Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 71, Decatur, Adams County, 24 March 1938 — Page 5
■SsMflO WSIEfTH |ST School Student ■ ■ sw !i -“ ■ ■ ■ KgES TlO N 9 ’’'*' GuUS" ,eed
e is Nothing ■ Refreshing As a Glass ■Your Favorite I BEER B BOTTLE or CAN K Don't be without it over the ■ week-end. You’ll enjoy it and ■ so will your guests. H Your dealer has your favorite brand in stock and will be glad H to make delivery any time you ■ wish. [order today
LJIP 111 |y| irf.,.,__ •*~ai i ■ - I —tH ''' . *?? * ».. jBTf4BME3EE! "wk ni ” Your Kitchen up to 19 3 8 neu' fiOeS mo{ l ern ” *“ a hurry when this Cf Z| w 0 - ( '^ moves in. Features like the Red ■ “w 1 •••a °' Cn eat contr °l an< l three-in-one burners the baU° S^ oven •• • »pecial equipment like '‘tapped” 8 t " M€r ’ e * ectr ‘ c light and condiment set —all AND YOUR in ima> man exter ' or that will dress your kitchen n . n c-rnVE . **’• ’ “■ bare - 1 ” •• . N «tural Gas, the Cheapest, Cleanest, Most Efficient Modern Fuel.”
sweetheart, Mrs. Phoebe Whaley,' ii widow. Washkuhn, a senior high school student end eon of well-to-do parents at nearby Stone Labe, board-; <>d at Mrs. Whaley's home during the school term. Ho was shot down Monday night ax he left the! houie. He died In Spooner hospital early Tuesday. "Mrs. Whaley named Phinn as Washkohus assailant.” Willie said. "She told me she had been Intimate with Phinn and that he was jealous because the youth lived iu her home.” She said, according to policeman H. W. McKeever, that Phinn was at her home for several hours Monday night and followed Washkuhu when he left. Phinn denied knowledge of the slaying He »m captured by Willis and two deputy sheriffs late yesterday after he fled from his ,ab!u home. 12 miles northwest of Spooner. Mrs. Whaley was held as a ma terial witness. District Attorney SylVes C. Johnson questioned her children, Edward. 17, and Hattie. 15. and Howard Sorenson, 17. who i
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1938.
’roomed with young WashkiUia, to' obtain full details of events at the Whaley home Monday night. Invest faaors at flrat believed i Wasbkiilui was Um victim of a $lO extortion plot, but aimounced today they had abandoned that angle lof the case. A note demanding the sum was found in the boy's pocket after he was slain. Police said ha was known to have been highly intagin-, ative and apparently wrote the note himself after hearing much talk about the recent kidnap slay-1 Ing of Charles 8. Ross, whose body (;<mw found buried hi a dugout near Spooner two months ago. A typewriter whose letters compared closely with those iu the note was found in his room. Willis said he was puzzled by many aspects of the case. Before he died at Bt. Joseph's hospital. | Washkuhn named a former schoolmate as his assailant, but the ac jcueed student established an alibi. "We are trying to find out why Wnshknhn named an innocent person as his slayer.” Willis said “1 , believe It has a close bearing on I the case.” ASK BOOKS FOR ; (CONTINUED FROM PAGE? ON’K) I April 2. by which time the books should lie iu the office of the coun'ty department of public welfare. I ’ Anyone having books may either I take them tn this office themselves I or call any one of the following ladies who are serving on the committee for the collection: Mrs. Delton Passwater, chairman; Mrs. David Adams. Mrs. G. Remy Bierly, Mrs. W. F. Beery. Mrs. George Buckley. Mrs. Herman Ehinger,; Mrs. James Kocher, or Mrs. Carroll Burkholder. Book* may be educational such as history, biography, travel, reference books or they may be recreational. They will be sorted by a I special committee before they are ! allotted to the institutions. CH AS. EHINGER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) charge of the Junion Prom last year, and is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, social fraternity. Charles is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman F. Ehinger, West Madison street. Trade In A Goad Town — Decator
Weather A Week Ahead As Forecast By PROF. SELBY MAXWELL, Noted Meteorologist J. W 5« \ ' ></MAR2B-AP« 3J9JB ‘jSy / V 11 '-""I - [S <v-\ 0 /- < < ' r/i > 'ok f LA/ *'*••' - r w mot $ cold wc & TEMPERATURE ANO RAINFALL FOR INDIANA March 28 to Apri! 3 N. W. Ind will be moderately warm, while the E and E. cen. si-c- --! lions will be cool The remuining areas will be moderately cool. The greater part of Ind. will be wet, but moderately wet over the E. cen., S. E. and 8. W. portions. Copyright 1938. John F. Dille Company,
