f’hiji' h of the Nazarene 11:00 Carl Deacon Orch 11:30 Bobby Grayson orch. 12:00 Sign Off STATION WJR — DETROIT MONDAY, J .AN I ARA 31, 1038 l». M. 5:00 Stevenson News 5:15 New Horizons 5:30 Melody and Rhythm 6:00 Poetic Melodies fi:ls Arthur Godfrey 6:30 Vic Arden's Orch. 6:45 Boake Carter 7:00 Dr. Dollar 7:15 Musical 7:30 Pick and Pat 8;00 Lux Radio Theatre 9:00 Wayne King's On h. 9:30 Brave New World 10:00 Headline News 1.1:15 Peaceful Valley in: 15 Solay 11:00 Ernie Holst s Orch. J 1:30 Orrin Tucker’s Orch. 12:00 Sign Off STATION WLW — CINCINNATI MOIkDAV, JAM ARA 31. 1938 P. 11. 5:00 Front Page People 5:15 That’s My Story 5:30 Allan Franklyn, sports 5:15 Lowell Thomas 6:00 Amos n' Andy 6:15 Four Stars Tonight 6:30 Lum And Abner 6 45 Money and Music 7:00 Burns and Allen 7:30 Voice of Firestone : .00 Fibber McGee & Molly 8-30 Hour of Charm 9.00 True or False 9:30 For Men Only lo.uo Paul Sullivan, news 10:15 Harmony School ii»:3o Lou Breese s Orch. 11:90 The 24-Hour Review 11:15 Tommy Dorsey’s Orch. 11:30 Law rente Welk’s Orch. 1. M. 12.00 Kay Kyser’s Orch. 12:30 Moon River 1:00 Sign Off STATION WOWO — FT. WAYNE TIEMOAY, I'EHKI IKV 1, I»3S A. M. 6:4a Morning Devotions 7.00 News 7:15 Morning Roundup 7:15 Concordia Chapel 8:00 Radio Bible Class 8:30 Breakfast Club 9:00 Margot of Castlewood 9:15 Cabin at the Crossroads 9:30 Mary Bergh off 9:45 Modern Home Forum 10:15 News 10:30 Linda’s First Lcr.e 10:45 The Party Line 11:00 Bill Board 11:30 Market Service 11:45 Home Folk Frolic I*. M. 12:00 Consolaires 12:15 Rob Wilson, news 12:30 Hey! Mr. Motorist 1-15 Al Becker Interviews 1:00 Richard Trnjan 1:15 .Jack Tilson's Orch. 1:30 NBC Mimk Guild 200 V. S. Marine Band 3:00 t’lub Matinee 3:30 Old Time Religion too News 4:15 Don Winslow 4:30 To be announced 4:45 American Family 5:00 Rakov’s Orch. 5:15 Sign Off 8;00 20th Century Serenade 8:30 Alias Jimmy Valentine 9:00 Hugh 8. Johnson 9:15 Kidoodlers 9.30 Stars <»f Broadway 9:45 Bob Wilson, news 10:00 John Hackett, sports 10:15 Jerry Blaine Orch. 10:30 Sign Off STATION WJR — DETROIT Tl EBD 11, FEBHI ARI 1, 1938 A. M. 4:30 Wake t’p and Sing 5:00 Hl, Neighbor 5:30 Patt and Gues-t 6:30 Wesley Methodist Church 6:45 Musical 7.00 The Crowley Milner Revue Stevenson News

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANI ARY 31, 1938.

