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The Daily Chronicle from De Kalb, Illinois • Page 3

Location:
De Kalb, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, PACE TOREK THE DEKALB DAILY CHRONICLE, DE KALB, ILLINOIS Social Security Program, said that Social Security was a phrase coin-' WORK HARD TO KEEP PEACE WASHINGTON New Cortland School Ready for New Year ed by his own Dartv. President GENOA NEWS Hoover referred specifically to "unemployment Insurance," the NE4WS basic provision of the Social Se-1 The new Cortland --'-oo! build n.nM 30. The Doublet son, Frederick of Ehrin snent Sun. curity program, when he made his ing will open for the fall and (Continued From Pago 1) France, would go to iher aid. iet Russia would keep her pact to aid the Czechs.

Under those cir request of the Senate Committee. Four Club met at the nome oi aay with relatives here. winter terms at Cortland Tuesday. The Question Is "VVhn originated i re Pharles Southard on Friday Mrs. Mabel Bodeen and son.

Ar- the idea of Social Security?" "Who afternoon. Mesdames F. Tilley, J. Ttiiled Cock Robin?" (Sell, K. Saunders and John Duval Only a minor plumbing Job and an exterkir drainage remain to ccimplete the splendid new educational addition to Cortland's civic environment A SICK INDUSTRY The soft acted as substitutes.

First prize coal industry is sick. It is a case cards was awarded Mrs. F. Fan-of too much competition. Oil, nat-j ning.

seconds Mrs. F. Tilley, third ural gas," and hydro-electric cower to Mrs. J. Duval, fourth to Mrs.

cumstances, Britain could ftot reasonably keep out, while thej smaller European nations mereljf would wait to see which way the British turned before going the sajme way. Italy would remain neutral if possible. I i den, of Batavia, spent Sunday with Miss E. Awe. Mr.

and Mrs. Max Burrows and daughter, Ina and son, Robert, were in DeKalb. Saturday. Miss Loretta Willis of Rockfbrd, spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. C.

Awe. Mrs. Bess Hermance and son and It was learned this morning that one change naa oeen made Dy FROM OUR CONGRESSMAN have thrown hundreds of Southard and traveling prize to IS YOUR FURNACE Always HUNGRY? N. M. MASON the school board recently in the teaching staff.

Due to the resignation of John O'Brien, Frank Rid Mrs. C. W. Swanson. ine next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs.

Emma Markoff at King- ands of miners out of work, and reduced the number of days work for the miners still working. What dlesbergeri- graduate of DeKalb Mrs. Field and Miss Rene Doran are moving from the Hadsall A VICIOUS CIRCLE Secretary of Agriculture reduces the can be done about it? What is the ston in two weeks Colonial brings you efficient, economical, trouble-free operation, and the winter-long comfort oi dean, healthful, even heat. See or phone your Green Colonial dealer today. apartment to the Albert More acreage of cotton.

He decrees that Germany Loses War Most keenly illustrative- of this powerful ring drawn by Britain to discourage a Nazi explosion as newspaper comment in Poland, Vhicft recently has been trying to play both sides of the fence. cure for this sickness? Congress Mrs. Caddie Corson was guest of gave the sick soft coal industry honor at a surprise on Sunday at house on Locust Street Teachers College, has been given the position. The position is that of teaching the seventh and eighth grades. O'Brien has taken a pos tion with the DeKalb County Farm Bureau.

53 shot in the arm when it nassed the i the "Ten Oaks" with about Mrs. George Buzzell of Kingston and Mr. and Mrs. A. Listey spent The way some furnaces "gobble up" fuel almost makes a man want to "end it alL" That's one reason why so many home owners are turning to Green Colonial Furnaces.

Green Colonials are real fuel avert! That's because they are KiMtiRctily designed and built by skilled Green Heating Engineer and produced by a company with 69 years of heating experience. And with Green Engineering Uuffey Coal Act, a little NRA for the coal industry. Its beneficial ef wi. "firmn Inst theiwar be Sunday at Maple Park homecom ing. guests, of relatives and friends helping her to celebrate, her 75th birthday.

