Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 21 April 1938 — Page 5

ill HU l) st Estate BB ... of :!'■• A'l-t" l ’ HL < ' M Indiana <’h«’'K” ■ ■ NEVER - ®-CT CAUSE Backaches * |)|d Treatment Often ng. Happy «•>>•» , m relieve backacM EJtocorw that tl-e real cauaa gre Nature '• chief find wwt<* out of the blood--1 about 3 pint* a day or about, TSity pMMpre with emanlM ' Jem there n« • K IHH' i ",* y g|K .. . - “.v ; t ‘" 9^K' ■ ■ < ’ in I - • r 40 e; ' ' “ h’ th« ;-vui blood. Oet L> an - Fills.

H Z" & ■: ROOMS • A modern lueurious hotel in Chicajo't loop, Afn with every room completely refurnished and re--31 JU decorated end with radiantly new public space. S Yet rates are amailnjly low ■ft* ■ • NEW POPULAR PRICED RESTAURANT KZ • MODERN COCKTAIL LOUNGE LA SALLE * VAN BUREN STS. Rodney D. HeiniMM, ManaKer kRGAINS! in M1 ■ I 11 I ■R -rfC. B| J T'X li’ZZ/ \ 9' ™ ’% ° .atjSP’ \ I \ *<»'' \ ■ A FEW 1937 \ ..<> \ IKELVINATOR \ \ I electric \ . REFRIGERATORS I BRAND NEW \ ■ as they came ■ ror n the factory I THEY’RE BARGAINS—SO i*CT NOW! fecatur Hatchery K° nr ot‘ St. Phone 497 ■ Authorized Kfelvinator Dealer. Down Payment — Easy Terms!

I Co.; Wcndall Macklin; Olga Re Inking: Dr. Ben Duke; John M. Young, receiver for the National Bank and Trust company. John L. DeVoss represented the defendant. Set For Trial The following cases were set for trial: Rusttoll Berryman against Edward and Rachael Eichorn, damages, May 11. Ida Scheumann against Joseph McConnell, Maty 13, Lawrence Schmitt, as guardian of Edward J. Riehl against Ernest W. and Wilhelmina R. Relnwald, ejectment, May 10. Christian H. Mtiselina n against Sarah Boyer, appointment of guardian, May 19. The Chicago Wall Paper Manufacturing company againet James W. Kane, trading as Manufacturers Walt Paper company. Opal H. Buhler and Harry E. Wolf, suit on account, venued from Allen county, May 16. Mrs. Christian Mertz against the estate of Elizabeth Moser, claim, May 2fi. Indiana Liberty Mutual Insurance company, inc.. against J. H. Dague, bad check, May 24. Leo E. Beall against Charles W. Haggard, collection of note, May 25. Wilfred Burgess against Raymond Eicher, conversion of assets,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1938.

May 25. Emma E. Smith against Elmer Smith, divorce, Mac 23. The LaSalle and Koch company against Floyd Death, collection of account, May 24. Mary V. Neuenschwander against Noah M. Neuenschwander, appointment of guardian. May 19. Ruled To Answer All defendants were ruled to answer on or before April 28 in the suit to quiet title, brought by Burley A. and Hulda M. Hough against Jeff Llechty, as treasurer of Adam county; John W. Tyndall, as auditor of Adams county, Phil Sauers, Frank Llniger and Moses Augsburger as board of county commission ers of Adams county. An answer in one paragraph was filed by all original defendants. Answer Filed John F. Dedker, judge of the Wells circuit court, assumed jurisdiction as special judge in the partition suit brought by Lewis A. Graham against Lewis A. Graham, as guardian of William C. Graham; Lois Graham, guardian for Rosemond Graham; Benjamin F Graham; Otis V. Graham; and ’he Adams county welfare department. An answer in general denial was filed by the county welfare department. An answer was filed by the county department of public welfare to require the plaintiff to answer interrogatories one to 16. This was sustained and an answer was ordered on or before April 30. Bond Filed

