Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 89, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1938 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

ROOSEVELT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) considered: 1. Elimination of future tux ex-1 e nipt ion of bonds of all government , agencies. 2. Subjection of all government salaries and wages from any source !

K—- ■■■ »I - - « IELDS . . . RAPES . . 7o SUGAR. '' uj /Z y® M")h g * ■MMMi _3Ej PoTASH is the important plant food in deter- / mining profits from sugar beets. A crop of beets removes from your soil more potash than nitrogen and phosphoric acid combined. Be sure to have your beet soils tested for availa* / ble potash. Maintain your soil supply by using 200-400 lbs. of a fertilizer containing at least 6% potash before planting; 100-200 lbs. Z, at planting; and the same amount as a sidedressing. On most mineral soils apply at least as much potash as phosphoric acid. On heavy fertile soils one-half as much may be satisfac- • , tory. On sandy soils the potash should be double, and on muck — soils triple, the phos- . ,. _ * 1 r experiment station. See your phoric acid. IVriYe US fertilizer dealer or manufaci for further informa- ‘ urer ; ? u W ' U k * ,urprised now little extra it costs to apply » tion and literature. enough potash. AMERICAN POTASH INSTITUTE INCORPORATED .NVESTMENT BUILDING WASHINGTON, D. C. MIDWEST OFFICE: LIFE BUILDING, LAFAYETTE, INDIANA

“Daddy wanted us to have a safe car so he bought a CHEVROLET because it has PERFECTED j • HYDRAULIC BRAKES!” r / W**?' A * »■ %■. ui f 7 fll M; W * , wF ||B vßKmvmhmumiiiimw ilfir* bIbBIIk """" _ __ comical Month/y Paym»nft. A Gwoftil Motwi Volw. P. A. Kuhn Chevrolet Co. PHONE 170 114 N. 3rd st.

| to federal mid state income taxaj tlon. i 3. Solution of the railroad, moi nopoly and price-fixing problems. The plan to utilize the sterile I gold and free gold funds accumulated during an earlier adininiatra- [ tion effort to put the brakes on I run-away credit conditions did not involve earmarking them for any

■ ’ particular purpose. The gold evidently will be transferred into the . general treasury fund for expenditure as needed. But the president put his recovery plan in the emergency category and proposed to limit a large part of expenditures to projects which could he started within six months and completed within a year or a year and a half. On the basis of lending spending data contained id the message and assuming that all RFC and other loans are repaid, the actual ultiI mate coat to the treasury would be approximately $612,000,000 beyond recovery and relief figures budgeted on January, 1935, for the next fiscal year plus whatever sum may be required to care for the unem- , ployed from Feb. 1. 1939 to July 1. The $1,250,000,000 WPA appropriation would be for expenditure during the first seven months of the next fiscal year up to Feb. 1. But the administration is confident of a better treasury showing than that. It is expected that this shot-in-the-arm for business during i the next fiscal year will increase the industrial turnover, hike the national income and raise federal revenue sharply above current averages. Calling for a truce « the wars of labor and capital with pointed suggestion that all special interests devote themselves to the common cause. Mr. Roosevelt said: "Amid the voices which now seek to divide group from group, occupation from occupation, section from section, thinking Americans must insist on common effort in a common endeavor and a common faith in each other,” FiL< » » n LOWE BROTH- V ERS NEPTUNITE I*Bs® SEAR VARNISH is made extra tough ; L to withstand the savage attacks of sun, snow, sleet, and rain. It is made to stay bright and new for a long, long time outdoors .. . and it does just that! Holthouse Drug Co.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1938.

Chevrolet Establishes Unique Business School 1 \ k - I ‘, IM HI I-H -B ’* I ' t r t ~ 1 t \ \ *ll II r •*Mear* c? Star IS w'ww JBRL UZ mBPM SR : # £ rjnWS V:^‘ m WBRBwIIBr rXi — 1 “■ William E. Holler, general sales manager of Chevrolet, has established a School of Modem Merchandising and Management for the sons of Chevrolet dealers, which is probably the first time that a large concern has undertaken the task of teaching a second generation the business. The first group of 27 dealers’ sons, drawn from every section of the country, is shown here visiting the General Motors Research department under the personal guidance of Charles F. Kettering, vice-president of General Motors in charge of research, and inventor of the self-starter.

SSOO DAMAGE — I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) l side." It is further alleged that the > plaintiff was compelled to pay a large sum of money for hospital and medical bills to treat the in-1 juries. John L. DeVoss appeared for the plaintiff. 0 F. I). R. H ARNS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) pean peace by weakening the nazi-! fascist dicfatorial combination. j France, under the limited dictatorial regime of Premier Edouard Daladier. was due to cooperate with the British policy toward Italy and it was believed likely new attempts would be made toward similar ar- i rangements with Germany. The theme of Britain's policy has been to make concessions to! th© expansion plans of the nazi- i fascist combination and in return receive guarantees intended to act as a check on the danger of war. | In this connection, loyalist Spain I already appeared to be paying part I of the bill. One of the terms of ( the Italo-British pact was with-j drawal of fascist “volunteers' - from i aiding insurgents in the Spanish! civil war but today's re-doubled I rebel attacks indicated Premier Benito Mussolini's determination | to assure defeat of the loyalist 1 regime (before the treaty becomes, effective. On the seventh anniversary of' the Spanish republic, its loyalist • troops slowly were being torn to pieces by rebel forces, paced by Italians. Germans and Moors, storming through the San Mateo and La Jana sectors toward the; Mediterranean. The rebels an-