Sunday guests at the home of The teaching staff Is not Increased lit numbers, even though fects, If it had any, have now vanished, and the patient is as bad- Mr. and Mrs. Luman Colton and FREE FURNACE INSPECTION Perhaps your heating problem st just a matter of a thorough furnace cleaning, a few adjustment! or minor repairs. To ba sure, let an experienced Green Heating Engineer intpect your furnace now, free of ly off as ever. The same Con- Mr.

and Mrs. A. V. Anderson son Richard of Kirkland, spent Sunday with the John Pratt fam each cotton raiser shall plant onlyl so many acres; re puts a quota on each farm. That means, of course, less cotton planted.

Less cotton planted means fewer men engaged in working in the cotton fields, fewer men engaged in transporting cotton to the gin. fewer men engaged in the gins, fewer men at work on the railroads carrying the cotton, fewer employes In cotton mills. It means, in short, fewer men at work. So, we have fewer men. at work.

And fewer men at work means fewer men able to buy cotton shirts and other cotton the new and larger building has been completed there "oilmen is expected to be about the same as in other years, an average of about 70 pupils. ily. Mrs. Helen Russell and grald- ervice, you get a so -entifkally correct in- tallation, based upon MfWMri ennaren, Doris and Jack, were guests of her sister. Mrs.

J. The school serves not only the land at Maywood. Tuesday. village of Cortland but also nearby A charge. He may ba able to thow you how to cut fuel cottt a 3 r-tuch aa 25.

Att your local Green Colonial dealer to arrange an appointment. fore Jt haa begun," remajrked the Warsaw newspaper Ilustrowany Kuryer Codzieny. "The attitudes of France. Great Britain and (the United States show that Germainy is entirely isolated. Germany cannot risk vr In this isolation, nor; can she tart one; and this isolation works for peace." The attitude of Poland I was significantly emphasized by a visit by Antonl Jazdzewskl, Polish charge d'affaires in Lonson.

to foreign Secretary VIrscount Halifax, (who was understood to have urg'id Polish collthoratlon for peace. Oi paper and rather like paper profits on the stock exchange that might audden- Mr. and Mrs. Ben Awe and rural areas. Pupils are picked up gress that passed the Guffey Coal were: Mrs.

F. Hendricks, Mr. and Act permits the importation of for- Mrs. L. Oldman, Mr.

and Mrs. Wal-eign oil from Mexico, and appro- ter Ivan and two sons of Chicago priates hundreds of millions of and Mrs. B. Engstrom of St. dollars to build hydro-electric Charles.

plants. In direct competition with Harold Austin and sister. Miss coal. The Big Muddy project in, gather returned Sunday after vls-southern Illinois just approved, In jttng relatives Lamshlng, Mich. -nht8huri lT ill!" I B.

C. Awe is suffering with inconsistency. How long must i coal miners of this nation suffer! Chester Rubnck and A. J. Dual this unfair competition subsidized "turned to their duties at the by the same government that Lelcn on Monday after en- a detailed study oi your heating requirements, accurate plant and tpecincationt.

That's why a Green daughter, Viola, spent Sunday with their son, Melvln, in Sherman Hos pital, Elgin. Harriett Whipple of Rockford, called on her grandfather, Charles Whipple Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A.

W. Dolan of Byron spent Friday with relatives here. by a motorist employed by the school board, brought to school In the morning and returned home In the evening. Due toi the small enrollment in the high school department, athletics are not encouraged at Cort-land. Thiis the expense -f providing gymnasium and equipment was not necessary in the construe-tion or operating achool budget.

DE ALB SHEET METAL WORKS Call ilaaa A Key Shop. 30 F- Lincoln Phone 259, DeKalb 4. LARSON. SANDWICH, ILL, goods. That in turn means less demand for cotton.

