Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 9 June 1938 — Page 5
QU' (Hb;i rce< In B L„ June 9.--(U.R>—A p 11 , ,■ ■ II . . rl. i" . 0 1 Kos B tur \ <ninu Man ls Wjiveii l.ul Sentence B *’ . ( ■ ’ 1' . I ■ I I WL m : p;ili..luu u :ai«l wus charged with ■ DA N C I N G With ■Joey Kay’s Band S' 1 at Kdg' al er Bark ■ BU'lii'iL ■ TONIGHT ■ Adr I ice I lancing. BKT — :i'”i — * B Wk Plan I lancing U ■nday Nite, I I June 12 Music Good Time.
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■ K I ' UT? ■ IK *• /v" UHL Rj x | 'Bf-'/QX- I -Masc la/ £■&' n ' e '•', IM -aZBIM 'IM si rrKfe«»” «pL-- U s; 'jj^g« if" ®F\a 9*'ll W7 it 12; b I ' ? '' P* E iH “’ li s® i 1 AAljwßb fl -■ ’ iWii <*■! iIERHp B ELECTROLUX I I is silent, saves more because I | it freezes with no moving parts H|the (jevi refrigerator gives you... Bg • Low running cost • *ears of satisfaction | | • Lasting efficiency • Savings that pay for it | | Are you planning soon to get your second refrigerator? | PGr your first? In either case, you can profit by the ex■B| penence of more than a million families who own Serve | | Electrolux. They have found that the gas refrigerator is I I a ' Wa y s silent, always economical. And here s why. ere | I are no moving parts in the entire freezing system of a S | Serve! Electrolux. Nothing to wear or become inefficient, » I nothing that can make noise. WITH THE REFRIGERATOR YOU HEAR ABOUT- BUT KEVtR HEAR I MODELS AS LOW AS $3.99 PER MONTH I Northern I NDrANA - 1V IfUßuc service Company
I the theft or a sterling wheel, valu-l I ed at sls from the trunk of a park-1 <<l ear at the airport. The car wan 1 owned by Russell Walters of Van Wert. Family Party At Reformed Church All of the members of the Zion Reformed church of this c'ty will' Join In a family party and reception for new members taken in dur-1 log the year at the church this even-i Ing at 7:30 I*. M. An entertaining 1 program of moving pictures will be given during the evening and light 1 refreshments will he served. All 'of tlie members of the church are asked to come and brill their children with them. Two Youths Are Drowned In Pit Fowler, Ind,. June 9. — (U.R> — f Funeral arrangements were being , made today for Marvin Mounce and Carol Albertson, 13-year-old youths who drowned yesterday in a gravel pit southeast of Boswell, Ind., while attempting to rescue Mounce’s 11-year-old sister, Colleen. The three had been wading in Charles Stcnble’s gravel pit pond. None could swim. Their shouts attracted two men hunting in a woods nearby who were able to rescue the girl. The bodies were , recovered when the pit was draggI ed. o Hospital Trustees Will Receive Bids — The board of trustees of the AdI ams county memorial hospital are to receive sealed bids, until 7:30 p. m. June 24 for the construction of an ambulance entrance at the | institution. The entrance te to enable amI bulances to load and unload pat-j I lents without exposing them to the . weather, which is necessary under J the present system.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 9,1 938.
Better r Crops Boost Sale of Farm Equipment [Giant combine | 111 I ' I z 111 J 4 & ' 111 ' d B. ' ■ ■ »' IL. .... * | Power 7hiesher~| c 'dTiXS 7> v IPwllwSyM- ' AJMMR. •**. :v,< , .-,«»<■ <- r ® - I Rubber-tired tractor] —\ r I '
America’s 6,500,000 farmers are expected to spend $600,000,000 this year on modern farm equipment. An industrial survey indicated that between five Mid six per cent of the agricultural income of SB,498,941,000 for 1937 would be spent on new imple-
Weather A Week Ahead As Forecast By PROF. SELBY MAXWELL. Noted Meteorologist M. n/5 if ■ o / wu-v •r / J WIT 4 DRY • TEMPERATURE AND RAINFALL FOR INDIANA June 13 to 19 Moderately warm weather will prevail over the N. W., E. cen. and ■ 8. cen. portions, with moderately cool weather over the N. E.. cen. and: I S. W. portions. The extreme S. E. area will be warm. The N. W and S. W. areas will be wet. The cen. and E. cen. portions will be dry. The remaining areas will be moderately dry. Copyright 1938, John F. Dille Company.
