Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 237, Decatur, Adams County, 7 October 1938 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DAILY DEMOCRAT DECATUR Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur, Ind. Post Office as Second Class Matter J. H- Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec y. & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single copies 1 -08 One week, by carrier .. 10 One year, by earner - 5.00 One month, by mail .35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mall 1.75 One year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office— 3.00 Prices quoted are within a radius of 100 miles- Elsewhere |3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER & CO. 15 Lexington Avenue, New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. This is a good time to pay your taxes and get that job well out of the road. Only a day or two in which to register and unless you qualify you can't vote in November. Give to the Krick-Tyndall fund. It means employment for a hundred good men and that means the livelihood of several hundred, people with families included Drop in at headquarters over this office any evening and visit | with the candidates and those who are at work on the job of winning an election that will show support of President Roosevelt and his administration. President Roosevelt aud every leader in the country is urging peace among the labor organization. It's good common sense that as long as the present division continues the men who labor will get few advantages and in the meantime progress of the nation is held back. If you are first voter, have never registered, have married and changed your name, did not vote at the last general election or have : moved from your precinct you must register again. You can do so by calling your precinct committeeman or by going to the county clerks office by Monday. Senators VanNuys and M.aton are campaigning over the state each night, telling the voters the truth about various issues, admitting that they may not always be right but insisting and proving that they are constantly striving for those things they feel will help the people of Indiana to the great-' est limit. Test polls carefully taken over the state show a decided and increased trend to the Democratic party. While this is an off year and while it is not anticipated the vote will be as large as in a presi dential election year, there seems , little doubt as to the results on November eighth. The Democratic candidates over the state will be elected except perhaps in isolated sections where local questions are the issue. An article in Collier's magazine is authority for the statement that Willis Allen, who is back of the 530 every Thursday movement in California, was convicted in 1931 for using the to defraud in selling a fake hair restorer. He is now associated with several others in the pension organization and the article says they have an income of $2,400 per day. It's surprising how some folks can be so easily swindled. Old Dizzy Dean made a great effort yesterday and for seven innings was the old time hero. Then in the eighth with a man on first Crossctti met one aud laced it over the left field fence, winning the game fur the Yanks. In the
ninth with one on DlMagglo lifted another over the fence and the second gqpie went to the American leaguers. Tomorrow the Cubs meet i. them again in Now York. It looks as though it's in the bag. Those who attended the fourth t district rally at Fort Wayne this i •. week were surprised somewhat at i 1 the great showing of enthusiasm.' Thousands met at the headquart- ’ ers, marched to the Shrine theater J and listened for several hours to i the addresses of the Democratic 1 leaders. There is no doubt that ( Allen county and the fourth dis-1 i trict will go strongly Democratic. I 1 showing support to the efforts of, the greatest president of recent ' years, Franklin D. Roosevelt. There is apparently a lack of i proper interest in the campaign to raise |B.OOO to match the $2,000 . already subscribed for the rebuilding of the Krick-Tyndall plant, a , 1 SIOO,OOO project that will restore to permanent employment, a hundred local citizens. It's hard to understand why any one would hesitate on such a proposition for surely there is nothing so important as providing work for those I able and willing. Let's go on un- ' til the job is finished A little pep will do it in a few days. “You ain't seen nothin' yet," is - a conclusion which a traffic stu- ( dent has drawn from a couple of race car try-outs recently made on the Salt Lake flats in Utah. where Captain Eyerson drove at the rate i .of 345 miles an hour and John Cobb covered the distance at 342 miles an hour. It has not been many years since the usual speed on Indiana roads was from 25 to 35 miles an hour. Now it is from 1 50 to 70' miles an hour. When we get our dual highway system finish- I ed in a few years we can roll along at 90 or 100. but that will not satisfy us and in. still another few years