’MAR, APR - 1958 «] 28 29 30 -J1 1 2 3 4 , OCalm <5 FAiRteUMSE frixp ©utinto ‘ • ATOM W'-'-Q The maps show total effect of Hot, Cold, Wet, and Dry air to be expected next week. DAILY FORECAST The Gulf Stream of the Air The air over our head Is like an oeean. It is a thin fluid completely surrounding our world, covering I the tops of even the highest tnoun- ; tains. If we could get into a high-flying airship and fly so high that we | could see all of North America and the Atlantic Ocean in one view, we would see a great ribbon of white clouds winding over land and sea. This cloud ribbon rises in the torrid zone near Africa. : .crosses the Atlantic Ocean and I ; passes north along the coast of i 'South America through the Carib-1 I bean Sea until it enters the Gulf of Mexico. Passing outward I through the gulf this stream moves : directly across the United States to New England. This ribbon is the Gulf Stream of the Air. Upon it depends the ; prosperity and happiness of milI lions. It is always tilled with rain clouds and storms. Wherever it blows we find many rains. Where i the Gulf Stream of the Air is ab- . sent the sky is blue and rain sei-, dom falls. The Gulf Stream of the Air twists as it flows across Nortli I i America. Sometimes is moves ’ 'along the Atlantic coast. Some-1 Himes it is in the Mississippi Vai I ley. Sometimes it moves as far I west as the base of the Rocky i Mountains. During the recent ' drought years the Gulf Stream of the Air lay far to the east. Then it poured its rains along the Atlantic Sea board, while in the west, where it did not flow was only dust, drotidit and dry weather. This year the Gulf Stream of the | Air follows a course that takes it into the west. That means rain there. This Air Stream conies i ashore in southern Texas, moves north by. the way of Amarillo, then I to northern Illinois and then across i lower Michigan and passes out to , sea by the way of the St. Lawrence Valley. Its sweep is too tar west I and north to bring a grea deal of rain into the Ohio Valley and the southeastern States, and so these, places were too dry for the past |
" GULFSTREAM OF M AIR? \ t MARCH 5.1958 M K ‘"/A -'A'. f/i - fl7 '/ ’,’ t KIE ARROWS SHOW THE ACIUAI WM Os Iri.i R..:.ROf MND C*• MAKMII9» < Super Plane for Ocean Sen ice I fc>: " gs w r <* \ T -~T , - ' 1® U, Ok&jf ; 5 > Sm mhs Wi s>^>i! . ■ ~ „f, I » 1 ‘ Sf~ gt 9 1 % P 1 Designer Alexander P. De Seversky and his plane Airplane Designer Alexander P. De Seversky shows a model of his super Clipper plane at Farmingdale, L. I. The plane, designed for trans-oceanic service, will carry 120 passengers and a pay load of 43,000 pounds. The ship will have a cruising speed of 5,000 miles 1 I and can b« adapted as a super-dreadnaught pf the skies,/
several months. The Gulf Stream of the Air . moves because it is pulled this way and that by the gravitational attraction of the moon and the sun. The forces acting upon it are all known, so scientists can compute with considerable accuracy where it will lie some months in the future. Long range predictions for rain in the United States are quite , largely a knowledge of where the Gulf Stream of the Air will be. Forecasts indicate that it will continue flowing from the western part of the Gulf of Mexico for sev eral weeks yet, and it may not flowover the Ohio Valley until early next summer. WEATHER QUESTIONS Q. —After a heavy snow fall in the spring and when the temper ature is slightly below freezing wTat causes a crackling sound to come from the snow? (C. P.) A.—lce expands upon freezing, and snow at 32 degrees can be slightly melted by pressure alone, giving a dull tone to your footsteps. When you walk in such : snow it partly liquifies under your feet. But near 20 degrees ice no longer melts by pressure alone. Then the snow crystals slip on each other as you tread on them, and give out a sound. Q. —Please straighten me out on bow to tell the light and dark of the moon. (J. G. B.) A.—When the moon is between the sun and the earth, we have the dark of the moon, but when the earth is between the moon and the sun, we have the light of the moon. Q. —At what temperature does it usually snow if it is cloudy? (D.C.) I A.—From 32 degrees to about |26 degrees. Snow turns to rain very promptly when the air gets over 32. It seldom snows for long j when the air is below zero. * ~ RAIN FORECAST FOR SPRING AND SUMMER Os great interest and value to ’ business men. farmers, students I and vacationists will be the Forecast of the Rains to come this Spring and Summer just prepared by Prof. Selby Max--1 well. It .will be sent to you upI on request with the cotnplii ments of this newspaper. Address your request to Prof. Max- ; well, care of this newspaper, enclosing a 13cI stamped selfaddressed envelope for reply, and a 3c stamp to apply on the cost of printing the forecast.