MOVEMENTS OF THE GULF STREAM OF THE AIR The exploration of the ocean of ! air over our head is today not much farther advanced than the : exploration of the ocean was in Benjamin Franklin's time, it is I only within the last 20 years that anything like a comprehensive survey of the atmosphere has been made. Before that people simply had no idea of where rains come from or why they act the way they do. Three fifths of the earth's air is still uncharted, but from the ! charts which we do have we are depriving an amazing picture, and a very logical one, of why rain happens the way it does. Rain winds in the earth's air envelope i are similar to the Gulf Stream and the other warm currents of water I in the ocean.
Famed Keys Quadruplets Celebrate Birthday 6 Hl r % i IL kW ’W w ' , x F*'■ / V > f'■ / A h f X 4 1 1 ■{ i i ■ I |j * .f "" 4 2 ■ ’ 1 > 2 " .... : - >' *' ±E Mona, Mary. Leota and Roberta Keys
I Bick home at Hollis, Okla., after graduating from | I Baylor university, the famed Keys quadruplets, le.t |
ments and machinery. Mechanization of farms is proceeding at a faster rate than at any time since the crash. There are now approximately 1,500,000 tractors in operation, while the total number of horses and mules dropped one million last year.
Both the water of the sea and I the fluid of the air, (for air is actually a thin fluid-like water) are strongly heated by the sun in the torrid zone. There is a constant exchange of fluid between the hot torrid zone and the cold polar zone, but strange to say, this exchange (
k DIAGW Os GUlf-STREAM AifT . . \ ( ) r jfv /MX \ Ar-v \ S <■' i t. ■ 'Wi < £I B K* $ Time t»i >■> mX I s 1 <*• JnSS" , mnosshow aeta / 5 ■ f / * . J I ; '-J
I to right, Mona, Mary, Leota and Roberta, pose for I their photo on the occasion of their 23rd birthday. \
! ’ ■ JUNE 1938 @1 I ,13 14- _ 15 16 17„16 19 >2O INDIANA ■ C ©CALM ©FAIRtUNStTIIfD @ltatTfltD' w<» 1 W The maps show total effect of Hot, Cold, Wet, and Dry Air to be expected next week. DAILY FORECAST ' of heated fluid does not flow just , anywhere, but is confined into curG ents, or streams. The stream | ; which passes near America is our I ■ familiar Gulf Stream of the Air. After leaving the hot tropical re- ! gion the Gulf Stream of the Air ■ passes across America, sometimes i by one route, and sometimes in I several branches. For the past few months the Gulf Stream of the i Air has moved from the western ! part of the Gulf of Mexico across ■ the western plains to the upper ■ Great Lakes regions, making unusually heavy rains here and giving us the most bountiful crops i we have had in years. The Stream mostly missed the Atlantic Sea- ' board and so that section lias been dry this spring. There is now a ' tendency for the Gulf Stream of , the Air to move qven further west.