And that, finally means less cotton to be raised. Mr. Wallace next year Will have to reduce the acreage of cotton still further. IMPORTS DECUNrl-Th other day a constituent wrote and joying a two weeks vacation wants to help them? Mr. and Mrs.

Karl Holtgren and WVimtK Backed by 69 Yran of Heating Experience GREEI1 at the were callrrs on Saturday Services for Genoa Woman to He on Thursday Genoa. Aug. 31. Funeral services for Mrs, Van Wie, 3.1, reter Nelson home. Fred Conway of Sleepy Eye, asked me If 't wn true that im-Hrts of farm have declined during the past six months.

Yes, imports have di)ined but it Is due to two factor, one bring that the domestic prices of farm In San Dlegc county, the Elburn Farmer Is Found Dead in Farm Yard attpndr-d the funral of his sheriffs department it now using Minn pianes t( truck fleeing criminals. sister, Mrs. Harry Luxton on Fri Oily. The nolle can and the planes are George ObrThnrt, living on a whose tragic and untimely dead CHRONICLE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Mr. and Mrs.

Howard Brett and In communication with each other Mr. and Mrs. Uevan McKenile re- by means of radio. oecurrcd yesterday morning at the! three miles northwest of Elburn. was found dead In the turned on Saturday from an outing at the la-krs.

vanish Poland remained thej ily powerful link to be welded into the rhaln Intended to curb any Nnl blow that might start war in central Europe. F.lwwhrr on the world's trouble fronts: Chechoslovakia," -L The Sudetfn Germans were reported trf have rejected In advance the government's proposal to grant them semi-autonomy on the Swiss cantonal system, demanding instead full autonomy similar to the independent! status of, the 'Irish. Free State. Government officials sought to calm liewspaper attacks on Germany. China.

The United Sttaes was urged by American missionary and business leaders fn Shanghai to use every means toward ending the China war and seeking restoration of foreign rights on the Yangtse river. An urgent message was sent products are now so low that It Is no longer profitable for the foreign farmer to export his products to our markets. Then, too. a number of the heavy exporting countries are suffering from severe droughts which have resulted In greatly curtailing the production in those countries. Now that the American prices are considerable below cost of production the American farmer is again permitted to have his own market.

It Is only when that market is profitable that the foreigner comes in and yard of his farm yesterday morning, apparently a suicide. Obe'r-hart was found in a sitting position against one of the supporting girders of the windmill. Nearby was a .22 calibre rifle and a hole in the temple was mute evidence of the cause of death. The body was discovered by Frank Mark, a farm hand. Mark summoned Albert Oberhart, a brother of the dead man, and the Kane county sheriffs office was notified and an Elburn doctor called.

The doctor pronounced the man dead. Albert could offer no explana-tiin for his brother's actions. He Sycamore hospital from complications following the birth of daughter five weeks ago yesterday, will be held on Thursday afternoon. The service will be held from the home at 2:00 o'clock. In charge of the Eastern Star.

Th? service will be conducted by the Rev. E. M. Edwards, pastor of the Genoa Methodist church, with Interment in the Genoa cemetery. Mrs.

Van Wie had been seriously ill since the birth of the daughter. The daughter died at birth. On Thursday last week she was able to leave the Sycamore hospital, but when she suffered a relapse she was returned to the hospital on Monday of this week. Mrs. Van Wie was.

born in Chi Several from Creston attended the rites for Mrs. Harry Luxton at the home northeast of here. Vernon Smith and family are enjoying a visit with relatives in the east as Mr. Smith is having his vacation from railroad duties. Mrs.

John Lewis returned the latter part of the Week from an auto trip to different points In the east. Theodore Cedarholm returned tc duties at the Creston creamery on Monday after having been laid up for an extended time with an Friday and Saturday Only! S9C This Ccrllllcatc Is worth $4.41 jJ9C i Thia certificate and 59c entitles the bearer to one of our renuine Indestructible S5.00 VACUUM FILLER SACK LESS FOUNTAIN PENS with genuine Duotone Durium Point. Visible ink supply You SEE the ink. A lifetime guarantee with each pen. Universal size to be used by men, women and children.