A cost bond was filed by the plaintiff in the suit brought by Marshall and Mary Jane Hflpert against Ruth Cromer. Austin McMichael, and Gretrude Hilpert to contest a will. Set For Trial A claim brought by Lesley Paul Wendell against the estate of Phillip Wendell has been set for trial on May 20. Petition Filed A petition was filed by the administrator for authority to exipend money for a monument in the estate of Alonzo Shanks. A cross petition and objections were filed by Flossie O. Hart. Report Approved The report of the inheritance tax appraiser in the estate of Levi Moser was submitted, finding the net value of the eetate to be $27,058.98. The appraiser was allowed $13.07, wihch was ordered taxed as costs. Will Probated The will was offered for probate in the estate of Clark J. Lutz, Evidence was heard and the will was probated and ordered placed on record. The will ordered all just debts and funeral expenses paid first. A gift of SI,OOO was made to a fosterdaughter, Rowena Shoaf-Holt house. The residue of the estate was given to a daughter, Jean Lutz Smith. It was requested that the law library ■be kept intact by the daughter Jean Lutz Smith, until his two grandsons, Clark William and Lewis Lutz Smith, shall definitely determine their life work when, it either should decide to practice law, it should be given to the one who did. In the meantime it was suggested that the librany be left in the possession of a reputable member of the Adams county bar. The daughter, Jean Lutz Smith was nominated executrix. A bond in the sum of $lO,000 was filed, examined and approved. Letters of administration were ordered, reported by Mrs. Smith and confirmed. —o— Street Drinkers Fined West Plains, Mo.—4U.R>-Persons caught drinking intoxicants on the streets, alleys or stairways here are fined from $1 to SSO.

HAS CHARGE OF STATE’S AUTOS 1H9119 [G "W iO U Mb RALPH K. SINES State - owned automobiles are carefully serviced at the Indiana state highway garage at Indianapolis, of which Ralph K. Sines is superintendent. Sines was a first lieutenant in the World war and during the 1932 campaign was veterans’ chairman of the Second district. He was in the automobile business in Logansport when appointed to his present position by former Gov. McNutt on April 1, 1933. • Sines is a member of the Scottish Rite and Shrine and comes from a family long active in Democratic politic*.

Weather A Week Ahead As Forecast By PROF. SELBY MAXWELL Noted Meteorologist BSK V . ‘//APRIL a5-MAY 1,1058 ’ ft - / r* WET <5, DRY TEMPERATURE AND RAINFALL FOR INDIANA. April 25 to May 1 Moderately warm weather will prevail over the E. cen. and S. E. portions of the state, with moderately warm weather over the N. E.. cen. and S. W portions. The extreme N. W. portion will be moderately cool. The remaining sections will be normal. The E. portion of Ind. will be dry. Moderately dry over the S. W . cen. and N. cen. portions. The extreme N. W. area will be wet. The remaining sections will be normal. Copyright 1938, John F. Dllle Company

Editor's note: Prof. Selby Max-1 well has just headed a weather ex-! I peditfon to the former drought area 1 to observe at first hand the preI vailing conditions. He planned the j trip to encounter the storm of two | weeks ago in the central west. His report of findings will be publish!ed here from time to ime. Here is his first story. It presents interesting data about the storm. Storm Action Like an Explosion Our party first met the anticipated storm at Ottawa, Kansas on | the outward journey. Its charact- ! eristics are very interesting. Did 1 you ever witness a dynamite explosion. with long tongues of smoke and rock shooting out from I the center of detonation? This j storm in some ways resembled a I gigantic explosion. There were many long bursts of wind, rain and laer snow streaking across the counry in great ribbons of precipitation as air masses collided. 1 These ribbons of snow were easy I to see when I went over the prairies of Kansas and Oklahoma after the storm. There would be strips of country perhaps ten miles wide where there was practically no snow, and then there would he a i strip a quarter or half a mile wide I where there was deep snow, and I then would come another bare ' area, and so on for miles. In IllinI ois and Missouri 1 saw the same I thing in rain, but after rain falls !it cannot be seen on the ground, ! aud so the snow shows the character of the storm better than the rain did. The cold winds that precipitated rain and snow came from the north and northwest, driving i icy blasts ino two streams of west | and moist winds coming from the ' Gulf of Mexico. Whenever these icy blasts of wind touched the wet air they made long streaks of -ain and snow. The frigid winds did ’ not advance as a wall or as a continuous push, but shot out long fingers of cold air into the hot wet winds, as though the forces of the storm were released by an explosion the moment the frigid and the torrid air came together. The cold wind from the north swept the norh and south roads

CAUSE OF RECENT STORM ' ttmmLlea Ta-tf 1 fak teVI-ni i>' dry MR.'ui/'il \ XWARM ' Roosevelt Honeymoon Cottage ■ Air view of bridal home Following their wedding on June 18, John Roosevelt, son of the president, and his fiancee, Anne Lindsay Clark, Boston debutante, will spend their honeymoon at this 12-room summer home now being erected at Nahant, Mass., by the bride’s mother.