APPLICATIONS FOR CROP LOAN Applications Received Here For Emergency Crop, Feed Ixians Applications for emergency crop and feed loans for 1938 are now bei ittg received at the office of Fred Schurger, field supervisor of the emergency crop and feed loan section of the farm credit admlnistraI tton. The loans will be made, as In the past, only to farmers who cannot ; obtain credit from any the source. ! The money loaned will be limited to the farmer's Immediate and actual cash neede for growing his 1938; crops or for the purchase of feed for livestock, and the amount : which may be loaned to any one 'farmer In 1938 may not exceed S4OO. Farmers who can obtlan the ifunds they need from an individual. ; production credit association, bank, or other concern are not eligible for crop and feed loans from the emergency crop and feed loau section of the farm credit administration | The loans will not be made to stand-
t America’s Favorite Coffee 8 O’CLOCK LB. lEn LB. BAG J BAG PELS NAPTHA SOAP IO 41c SUNRAE BLEACHQt. bot.__lsc SPAGHETTI. IONA COOKED 4 giant cans 21k' RICE. FANCY BLUE ROSE 2 tbs. J»c NORTHERN TISSUE 4 rolls 19c GRAHAM WAFERS. FAR FAMED 2 lb. box__ 19c BI TTER. SILVERBROOK Lb. print JTfc BREAD, A&P SOFT TWIST 24 oz. loaf 10c WHITEHOUSE MILK 3 X 19c PILLSBI RY FLOUR 24ft ib. bag—93c GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 24' 2 lb. bag 95c SOAP. AJAX LAUNDRY 10 giant bars .38c OXYDOL RINSO CHIPSOX 19c CORN. PEAS or TOMATOES, IONA 2 No. 2 cans .15c Campbell’s Tomato Soup 2 cans —lsc CHEESE. FINEST WISCONSINLb. 19c IONA FLOUR6Sc MOLASSES. BRER RABBIT. GREEN LABEIIft lb. can_.lsc DEL MONTE PEARSNo. 2 can_.l7c KARO, BLUE LABEL 3 lb. can_.2lc Maxwell House COFFEE Ib2sc DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE 2 No. 2 caus__3sc GERBER'S BABY FOODO cans__39c PINK SALMON, COLDSTREAM2 tali cans__2sc Soda Crackers f.*mbi> 2 15c POST TOASTIESLarge pkg. _9c JELLY EGGS r 3 tbs. 25c TOMATO CATSUP3 - 14 oz. trots— 25c SOAP CHIPS SW = RT V, 25c BEANS or SPAGHETTI. IONA 4 - 11 oz. cans.. 15c JELLO or ROYAL DESSERTS 4 pkgs. 21c SHINOLA SHOE POLISHcan 9c RITZ CRACKERS 21c SCRATCH FEED. DAILY EGGIOO ibs.__Sl.7o STARTER MASH. DAILY EGG 100 Ibs.__s2.2o ! LAYING MASH, DAILY EGG 100 lbs.__s2.oo —FARM FRESH PRODUCE BANANAS G X’ N 5 lbs 25c POTATOES, U. S. No. 1 Michigan9B ibß.__sl.so Peck—23c TOMATOES. RED RIPEIb. 10c APPLES. FANCY BALDWINSB tbs. 25c LEAF LETTUCE Lb. 10c GRAPEFRUIT, ARIZONA SEEDLESS 5 for—l9c RADISHES. ROUND. RED 3 hunches—loc POTATOES. IDAHO BAKINGPeck 29c CELERY. WELL BLEACHED Jumbo Stalk—6c t SPIN ACH. FRESH AND TENDER 2— Lb. 6c • YELLOW ONIONS, Large Sizes Ib. bag__23c CARROTS. Best Qualityßunch 6c POTATOES, New Florida Bliss 6 lbs. —25 c >»■ i imlir' •■•CW.UdJ ORANGES | -- St Dozen 29c
ard rehabilitation clients whOM current needs are provided for by the farm security administration, formerly known as the resettlement .idmlnlstration. As in the past, farmers who obtain emergency crop and feed loans ' will give as security a flrat lien on the crop financed, or a first Hen on rhe livestock to be fed, if the moneiy borrowed is to lie used to
, i —ii „ a —.m ■■ n Save 51c on Medicine f —AT KOHNE DRUG STORE Jnrik BIG SI.OO IMITTLE J OLD MOHAWK ONLY 4 Safe and pleasant to take—For both young and old | —SOLD ON MONEY BACK GUARANTEE— I H OLD MOHAWK TONIC is a body builder; it I I * f " ’bro* off gases and Impurities (frequently I from the first dose); it Is readily absorbed into Ii Pl® MOMAWKH (1,,, Wbara it begins work by aiding the “ INDIAN n Stomach, Liver and Intestines to perform their I TONIC N duties thorly. Within 12 hours It will drive poisons from your system. Try it tor Indigestion. Biliousness. Constipation. Rheumatic Pains, and Acid Stomach. Maih-d anywhere. 15c per bottle extra. KOHNE DRUG STORE ‘ Decatur, Indiana
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1 produoe or purchase feed for livestock. i Where loane are made to tenants the landlords, or others having an Interest 1 nthe crops financed or or the livestock to bo fed. are required to waive their claims in fa- | vor of a Hen to the government of the farm credit administration until the loan Is repaid. — — ■ - —