we shall be able to go at a 150-mile clip. When 250-mile cars are common who will want to poke 1 along at less than 100? —Farmer's : Guide. JOHN A. M. ADAIR; Indiana has lost one of her lead- | ing citizens and this section of the state will particularly miss, in the passing of John A. M. Adair, one who was always interested in the people aud the projects that pro vided most for every one. A clean,, , careful, thoughtful and wise man. he succeeded always in the things he attempted, his advice was excellent and he was considered in every way, one of the outstanding figures of 'he middle west. He was for years the president | of the First National Bank of Portland, where he was educated and where as a young man he became interested in politics. He served as city clerk, county clerk, a member' i of the legislature, chairman of the : i old eighth district and as a mem-I her of congress for six terms dur-1 ■ ing the years when many important problems were solved Mr. Adair was the Democratic nominee i for governor of Indiana in 1916 ' and lost by a few thousand votes. . running far ahead of his ticket. ■ In recent years he had been asso-: I dated with his son in several large , i enterprises in the east, returning to Portland last spring. Hi- death was unexpected and came as a j shock to the thouaauds of people I in eastern Indiana who had known i him long and respected him highly.; Mr. Adair visited here during the summer and was enthusiastic I about the future of the nation, i with the old interest in every body' I ! he formerly knew and in every thing that wt*t going on. His death is deeply mourned. . —. ——o Fate Crosses Ex-Fighter Camden. N. I —(UP)—Billy An-I i gelo, 30, once a leading welterweight, fought for nine years in • ,ne ring without suffering any serious injuries. While playing witn his 4-year-old niece she stuck her finger in his eye. Angelo went to a hospital, where surgeons removed ,! the eye. — o — — Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
RINGING THE BELLS NOW, BUT WILL THEY BE WRINGING THEIR HANDS LATER? - . ■ , — — 111 nW ill I
t Answers To Test Questions I Below are the answers to the Test Questions printed on Page Two ♦! 1. Gibraltar. 2. Colorado. 3. Peso. 4 An instrument used to copy ■ maps, plans, or the like, on any predetermined scale. 5. Four. 6. Hamlet. William H. Green. S. Wisconsin. 9. E-pit-o-me. 10. Nevada. o > Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Soft Hands Soft hands are one of the essentials of beauty. Before retiring each night, rub oil into the hands and then dou a pair of gloves and leave them on until morning. Pure dive oil is best for this treatment. Upon removing the gloves you will be amazed at the remarkable results obtained. Apples Apples should be cored before paring, as they are then leas likely Gets Czech Post «w* X J —- .wr r—n Or. Frantisek Chvalkovsky ... C zech foreign minister Czechoslovakia sets up a new . •concentrated power" cabinet under Premier Gen. Jan Syrovy to rehabilitate the dismembered republic. 4One of the most "prominent new men in the cabinet is 1 Dr. Frantisek Chvalkovsky, above, who replaced Kamil Krofta gs foreign minister. Chvalkovsky is ■ former minister to Rome. _
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7. 1938.
I to break. Always pare the apples :thin; a broad surface causes much i waste, because of the rouud’ug surface of tbe apple. Smooth Irons Ruoty, sticky or rough irons can : be smoothed to a fine glassy finish : if they are rubbed with salt and a I piece of crinkled paper. 0 — * “TWENTY'S ears I I AGO TODAY i From the DsltyD-tmecrat File ; 4 « Oct. 7 —Mrs. Jessie Burdg of Deratur elected Grand Pythian Sisters trustee. Secretary McAdoo declares Allies will fight until victory is c’.inchev'. Dr. J. C. Grandstaft secretary Adams county board of health, acting under orders from Dr. J. N. Hurty, state health secretary, orders all acuoo'ui. churches, theaters wud public meeting places, closed until further notice, on account-of the ■ . . 11 1 ■
- ■ . SAVINGS for SATURDAY I I’epsodcnt ic Sale — sic BPWywWWNCMy i-isterine Tooth Paste r. JkMEH c Sale ESwylß 2k . 26c "■ Nyal Honey & llorato hound for Cougits and BaMpBII s©c tgfc l \wj|MEwWswißiWw I axacoid for apa ■Swt Head ( olds_ H 6oc SalHepatica __ P Tablets L Haliver Oil Capsules ___ /“G .M'sa-S.dl/.r G5c Pinex Xaa....»9c X?SB9c ■ Jf MONEY BACK ON SI.OO M. & 0. » LARGE ONE E J IF NOT SATISFIED 85c Ucxtro Wf *'™ GIFT BOTTLE Maltose O“C ® ; ’ JTg^-whib<> tti.withsod I ’ I M I i) sue Hinds. Money back on S;i IM I latgs <i«e if gift bottle HI 5 doesn't mgke chapped skin S. S. S. — V * feel softer. JM. p t . 69c /Imond°cream 45c Holthouse Drug Co
serious influenza epidemic Urban Kintz, Geneva soldier, dies of the flu at Camp Grant, 111. German Fire Insurance Co., ' changes name to French Township Mutual. 4.90 G voters have qualified to vote ' in Adame county by registering, > the report of C. C. Ernst and S. | W. Peterson, registration clerks. 1 show. 0 * Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE *| Q Is it good form to eat pop corn , or candy during the progress of a motion picture? A. No; this is very annoying to | the people nearby. A well-bred per-, son will remain perfectly quiet. . Q Would it be possible for a woman without servants, to give i a formal dinner? A. The only way she could do so would be to secure outside assist-: '"■-- — . ■ X