il APR. < 0 1938 MAY I 25 26 27 28 29 1 2 I J e I ft-U? ■ The maps show total effect of Hot, Cold. Wet. and Dry Air to be expected next week. DAILY FORECAST clear of snow and piled deep drifts on the east and west roads, making large areas of the west impassable for several days. The Ice performed a signal service to the farmers. It formed a glaze over most of the tender buds tnd the young growing plants of the region vvherd the storm was, and protected them from the freezing winds that came after the snow. Farmers will probably find the storm beneficial instead of injurious in the places where it occurred. WEATHER QUESTIONS Q.— Kindly tell me the proportion of cloudy days to sunshiny ones for the average year between September and June for the region around Lockport, New York? information needed for light conditions in our high school (R. F. J.) A.—The best record of past sunshine which I could get’ indicates that from September to June you can expect 41 per cent of the days to have bright sunshine. Q. —My husband is an invalid. Do you know any place in the north where the weather is as nice as : Sarasota. Florida. (Mrs. B. 11. B.) A.—There are many such places in Wisconsin, Michigan, and the northern part of New York. Q. —Why is the sky blue? (A. Z. D.) A.—Fine dust in the air makes distant objects all look blue. The more dust, the bluer are distant objects. In the clear air of the west, objects are very clear and the sky is deep blue. In the east, i objects are pale blue and the sky j finally is a milky white. Q. Why are there no tornadoes

COOGAN SAVES MOTHER'S HOME .Jackie Coogan Prevents Mother From Being Ousted From Home Hollywood. Apr. 21 <U.R>-Jackie Coogan today prevented hia mother and step father being dispossessed of the mansion and two Rolls Royces bought with the money he earned as a movie star. He made his gesture amid unconfirmed reports that his suit against his mother, Mrs. Lillian Coogan Bernstein, and her husband. Arthur L. Bernstein, for an accounting of the $4,000,000 he earned during his childhood, was about to be settled out of court. Attorneys for the Bernsteins would not deny the reports. Learning that as a result of his suit, the Bernsteins were about to be forced out of the mansion and deprived of the use of the cars, Jackie hurried to his attorneys and stopped it. John Biby, an attorney, had been appointed receiver by the court to take over all of the Coogan property pending a decision in the suit. Blbiy liad indicated that he intended carrying out the judge's orders to the extent of taking away in New England. (B. S.) A.—The ruggedness of the hills breaks them up. Whirl winds must have flat open country. Q - When the end of the world comes, will we burn to death or freeze to death? (F. G.) A.—ls you will tell me what will cause the end of the world I shall try to answer your question. ECLIPSE OF MOON, MAY 14, 1938 There will be an eclipse of the moon on May 14 next. Every student and teacher will be interested, and astronomy fans will want to see it too. Prof. Selby Maxwell has prepared a monograph on eclipses, pointing out how an eclipse like this one once changed the desiny of the civilized world. This paper will be sent to you free with the compliments of this newspaper. Address your request to Prof. Selby Maxwell, care of this newspaper, enclosing a 3c stamped selfaddressed envelope for your reply.