I THE PEN WITH A LIFETIME GUARANTEE takes it away from him. BELIEVES IN ADVERTISING to. Secretary of State Cqrdell Hull In addition to being one of the coincident with Japanese reports bieeest property owners in the that their offensive was cracking country uncle Sam is also one of ODen the entire Chiese defense of thp heaviest advertisers Arrord- the heaviest advertisers. Accord Hankow stated that his brother had been drinking a lot lately, but had no troubles that he knew of. injured ankle received while driving the truck on the cream route.

Mr. and Mrs. Adam Hoereth were In Chicago on Wednesday to attend the. funeral of a relative. cago on April 7, 1905, the daughter of Adam and Mary Weber Ludwig, and came to Genoa twenty years ago with her parents.

For a period of eight vears she ing to the latest figures compiled by Congressman J. Parnell Thomas of New Jersey, the government in one year sent out at the expense of the taxpayers 669,352,060 pieces of mail weighing 91,125,145 pounds at an estimated cost of 54 million dollars, which does not include Spain. The Loyalist government reported new gains on the Estre-madura front In southeastern Spain where they said three insurgent divisions of about 10,000 men were trapped In the Zujar valley. Loyalist bombing "planes raided Nationalist warships at Ceuta. Spanish Morocco.

1 THE NEW PLUNGER FILLER VACUUM ZD? ONLY ONE PULL AND IT'S FULL CREST0N The pattern of the skin on a bird's leg Is a valuable aid to scientists in linking up the various bird families. Related families have similar designs. Lutheran Ladies Aid to Be Entertained at Church on Thursday. This PEN holds 200 more ink than any ordinary fountain pen on the market Vru can write for three months on one No repair bills. No lever filler.

No pressure bar. Every pen tested andj guaranteed to be unbreakable far life. Get yours NOW. THIS PEN given FREE if you can buy one elsewhere In the city for les than FIVE DOLLARS. This certificate good only while advertising sale Is on.

LIMIT SORRY, JVO MORE THAN' THREE PENS TO EACH CERTIFICATE postage. To prepare this flood of propaganda the administration keeps employed 270 publicity writers whose total salaries run better than $600,000 annually. The sad part of all this needless expense is that the biggest part of the propaganda that is sent out is consigned to waste baskets and never read. "WHO KILLED COCK ROBIN?" President Coolidge had a was employed in the office of the Leich Electric Company in Genoa. Mrs.

Van Wie was also greatly interested in music, nnd for some time gave piano lessons. On November J6, 1928, she was united in marriage to George Van Wie. She leaves to mourn her death her husband, her father, Adam two half brothers, Charles Welter of Genoa and Nicholas Welter of the Soldiers' Home, Quincy, and two nephews and two nieces. Her mother passed away in March, 1933. Oil Chief Dies From Injuries by Circus Lion $1.30 PENCILS TO MATCH ABOVE PENS, 29c Prica After Sale $5.00 iup An Ideal Pen for Office, School or Home Sheboygan.

Aug, 31 4U.P T. W. Cahtll, 40, i Memphis, Creston, Aug. -30. Mrs.

Fred Busse and Mrs. Lloyd Kruger of Esmond will entertain the Lutheran Ladies Aid at the Creston church on Thursday, Sept. 1. The Young People's meeting will be held at the parsonage on Thursday evening Sept. 1.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blackmore entertained company froi Oak Park last week. Mr. and -Mrs.

Bowen of Sterling Sealed bids will be received by the City of DeKalb for the repair of Pumping Station on E. Locust Street until the hour of 7:30 p. m. on Sept. 3, 1938.

Work to be done can be seen by applying to the Commissioner of Public- Works at the City Hall. CITY OF DE KALB By H. J. yakala. Mayor.