Tcoldweather ! MARK SET HERE Mercury Fails To 38 Last Night For Season’s Low Mark ■ A new low temperature mark for I :ie season was set in Decatur last night ns the city experienced prd- - Lsbly Its heaviest frost of the fall j reason The mercury started rapidly des-, I rending Thursday evening until It reached a low recording of 38 de-1 grees above zero at 4 a. m. The temperature hung at 38 de-1 | grees until after dawn, when it: J slowly climbed to 40 above al 8, : o’clock. I The new low mark, just six de-1 i grees above freezing, is also five ' degrees lower than the previous record for the season set several weeks ago during a cold spell. j The weatherman, evidently en1 couraged by a warm sun that shone early this morning, predicted the low temperatures would be shorti’ved. forcasting warmer and cloudy weather for Saturday. o — CLERK BIERLY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i street, and south of Washington ’ street. Vote in the old Hower j Grocery building. If for any reason the residence has been changed in or out of these or any other precincts in Adams I county, it is necessary to re-regist-J er. Changes of name arc also ; causes of re-registration. o KILLER OF FIVE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) decided to rescue him. AY ben Nash, manacled to federal agents and surrounded by federal agents, stepped off the train and out of the Kansas City union terminal, they were met by a blaze of ma- ; chine gun fire. The gunners were careless. Not only did they kill Nash s four guards, but Nash Miller a year later was killed by gangster associates near Detroit, and. two years later, Pretty Boy and Richetti were trapped by GI ance. Q. What is the proper way to ad- ! drese a member of the House ot I Representatives? A. “My dear Congressman." or i “My dear Representative.” I
Style.. Beauty.. Value.. ML That’s the watchword in every Niblick 1 & Co. garment. Especially interesting < is the large showing now awaiting you. • Come in! Choose your new Coat or ; Dress from a stock that was especially W bought for you. £ NEW FALL COATS 1W * fe never .seen a finer -L'J 1’ New styles . . new / s . . new shades. one a beauty. Richly •iirmed Coats. j $16.95 t 0 ararX 1 $49.50 HF ■all Dresses L W ■■ >u know you’ll he correctly . essed in one of these new frocks. Os a bw numbers just arrived today. JvfLfl zes 11 to 20, and 38 to 50. Black M d colors. w 3.98 M. 98 100 NEW GAGE HATS Just Arrived. Wonderful Selection. New Sl.'le*Black - Wine - Rust - Green. $2.98 $8.98 s4<gg NIBLICK & CO 1
’ men near Wellsville. O. Pretty Boy was killed aud Richetti was captured, Richetti insisted be was innocent of any participation in the massacre. o— REICH BECOMES 1 (CONTINUED FROM FxUE ONE) the French satellite system such as the little intents Csechoalovukia. Roumania and Yugoslavia ’ —which has largely lost reason tor existence. 5— Rapid extension of the Ger-: 1 man political and economic influence through middle Europe to tbe Black Sea, with Hungary. Yugoslavia and Roumania moving 1 into the Nazi orbit. 6— Isolation of the Soviets from their European connections with ' Czechoslovakia and France. < —Augmentation of French diplomatic dependence on Great Britain. Among the first repercussions of the regrouping of powers will be France's attempt to repair her fences by rapproachment with Italy in an effort to safeguard her position in the Mediterranean. Al-
Monday, Oct 10l —last day to register I It is necessary to register, IF- j * Y’ou have moved since you last voted I * You have changed your name for any reason . I * You have not voted for two consecutive years I It is your patriotic duty to register and vote if by ElectuaJ November 8. you will have — * Lived in your precinct 30 days * Lived In your township 60 days * Lived in the state 6 months Y ou can register at the following place County Clerk's office. or with your precinct committeeman; Lang’s Drug store, Gtueva; Elmer Winteregg, Leonard Baumgart tier and Dave Stauff-r, Berne, or if in doubt, phone 73 or 108. County Clerk's Oft ice will be open until 8 o'clock Saturday anti Monday evenings for the convenience of the voters. ADAMS COUNTY DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL COMMITTEE ~ " I —■
w,.- — m'’® X" 1 s A luoilx ~ ' VH I . cr '”' ''oUm tw " ,r '"“Ju ' u Hill,. T " l,y ,l ’ u t-,.| lhj[ J| has Hatched with ltl| '| ;**"> as rtiddie Eur ope fil! " '"“ve 'hey thru,(J *>>K t<> ternin whh J of Iht qm-rt "I Ethiopia "’ e "' ■'>' lt »i WrnafiXß l«e Snani.h ,| vU •ne Ilk, ly to reafi, with Italy even j( j,. 4 tt*s>'* to withdraw as f.or.i 51..00 as originallyZl Miss Harriett Frucht, , J iioni Earlham the past • count of illness. h