It appears probable that this current of wet air will flow over western Canada to produce plentiful rains In that section. During tlie week of Jtmo 13 and 19 the bulk of the Gulf Stream of wet Air will flow across western Canada. Another part continues from the western part of the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Lakes and over east central Canada. A third movement will flow along the Atlantic. coast, passing across tho Atlantic Ocean south of Greenland. WEATHER QUESTIONS Q. Is there any place on earth where it never rains? F. L. D. A. Parts of Peru, under the lee . of the Andes Mountains. It sometimes goes without rain for thirty years, but there is no spot on the earth, so far as known, where it does not rain sometime. And when rain does fall in deserts there are frequently flooding deluges of wat-1 er. Q. Will we have a dry or wet summer? Will we have any hot weather and if so, when will it begin? Which are out hottest months? T. L. H. A. Early June, July, late in August, and early September will be warmest over the central and eastern parts of the United States. The summer will be mostly wet, especially in the west. Q. Will It soon be dry enough | for corn? Our corn field has a | small lake in the middle of it from recent rains. C. T. T. A. The corn belt will grow drier and warmer as summer progresses. YOUR VACATION WEATHER Golfers, Motorists, Fishermen, Trippers: If you are planning to take your vacation in southern Michigan, northern Indiana (including the Chicago region) or in North Carolina and the Great Smoky Mountains you will need a special vacation weather forecast. We have arranged with Prof. Selby Maxwell to supply you with a Vacation Weather Foercast of these areas for any period up through Labor Day. Write your request to Prof. Selby Maxwell, care of this newspaper. Enclose a slanged (3c) self-addressed envelope for reply and 10c to cover the actual cost of preparing the forecast. o LIST PROGRAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ings from the city of Decatur will be extended by Arthur It. Holthouse. mayor of Decatur. Greetings will also be extended by Mrs. P. J. Mann, president of the Woman’s Baptist missionary society of Indiana, and by visiting pastors. Special music will be presented by the Swiss Singers from Berne. An organ concert by Prof. Ham-
I —— — —.—— ——— Romance - Mystery - Adventure When East meets West... in THE STOLEN QOD The Great New _ Seria| by ; fMfIR Marsl,a " IwJiRI • Far into the sinister lands of Laos goes Ned Holden, son of an American tnis- / sionary, yet a man "reared in the arms of Asia.” He is searching for the emerald Buddha which must be returned to Siam by festival time or revolution will ensue • Ned meets Virginia Griflin and her father, a St. Louis art collector. With their party is thetstrange Frenchman, Chamhon, Virginia’s fiance • Together they set out for Laos».. . and unpredictable adventure! BEGINS TUESDAY, JUNE 11 IN THE Decatur Daily Democrat
mond will be the feature of the evening service at 7 o'clock. A solo will also be presented by Mrs. i Homer Aspy. o Award 39 Contracts For Highway Work Indianapolis, June 9. - Thirtynine contracts for construction and Improvement work on the state highway system were awarded by the state highway commission during May, T. A. Dlcus. chairman, reported today. The awards represent a total expenditure of $3,558,I 763.93. Tills is believed to establish a record, both in the number of contracts awarded during one month and the total expenditure repre-
KtOfopU Bl jU Kj—J—. ' J You won’t have to , Come m and let m K'<e HIGH STANDARD paintsooften when you iXt brushcs on “ easll »’ use LOWE BROTHERS V • that you save on labor HIGH STANDARD house paint. W spreads so evenly that it For you get more actual paint. covers far more surface per galYou don't pay for the water and lon. Let us give you al! the inferior ingredients that you get facts about this good house when you buy many cheap paints. paint. Stop in today. Co
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- 1 scnti'd by the conßlruetlon and Improvement work to be done. Thirty- ' four of the contracts were for grad- | Ing, surfacing and paving on the I state highway system and five con- , tracts were for bridge and grade separation construction. , 0 Gary Steel Worker Is Killed By Truck , Gary, Ind., June 9.—idJ.R) Lazo I Delicli. 47. a steel worker, was inI stantly killed at a street intersec- ’ I lion here yesterday when a ChiI cago bound freight truck struck ' him as he was crossing against I the red signal. The truck driver 1 ; was Frank Rlckenbacher of Cleve- ' i Ind. II o ..... Trade In A <so«»«l Town — J>r«*nlur