A WANT-AD A DAY KEEPS BUSINESS SLUMPS AWAY HAD A . M i V pretty gooi> MV roW - T HOSe DAD'S I WANT W 5 SORE in g-\ ci?'H6 Results doS UP •> I^-7-^—-4: »= (lately ?J wSwzl r -- - !"r M anx> I — - A Nice V S^Xi I MEATY BoME ! |» \ Fop- ’ Wl,\ I w

nounced capture of both towns only 11 miles from the sea. The penetration of the insurgent armies to the sea had been considered certain since they broke the back of loyalist Defenses on the Catalonian frontier two weeks | | ago but was slowed up by the. I tactical necessity of establishing ’ new rear lines and advancing the rebel northern lines for flanking maneuvers. In addition, reorganization of the loyalist government at Barcelona stiffened resistance despite the exhaustion of the defending armies. When the rebels reach the Medii terranean they will have cut off Barcelona from the loyalist territory of Valencia and Madrid. Military experts consider the col- j lapse of the two latter areas would ' be only a matter of time. HIGHLIGHTS OF | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE .ONE) WPA) is ammunition of the highest grade for attack on recession.”; “Let us unanimously recognize the fact that the federal defct, I whether it be twenty-five billions jor forty billions, can only be paid , if the nation obtains a vastly inj creased citizen income,” “The higher the national Income ' goes the faster will we be able to ' reduce the total of federal and state ; and local debts. . . . Today’s pur•chasing power—the citizen’s income I today—is not sufficient to drive the ! economic system at higher speed.” “There can be no dictatorship by an Individual or by a group in this ; nation, save through division fostered by hate. Such division there

must never be.” “Let every labor leader find not how work can be stopped but how ' it can be made to proceed smoothly, continuously, and fairly.” o—- ' Father Os Eight Crushed To Death Princeton, Ind., April 14 —(UP) —Thomas Jones, 64-year-o’.d farmer. father of eight children, was crushed to death by a derailed car at the new Liberty coal mine east; of here late yesterday. o Urges Grants For Syphilis Education i I Washington. April 14 —(UP) —Dr. iVerene K. Havey, Indiana state i health officer, today urged federal | grants to states for syphilis education “to get people to think of syphilis as a disease instead of a dis-, grace.”

\J —\ G^ M . • H ...BEFORTfOUCADEB MORE FUEL I Finish this Heating Season with I AUTOMATIC GAS HEAT O Up-and-down temperatures make this season the trickiest of them all— except for the man who has Gas Heat. No matter how outside te’mperatures vary, inside tcupcratures stay at the same even heat with Automatic Gas Heating. You use exactly the amount of fuel you need . . • P a y for only the amount you use — after you’ve used it! There $ nothing to order, no fuel left over. HOF ABOUT NEXT WINTER? Before long, you’ll be thinking about next winter s heating problems. Be sure that you find out about Gas Heating he fore you make a decision. Remember, Gas is the only ftillj automatic fuel. At no obligation to you, we’ll be glad to tell you abou the reasonable cost of heating your home the modern wa) HORTHERN INDIANA PUBLIC SERVICE COMPAQ I • ' K r c 1 0 “Natural Gas t the Cheapest, Cleanest, Most Efficient Modera u 1

SEEK BASIS TO SETTLE STRIKE Labor Board Examiner Submits Order To Connersville Co. Connersville, Ind., April 14 — (U.R>— Officials of the strike-bound Rex Manufacturing company today studied a report by Henry J. Kent, national labor relations board trial examiner, on a case of companylabor union trouble here several months ago. Officials were searching for a basis for expediting negotiations with the United Automobile Workers Union, which has picketed the plant for more than a week. It charges the company with discrimination and violation of seniority rights. Assistant state labor commissioner Arthur Viat is directing negotiations. The report, which must be complied with in 10 days, recommended: That the company cease and desist from interfering with, restraining or coercing its employes in the exercises of the right to organize, to form, join or assist labor organizations; to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing and to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining: and that. the company desist from'discourag Ing membership in any labor organization, especially local 152 of the ■ UAWA. The report disclosed that the company “fostered, promoted and financed” the Cabinet and Refrigerator Workers' Protective Association of Connersville, whose members later joined the federal labor union 10839 of the A. F. of L. Present negotiations have been held up. according to state labor commissioner Thomas Hutson, by the struggle between the C. I. 0. union and the A. F. of L- to obtain collective bargaining rights. The ; A. F. of L. last week signed a i closed shop Contract with the company and the UAWA precipitated a strike. Movement of 3,631 refrigerator I cabinets out of the plant continued today under the supervision of i Sheriff Lester Hunt. UAWA officials issued a statement which contended that a replevin action by the Crosley Radio corporation of Cincinnati, 0., to ; obtain the stored cabinets was not ; necessary, but was a political move to discredit the union. They had

.... . .... ' ■ I (’■(ritmin-rK ■■ ■ ■ undistributed pro( its 1 ir '’ ( iruiH st r ik e W L Brought ■ - ' '''' > * .>l2. Blooming I'lai® for ■ kJ Easter SundaH Growing plants the love est of ill Hvdrangeas. Hucfl l.ilie-. lulips. (zaleisH anium>. Doublr I’eiiß Rambler Roses. B| PRICES REASONABiM I FOR QUALITY FL OWERS TEvEGRApB I ANYWHERE ■ Say It With FlowerM DECATUI FLORAL I Puttrran Ave. i ' M