, 7:30 Three Aces 7:45 The Pinex Merrymakers > iio Stella Dallas 8:15 The Party Line 8:30 The Road of Life I 5:45 Bachelor's Children . 9:00 Pretty Kitty Kelly 9:15 Myrt and Marge 9:30 Emily Post I 9:45 Mrs. Page | 10:00 Mary Lee Taylor I 10:15 Carol Kennedy's Romance | I••:30 Big Sister 1*10:45 Real Life Stories 11:09 Mary Margaret M. Bride I 11:15 Edwin C. Hill i 11:30 Romance of Helen Trent 11:45 Our Gal, Sunday P M, 12:00 Betty and Bob 12:15 Hymns of All Churches 12:30 Arnold Grimm's Daughter 12:45 Hollywood in Person 1:00 Four Clubmen 1:15 The O’Neills j 1:30 Musical i 1:45 Linda's First Lqve 2 oo Tuesday Matinee I 2:30 Jack Berth — Songs I 2:35 News 2:45 Lucky Victims I 2:50 Musical 1 3:on Young Widder Jones 3:15 Wife vs Secretary 3:30 The Goldbergs 3:45 J;rt k Westaway 4:00 Follow the Moon 4:15 Life of Mary Sothern j 4:30 Stepmother -:45 Hilltop House 5:00 Stevenson News I 5:15 Comedy Stars of Broadway 5:30 Melody and Rhythm 5:15 Vocal Varieties 6:00 Poetic Melodies 6:15 Hollywood Screenscoops 6:30 Second Husband 7:00 Ed. G. Robinson, "Big Town” 7:30 Al Jolson Show* s:oi) Watch the Fun Go By 8:30 Jack Oakie’a College 9:00 Benny Goodman swing school 9:30 The Beachcomber 10:00 Headline News Jii;ls Red Norvo's Orch. 10:30 Leighton Noble’s Orch. I • 45 Meditation 11:00 Ernie Hoist’s Orch. 11:30 Buddy Roger’s Orch. 12:00 Sign Off STATION WLW — CINCINNATI Tl EBDAY, FERRI ARY 1, 1938 I. if. 4.45 A Thought for Today 5.0<) Hugh Cross & Radio Pals :15 Top o' the Morning Gang 6:15 Brown County Revelers 6.::0 Hugh Cross & Radio lais 6:4 5 The Merrymakers I 7:00 Family Prayer Period 7.15 Peter Grant, news 7 30 The Gospel Singer 7:15 Voice of Experience x:00 Hymns of All Churches 8:15 All the Answers 8:30 Myrt and Marge 8:45 The Young Widder Jones 9:09 Linda’s First Love 9:15 Aunt Jemima 9:30 Betty and Boh 945 Houseboat Hannah 10:00 Story of Mary Marlin lo:15 News 10:20 River, Weather — Live Stock 10:30 Hugh Cross & Radio Pals 10:45 The Goldbergs 11. Girl Alone 11:15 The O’Neills 11:30 Live Stock Reports 11:35 National Farm & Home Hour P.M. 12:30 Hello Peggy 12:45 Kitty Keene. Inc. 1 Os) Nation's School of the Air 2:00 Popper Young’s Fami’y 2:15 Ma Perkins 2 30 Vi? and Saric 2:45 Dan Harding's Wife 3:00 Dr. Friendly 3:15 Life of Mary Sothern 3:30 The Mad Hatterfields 3:45 The Road of Mfe 4:00 Junior Nurse Corps 4:15 Jack Armstrong 4:30 Singing Lady ..15 Hilltop House 5:o<) Front Page People 5:15 Supper Serenade 7..30 Allan Franklyn, sports 5:45 Lowell Thomas 6:ofi Amos ’n’ Andy 6:15 Vocal Varieties f:3O Press Review 6:45 Tonic Time 7:00 Johnny Presents 7:30 It Can Be Done 8;0o Horace Heidt & Brigadiers 8:30 True Detective Mysteries 9.00 Eddy -Dm* bin’s Orch. 9:30 Jimmy Fidler 9:45 Dale Carnegie 1' 00 Paul 10:15 Los Amigos 10:30 Larry Lee’s Orch. ll;00 Twenty-Four Hour Review