BOOKLETS FOR YOUR HOME LIBRARY Here are listed seventy-five booklets, each of 24 pages, attractively bound, size 7*4x4 inches, filled with interesting and authoritative information on .the subject covered. They are ten cents each, or three for twenty-five cents. Check the titles wanted and use the coupon below for ordering. Biography: Laws: . Foods and Cookery: Famous Authors Marriage Laws of the Candy Making Famous Composers States Canning at Home Famous Painters Patents and Trade-Marks Cold Dishes, Drinks and Presidents of the U. S. ~ . Desserts Radio Stars ' Science: Foreign Dishes Screen Stars . O Astronomy ° an , d Pastries r-j • r *’i O Scientific Facts <■ u Education: • o stanip collecting a Salads and Sandwlches Best Books O Weather and climate Home Economics: Bible Book _J dUlrlran- Budgeting Household Correct English DODies and Children. Accounts First Names and Their n Baby Book Formula Book Meanings Child Health Home Repairs • Meanings Interior Decorating ' y 1 Letter Writers’ Guide Health and Beauty: Pests and How to EradlMarkets for Literature m 0316 Tl ’ em Mathematical Puzzles and D Beauty Aids, y n Stains Spots Removal Problems and . , . , Poems, Favorite n Health Book Birds and Animals: Proverbs, Best Known D Sex lnstrucUon fIW CM- q C age Birds, Their Care Puzzle Workers’Dictionary dren and Adults and Treatment Surnames and Their ° Swtamln 8 and Diving ; Dog and Cat Book Meanings Weight Control Poultry Raising lor Profit Government: Etiquette: Gardens: r-, „ n nrirto-o Annual Flowering Plants Employment in U. 8. Brides Book Government Etiquette for Everybody B care for* 40 PlaDt Postal Service, History of Mixed Beverages and n Gardens f Wines, Mixing and Flower Gardens Historw ‘ Serving House Plants Landscaping Home Constitution of the U. S. G ames an d Parties: Grounds Famous, Buildings and Lawns, Making and Structures of the World O Card Games Maintaining Genealogy and Making a E) Children’s Parties q m y pools; Rock Gardens; g Family Tree Contract Bridge Hedges Geogiaphic Facts Fortune Telling Perennial Flowering Marriage, History of Games, The Book of Plants World War Party Book , | , Vegetable Gardens -f FREDERICK M. KERBY. WASHINGTON SERVICE BUREAU, 1013 Thirteenth St, (Check or money order preferred; Washington, D. C. Enclosed find $7.'..7...f0r publications checked: / ~- .j t ... NAME '.7777...77777.77..77T7..77 STREET AND NO. 7.77.....7.7.7..7... a CITY ;7...77.77777...777....77.. STATE

the cars and ousting the Bern■telni from the home in San Fernando valley. Jackie, who contends that he had been forced to leave the home himself because he had demanded hie earnings, had his lawyers arrange u stipulation permitting them to live In the home and continue using the cars. Jackie acted after making new charges. He said that Bernstein not only had cut him off without a cent, hut that he had ordered his credit stopped at the Brown Derby restaurant. “He didn’t overlook a thing.” Jackie said, as Judge Emmet H. Wilson announced that he would open hearings tomorrow in the case of Coogan vs. Bernstein. Jackie's suit charges, in effect, that he sacrificed his boyhood to earn s4,ooo,ooo—and that when at last he put on long trousers but no longer was a movie star, his mother and stepfather said they intended to keep all his money, his two Rolls Royces and the mansion his earnings bought. Judge Wilson has before him a confusing set of affidavits, depositions. and demurrers from Jackie, his mother and her husband. Jackie seeks $4,000,000 Mrs. Bernstein insists he never earned that much, and that besides he has been such a "bad boy" that she intends to give him nothing. She bases her claim on the California law, which says specifically that the earnings of a minor belong to his parents. Her position seemed almost, impregnable until Jackie produced two old court documents

Save 51c on Medicine tAT KOHNE DRUG STORE BIG SI.OO BOTTLE X AtfV OLD MOHAWK ONLY4|y<J Safe and pleasant to take—For both young and old —SOLD ON MONEY BACK GUARANTEEOLD MOHAWK TONIC is a body builder; It will throw off gases and impurities (frequently from the first dose); it is readily absorbed into the system w ere it begins work by aiding the Stomach, Liver and Intestines to perform their duties thorly. Within 12 hours it will drive poisons from yout system. Try it for Indigestion, Biliousness. Constipation, Rheumatic Pains, and Acid Stomach. Mailed anywhere, 15c per bottle extra. KOHNE DRUG STORE Decatur, Indiara

PAGE FIVE

indicating that, at one time his par. ents had arranged to keep In trust for him one half of his screen earnings. His mother simultaneously entered a demurrer asking the question: "What consideration, If any, did plaintiff ever render to his father and mother for their alleged promises?" Mrs. Bernstein also asked the court for permission to change her sworn testimony of last Monday in which she cried hysterically that her son was such a bad boy she felt she owed him ftothlng. Her attorneys said her memory since had been refreshed. They would not reveal the nature of her new statement. The 23-year-old Jackie said he had received hundreds of letters from fans, sympathizing with him. "It is a gratifying thing to learn that they still remember," he said. Jackie said he was as angry at Bernstein for harming his credit at the Brown Derby as he was ebout being cut off from his earnings. o Improved Spur Invented Phoenix. Ariz. —(UP)—Spurs—linked closely with the romantic history of the old west —have their third patent listed Ln Washington according to William Seyfarth of Phoenix. When Seyfarth took out papers for his invention—a spur that can be snapped on or off almost instantly—he found only two other persons have patented ideas .for improving the "horse ticklers.” o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur