Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 219, Decatur, Adams County, 16 September 1938 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
STEVENS NAMED BY GOTTSCHALK Dr. George I'. Stevens Director Os Medical Care Division Indianapolis. Sept. 16. - (U.R) Thurman A. Gottschalk, state welfare administrator, today announced the appointment of Dr. George C. Stevens, psychiatrist, as director of a newly-created division of medical care in the state department of public welfare. •‘The division will have Immediate charge of the supervision of several public benevolent institution# of the state and of all non Institutional care connected there-i with, the operation of the Central.; Logansport. Richmond. Evansville.] »nd Madison State hospitals, the. Port Wayne State school, the Mas ( intatuck Colony, the village for I •plleptics, the Soldiers’ Home and lhe State sanitorium." Gottschalk] said. Main duties of members of the division will be to make four an-, nual inspections of each institu-J lion, investigate and report on all. iccidents and deaths and make recommendations tor prevention ol such deaths, set up and maintain suitable standards of medical, mrsing and institutional care and st her minor duties. Dr. Stevens has been connected 1 with the welfare department since I Way. FARLEY SPEAKS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I iie introduced Congressman Far-] ey by saying he had voted for nore major, progressive bills than | my congressman this district has sad in the last 20 years. Congressman Farley began the iccounting for his stewardship with a comparison between the I lituation of the country today and hat of 1932. He pointed out the ranks now have more money on leposit than at any time in their tistory and said the insect NOTICE OUR CANE MILL is running again this year every day. with new and larger equipment. We can handle any job. large or small. Also have some new sorghum for sale. Wm. Klink & Son Five miles east of Decatur. (23 years experience)
—■ s ■ Racers Bread 3-1 1 4 lb. loaves___2sc (Saturday Only) BACON, Our own fancy, rined and sliced. Saturday Only, lb. 29c Meaty Neck Bones, 3 lbs. 25c LONGHORN CHEESE, lb. | £ c No. 1 Quality, Special Saturday ~ BACON, Sugar Cured. Ib. Thuringer Summer Sausage, chunk lb 25c Pork & Beans. Van Camps. 3 cans 25c—doz. cans 95c JELLO and JELLO PUDDINGS. 4 pkgs. 19c ASSORTED BOULLION CUBESIOc 3 for 25c GOOD MEATY SOUSE, pound2oc ICEBERG HEAD LETTUCE, headloc FANCY SUNKIST ORANGES — Dozen 25c -35 c ONIONS. 10 lb. bag, U. S. No. 1 J GREAT NORTHERN BEANS 2 lbs. 15c NICE RIPE BANANASpound 5c SNIDER Extra Fancy No. 2 Sieve PEAS < (Special prices on doz. or case lots) can — * D • D f Rib or Plate | Boiling Beer Pound lOc NICE CRISP CELERY, bunch 5c KRAFT BRICK or AMERICAN CHEESE-— 2 lbs. 45c VEAL SHOULDER ROAST or STEAKIb. 25c VEAL PADDIES (boneless) pound2sc FRESH GROUND HAMBURGERIb. 15c FRESH PORK or SHEEP BRAINSIb. 10c SWIFT CIRCLE “S” PICNIC HAMSIb. 25c LARGE SLICING BOLOGNAIb.__ISc PURE PORK SMOKED SAUSAGE, pound 25c Swanton Buckwheat & CORN MEAL « FLOUR, bag Viking Toilet < Am Red Cross Paper Tissue, 4 rolls IjV Towels MOC FOODCRAFT OLEO. poundloc LIBERTY BELL SODA CRACKERS—2 Ib. box._lsc
Gave Ultimatum
■ Ernst Frank
It was Ernst Frank, Sudeten German deputy, who telegraphed the Sudeten German ultimatum from I the town of Eger, near the German border, to Czech government I officials in Prague, The ultima- ] turn, ignored by the Czech government, demanded removal of I martial law from Sudeten districts. . the banking system of 1932 has ] been remedied by the new bank- ' ing laws, in which he had a hand in writing as a member of the j banking and securities committee. , This committee also prepared the housing act, the reconstruction | finance corporation and other itnI portant legislation. He warned against the election I of a minority party member to conI gress if the best interests of the district are to be served and represented. Speaking on the farm program. ; ae said it has been endorsed by 1 | the highest farm leaders in the country. He condemned the criti -cs for the farm program for making misleading statements. He I said an examination of the records of the V. S. department of agriculture this year revealed that all of the corn imported into this couni try amounted to a total equal to that grown in Jefferson township. • Alien county. , He discussed other legislative j acts and closed with a strong enj dorsement of the progressive and * humanitarian leadership of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
LEWIS, MARTIN IN AGREEMENT UAW Executive Board Accepts Proposal To End Dispute Detroit Sept. 16—(I’P)- The executive board of the I'nlted auto-' mobile worker# today accepted In I modified form the proposal offered by John 1.. Lewis to bring peace into the unions faetlonally split ranks., Avoiding a break with president Homer Martin but veering from his wishes, the board accepted an i agreement which provided for settlement of future VAW disputes and which placed the recent expul-1 sion of high officers before a spej cial committee for arbitration. The agreement eliminated the immediate possibility of an open bat- | tie between Martin and Lewis and assured at least temporary peace to the union which has been split 1 inee Martin last spring expelled f >ur high officers and suspended another. Nine points were contained in the agreement, drafted with cooperation of Sidney Hillman and Plil'ip Murray. CIO officials sent here by l ewis. Martin vigorously had battl- ; •<! Lewis’ original proposal but, after reports that the board would accept the CIO planUesplle his opposition. acceded to the modification. The special committee that will arbitrate the cases of the suspended officers will be compose! of Hillman and Murray only. On all other such cases, however, and for any other matters before the committee Martin and R. J. Thomas, the only . temaining vice-president will sit with the committee. The officers expelled in Martin’s purge were vice-presiden* Richard Frankensteen. Wyndham Mortimer. George Addes. Vice president Walter Wells was suspended for three months effective last June. Under the agreement, future disputes of the VAW will be submitt- ’ will determine matters of policy between the VAW and the CIO. The board’s decision in such cases will be final. An important point in the agree- ‘ ment was that the CIO recognizes • the autonomy of the VAW. Martin had fought the original Lewis pro- 1 ' posal chiefly on the ground that it ] encroached upon the UAW’s auto- ] I nomy. Lewis, in bis proposal, had urged that VAW disputes be arbi- . trated solely by a high CIO com- ’ mittee. o George Eyston Again Breaks Speed Record Bonneville, Salt Flats. Utah. Sept. 16— (VP)—George E. T. Eyston. the I retired British Army Captain, today . drove his big racing car nearly six miles a minute when he set a i world’s land speed record of 357.50 I miles an hour over the glistening , white salt beds here. It was the third time the record i I had been boosted toward the six I mile clip—considered the utimate 1 land speed —in two weeks. o • > j Set Os Keys Only Clue To Bandits Indianapolis Ind. Sept. 16—(UP) -State police said today that their i only clue to the identity of those bandits who robbed the Fifst Na- : tional bank of Swayzee of $5,000 Wednesday is a set of keys. Lieut. Ray Hinkle said that during the holdup one of the thieves pocketed a keyring belonging to a . bank employe, who pleaded that they were personal keys and would be hard to replace. The bandit reached into his pocket aad tossed a set of keys on the floor but it . 5 was learned that he threw away nis own keys instead of those he had picked up. State police are trying to trace I the keys. —o — Doctors Fly in Australia Darwin, Australia. — <U.R> — AusI tralia’s flying doctors think they are really one up on the old time I country doctor of America. One of i them. Dr. J. E. Fenton, made three calls in the course of a day and a half during which he flew 1,800 miles. o —s Hops Ahead of Beer Sacramento, Cal. —<U.R> —Despite America’s great consumption of beer, it is unable to keep up with California's production of hops. I Eighty-five thousand bales of old I hops have just been diverted from I the beer manufacturing vats to the fertilizer factories. o Birds Win Over U. 8. Butte, Mont.—(U.R>—The United I States government has been obligI ed to install a second mail box at 11302 Adams street. Blue birds ocI cupied the first one and built a nest and although they were ejected several times they persistently returned until the postal authorities gave in and ordered a second box,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 16. 1938.