11:15 Sammy Kaye’s Orch. 11:30 Shep Field’s Orch. A. M. 12:00 Ray Pearl’s Orch. 12:30 Moon River 1:00 Sign Off STATION WOWO — FT. WAYNE IIEDNESDAY, FEBIHARI, I, 1938 ! A. li. 6:45 Morning Hymns ’ 7:00 News 7:15 Morning Roundup I 7:45 Concordia Chapel I 8:00 Radio Bible Class I 8:30 Breakfast Club | 9:00 Margot of Castlewood 9:15 Cabin at the Crossroaus 9:30 Richard Trojan 9:15 Modern Home Forum 10:15 News bi 30 Linda’s First Love 10 45 rhe Parly Line 11:00 Bill Board 11:30 Market Service 11:45 Ohio Agricultural Pgm. STATION WJR — DETROIT 11 EDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1. 1938 1. if. 4:30 Wake l*p and Sing 5:00 Hi, Neighbor 5:30 Patt and Guest 6:30 Tiie Sunshine Buy 6:45 Musical 7:00 Crowley Milner Revue 7:15 Stevenson News 7:30 - Greenfield Village Chapel 7 45 The Pinex Merrymakers 8:00 Stella Dallas • 8:15 The Party Line 8:30 The Road of Life • 8:45 Bachelor's Children 9:00 Pretty Kitty Kelly 9:15 Myrt and Marge 9:30 Tony Won’s Scrapbook 945 Mrs, Page 10:00 Grace and Eddie 10:05 Three Aces 1015 Carol Kennedy’s Romance 10:30 Big Sister 10:45 Real Life Stories 11:00 Mary Margaret Mcßride 11:15 Edwin C. Hill 11:30 Romance of Helen Trent 11:45 Our Gal, Sunday — 1 STATION WLW — CINCINNATI WEDNESDAY, FEBRIARY 2, 1938 I 4 :45 A Thought for Today 5:00 Drifting Pioneers . :15 Top o’ the Morning Gang 615 Arthur Chandler. Jr. 6.30 Sing. Neighbor Sing 6.45 The Merrymakers I 7:oo Family Prayer Period I 7:30 The Gospel Singer 7:45 The Voice of Experience 8:00 Hymns of AH Churches 8:15 All the Answers ■ 8:30 Myrt and Marge 8:45 The Young Widder Jones 9:00 Linda's First Dove 9.15 Aunt Jemima 9:30 Betty and Bnh 9:45 Houseboat Hannah 1 <•:(»<» Story of Mary Marlin 10:15 News 10:20 River. Weather — Live Stock 10:30 Carson Robison 10:45 The Goldbergs 11:00 Girl Alone 11:15 The O’Neills 11:30 Livestocks 11:35 National Farm & Horne Hour ; O Grieves Over Father, c Farmer Commits Suicide —— Ncf.>lesville. Ind., Jan. 31—C. O. Small, 55-yearold farmer, living r near here, committed suicide by hanging himself in a barn early today. His act was attributed to grief over the death of his father last week. The widow, tow children, a brother and four sisters survive. 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 mute I two. i

Answers To Test Questions Below ere the Test Queetione printed on Pag« Two « j’ The fir*» t*ve books of the Old Testament. Republican. 4. St. Augustine. Florida. 5. Sicily. 6. John Tayler. . 7. June was named for Juno, God-, | dess of Marriage. '. 8. in the Dutch Best Indies. 9. French musical composei. 10. Duraluminum. 1. Lansing. 2. The Constitution. 3. Elias Howe. 4. Twenty-fourth New York district. 5. 1914. 6. Hunting Creek. 7. Chameleon. 8. Famous German musical composer. 9. Yellowstone National lark. 10. Indiana. — j 1 f Modern Etiquette I By ROBERTA LEE Q. What is the proper way to, I hold a coffee cup in the hand? A. The handle of the cup should I I be held by the thumb and first two fingers, the other two fingers being bent slightly towards the palm of the hand. Q. Is it all right for a young married woman to call her husband 3 parents "Father Matvhall" and Mother Marshall”? A. Yes; there is nothing in the least improper in doing so, to designate them from one's own parents. Q. When acknowledging an introduction. is it good form to say. I am very pleased to meet you”? A. No; merely say, "How do you do?’’ o * —♦ | Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee * * Dull Paint i If, after washing, the paint looks dull, waeh again with the following mixture: Pour one tablespoon of turpentine, one taiblespoon milk, | and onehalf tablespoon soap Jelly I into one quart of hot water. This 1 will leav a nice glossy finish Rancid Butter When batter has become rancid ■ it may be sweetened by melting it | I in a pan, skimming it, putting a piece of toast into it, and allowing to stand for a few minutes. Then remove fihe toast, and the butter will no longer be rancid. Broken Glassware Broken glassware can mended ' by cementing together with a mixture of one ounce of isinglass dis-