205 oil company executive, study made of the Social Security DEKALB NEWS COMPANY died last night of Infection re-! problem in the United States by suiting from being chtwed by a I the Senate Committee on Educa- circus lion. tion and Labor of the 70th Con- SSI East Lincoln Highway DeKalb, UL cahill was clawed as: ne walked i gress. The study was mnde a lion cage while visiting ant to S. R. 219.

In 1932 a report Police Seize Man for Firing on Three Boys 83S winter quarters of thej Lindeman on Social Security was made at the request of President Hoover, Brothers Sells-Sterling Circus last Thursday. He and hiS wife had Senate Report 964. This report been vacationing at neprby Cedar Went very thoroughly into today seized John Robin- subject of Social Security, but a Beach. His body was taken to the home of his" mother at Milwaukee. son.

24, Chicago radio repair man, and shortly afterward he confessed, according to Sergt. Sandor Singer, that he shot one of three boys who allegedly stoned him Democratic Congress fefused to act thereon. President Roosevelt a few days ago, on the Ihird anniversary of the establishment of the Chronicle Want Ada Being Resulta as he sat on the back porch of his Chicago home Shot and critically wounded was Harold Murphy, seventeen. A .22, calibre bullet was lodged near his spine. Surgeons at a Chicago hospital sought vainly for The Same and the Same Bank two hours last night to remove the bullet.

Murphy and two companions, Harold Moberb, sixteen, and Nor-bert Vhallng, fifteen, were in an alley in the rear of Robinson's home w5en the shooting occurred. Robinson, according to: Singer, said the boys stoned him yesterday and shouted to him "We'll chase you out of town; we don't want you In the "If you come back I'll shoot you.H Singer quoted Robinson as warning the boys. When the boys 6 returned. Robinson opened fire end Murplr fell with a bullet in his back. Singer said Robinson related.

Singer said that Robinson signed a waiver and was being held for Chicago police. Rites for Bert Reiser Will Be Held on Friday Funeral services for Bert Reiser of Rockford, former resi- of this city, will be held on Friday afternoon at 2:00 olclock i rom the First Baptist church In Rockford. relatives in this city to- Haircuts are all a matter ci confidence, cmdonci you find the right barber you day were Informed. Mr. Keter died at 7:45 o'clock yesterday morning at the Barber-Coleman plant in Rockfcfrd.

where he had been employed for the past ten Chesterfield Tims on Your Radio Paul Wimteman rrry Wtdnnduy F.ptniuf All B. S. Slatm years as a janitor. Death, was attributed to a heart attack. Mr.

Kelser wasvborn on October keep going back to him again and again. This samja customer confidence applies to banklng. First National Bank in DeKalb boasts of a large clientele of DeKalb people who have found it the right bank for service, dependability, advice and every other financial facility. 22, 1S70, In Prophetstown, com lnz here as a youn man. Eleven Light up a Chesterfield and youll get your wish for refreshing mildness, better taste and pleasing aroma.

You'll say "Chesterfield is a great cigarette." It takes good things to make a good product. That's why we use the best ingredients a cigarette can have mild ripe tobaccos and pure cigarette paper to make Chesterfield the cigarette that smokers say is mtider dnd better-tasting. Paul Douglas Daily Sfrtt hvtrtm SI Ltadimf S. B. Slattern jenrs ago he moved to Rockford, He Is survived by his widow Alice Kelser, one son, Clarence, of Rockford, we daughter, Mrs.

Vera Worden of Sycamore, five grandchildren, four brothers, Charles of Sterling, Andrew of I' DeKalb, William of Geneva and Frank of Chicago; two half sis MORE PLEASURE for millions ters, Mrs. Anna Metcalf cf De FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN DE KALB Member ffderaj rplt Insurrv Corporation 1 Member Federal Reserve System Kalb and Mrs. Katie Millard of Chicago, and four half brothers. Glen Kaiser ot DeKalb, Alfred Kaiser of Milwaukee, Ed lUirke of DeKalb and George Burke of Chicago. One daughter and; one Cffrht U.

Ikmsu Mvm Toatfco son have preceded him la death..

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About The Daily Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
814,006
Years Available:
1895-2024