1 — , Jntwduciny: Frederick van nuys Democratic Candidate fur Re-eleclion to the United States Senate VOTERS of Indiana have an opportunity at this election to return an experienced and competent Senator to Congress. That opportunity is presented in the person of Frederick Van Nuys, Democratic candidate for United States Sen- ■ ator, whose record from the start •tamps him as a teal statesman. On his record for firmness, truth and distinguished service to his . dßpr constituents. Senator Van Nuys '|T IraL goes before the voters without any apologies. His re-election to the < - Senate will mean greater glory - for Indiana in the sacred halls ' * * ot Congress. Born at Falmouth, Rush Coun- nßf \ ’■ ty, Indiana, April 16, 1874, Fredcrick Van Nuys became a resident ’ i | of Lebanon in his boyhood, when his parents moved there. He was graduated from the Lebanon High Xk School 1894 and entered Earlhim College at Richmond, where le was graduated in 1898. FoL ..wing graduation fiom In- ■ I '■ ’ ’ 1 ’■’" -o jErggHg® (nd. He practiced law at Sumnitville, Madison County, and at Anderson, Ind. Mr. Van Nuys FREDERICK VAN NUYS ?ntered politics through his elec- of Indianapolis •ion as prosecuting attorney of Madison County for two terms. He also served as chairman of the Madison County Democratic Committee. He served as state senator from Madison County during the legislative sessions of 1913 and .915 and was president pro tern of the Senate during the latter session. Since 1916, Mr. Van Nuys has been a resident of Indianapolis. He was elected chairman of the Democratic state committee and directed the state campaign of 1918. At the conclusion of the campaign he was appointed United States District Attorney by President Wilson and achieved a record in that office that has never been surpassed. For more than thirty-five years Mr. Van Nuys has been an outstanding political speaker in Indiana. He was the keynote speaker for two Democratic state conventions. He served as chairman of the state platform committee and was a member of the state executive committee in a number of campaigns. His address placed the name of the late Senator Samuel M. Ralstor in nomination for President at Madison Square Garden, New York, in 1924. Mr. Van Nuys was a member of the law firm with lamuel M. Ralston at the time of the iatter’s death. He is now the senior ember of the law firm of Van Nuys, Barnard and Walker, with jffices in the Fletcher Trust Building at Indianapolis. He is endowed with good judgment, common-sense, consistency, and his word giver, is a pledge of honor and faithfulness be;\>nd violation, regardless of the emergency. In the Senate, Senator Van Nuys has been active as a member of the Judiciary and Foreign Relations Committees. He is also a memher of numerous commissions.
CZECH GOVERNMENT (CONTINUED FROM PAGB ONE) Morgenthau, Jr. joined Hull and Mr. Roosevelt in the White House conference. Morgenthau's I presence was requested to allow. administration study of possible' fiscal repercussions of the European crisis. Huge sums of foreign gold are
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1 now entering the United States as war panicky Europeans transefr their cash balances here for, safe keeping. Entry of the huge gold store into the United States was believed to present complies-1 ■ tions in American fiscal policy. Other treasury problems raised , h ythe war scare include the operation of the tripartite monetary agreement between the Vidled States, Great Britain and France.
Coordination of stabilisation operation! <>- the three nations is established by the agreement. Heavy International exchange operations have been believed in progress in recent days due io depressing effects of the war crisis upon European <urreu<y systems ■ - ■ - • ■ o-*— —- Sen. Walter George Pleads Party Unity Atlanta. Sept. 16 I VP) Sen. Waiter F. Georg*-. victor over I’ l '-
The nearest thing to | ~.1 J, fl *V . w fl IB At Regular Price | Mike no n..<tikc' Polv Cis is wf n grsohne. b.:: < f .JI tnc ■: . tor f i’i m.iJc f. ' car'. tr..,kt. □nd traGors — 'clJr'.g at rc.,-..’.ar prac—Phillips 66 r. !v <>as is the or.t whose i ohtihty (or high test) - , < ” most nearly and consistently approaches the U. S. Government specifications tor aviation gasoline. Remember, leading authorities say that volatility « \ is the most important quality in gasoline: Sayt a well-known scientist: Ti t more volatile \ fu. I can be us< d wit ha b ar. ’ ca’Lur. • •*. U .nf, wY \ with less fuel Soys a professor of chemical engineering: “In- x crMsad vola c r.ing the warm-up p< r.od - . - provid.ng more .. and producing snappier acceleration and throttle response.” Says an editorial in an oil magazine: 1 Outstand- WsW'-’' ing in the characteristics of improved motor M Accurate laboratory research proves that your 11 gasoline money buys more volatility in Phillips BJ 8■ s wa, 66 Poly Gas. In fact, it contains nearly four times i . k Ito* ■ as much natural high test gasoline as the avenge W/ motor fuel. F 1 I This extra volatility costs you nothing extra, \ NX ■ because Phillips is the world's largest producer of | : .:..ril high test gasohi-.e. \V!:v ret try a tanktul, jH at any Orange and Bia, k <>6 Shield?
sldent Roosevelt In the Georgia sen ! c.torial primary Wednesday, pleaded for Democratic unity today, declare Ing that he bore no grudges. "We cannot afford bitterness ar-1 ter the election," he Mid in a "vic-; tory" speech last night. “Good Dem-! o rats will lay aside all differences' and work for the common good. "Tills is no time for bias, malice ' or hatred. Differences have existed but they were orderly and within , the party. We shall forget these 1 differences now.”
ONLY IS' M:u\\ • ni '"‘Hl ’ Mon ® I Ft,•!:< h 111 i Hartford h H Wabash ‘ •’ Bl .I-n-r-0,, ® I " aKhir,-,.., i ' V ’ , ’' h ‘;,K I