Successful, beautiful, yet unmarried at thirtyWas her “independence*’ really Fear of Love? .. • i / !/L Read this stirring / / /i new daily serial Isl LOVE F'sHMOJ ] I Dare M .Not f ' BY ‘ ’ f &LLLENE CORLZSS \ I / WARREN at 30 had arrived at an enviable position in life. This poised, charming bachelor girl was America’s most success* ful woman portrait painter—-a glamorous figure in the worlds of art and society. She was sure she had no need of romance and marriage, she thought she wanted her career above all else. But she learned the truth about herself... and her awakening is told in a serial novel that will fascinate you with its revelations of the secrets of a woman’s heart Begins Thursday, Feb. 3 in the Decatur Daily Democrat

Plan Your Family Expenditui<W Managing a household Is n business, •ystenwtic gav in. ■ ing must be carefully planned and carried out if lhe ure of the family la to rest or a solid foundutkm Budgeting is nothing more than a carefully th->u M1(4 ,„. ■ ndlns Income There is no need to keep elal>oi Ml( . ‘j” Mltfl knowledge of the pi lnctplea of bookkeeping ami all necesaary. . Our Washington Bervia< Bureau ho ready for y„ u q, ■ Booklet on Budgeting, which will aid uny family 1M rtl Planning expenditures according to income, will Bhow moat out of every dollar, to avoid waste and '“*■ manage family finances In the wisest manner Send the coupon below (enclosing a dime) for y OUI . ■ valuable booklet: CLIP COUPON HERE ■ Frederick M. Kerby, Director. Dept. B-172, ■ Daily Democrat's Service Bureau, ■ 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. ■ Enclosed find a dime (Carefully wrapped) for my ■ Booklet FAMILY BUDGETING, which mail to: N A M E ]■ STREET and No. fl CITY STATE Jfl I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, luj/fl

solved in two ounces of spirits of wine. 0 * TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Daily Democrat File ♦— Jan. 31 — Orders issued from Washington that flat feet is not sufficlent to exempt men from draft. Al! postoffice employes are to receive a 10% boost in salaries. Sixteen couples were divorced and 182 couples married in Adams county the last year. . Racy Burrell ordered from Camp Shelby to Camp Hancock and Fred McConnell to Washington for special training before going to France. Bernard Holthouse of Jonesboro, Ark., visits here. o SCHRICKER TO (CONTINUED FKoy rAOB ONB) ment association!! will be chairman of the affair this year. Tickets are to be sold at 75 cents and may be obtained from the following people: Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Busche, George Krick, Benjamin D. Mazelin Peter B. Lehtoan, Dale D. Moses, Roy Price. Homer W. Arnold, Vic-! tor Bleeke, Ed Neuhauser and 1 County Agent L. E. Archbold. SUGAR BILL TO icon me. uiin* nwM raOll i | crop will amount to approximately . SI.BO a ton. it is believed. Crop i insurance programs are also in- i ' eluded in the bill. For deficiency : crops in which the yields it} 1937 were less than normal, growers will lie paid SI.BO a ton on 80 per ' cent of the normal yield. In cases ’ where there was a complete 1o«s ' of crop, growers will be paid on , one-third of the normal crop. It was stated today that the gov-

ernment payi : „. h!s : made forth,. t „ u .. v , a ! Increase the growing 1,,.. - s ,| U ,. , h the price is to of downward pries 01 ■ cultural come . . Ed Zwick Candidate I For Township! J Ed Zwick. who is eotapleiJ first term as trustee township, t s! didacy for re.-.Mt jun a farmer, has ;,e v n a crat. He is the llrsannounce for tins * CtllMVniKETj N A M E "fl Os J Town or Township ■ Democratic candidate itl - - - ...J Office running fix. | * TOWNSHIP OFFlffii I NA M E I i of- — j Town or Tewtiihfp I Democratic candidate fa] -J Office i-unning for ] CITY OFFICE] * 1 NA M E 1 I of J| TOWN I Democratic candidate fa I Office running ior. ]