Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 28 October 1932 — Page 4

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FlftrOAr, 28, 1932

Biggest Stars in New Comedy Film “The Big Broadcast,” a romantic comedy set against the background of a radio studio, and featuring many of radio’s greatest personalities in company with a cast of screen favorites, opens Sunday at

fhe Rivoli Theater.

Bing Crosby, Kate Smith, the Boswell Sisters, the Mills Brothers, Cab Calloway and his orchestra, Burns and Allen, Arthur Tracy Crhe Street Singer) and Vincent Lopez and his orchestra, all of Whom have radio audiences numbering millions, are cast with Stuart Erwin, Leila Hyams and other movie players in the picture. The story revolves around CrosBy, Miss Hyams and Erwin. Crosby, in the film, as in real life, a radio favorite, is so fascinated by another woman that he never shows up at the studio in time for his broadcasts, and consequently gets himself fired. Erwin, in love with Miss Hyams, finds she loves Crosby; and in a magnificent gesture,

htiys the station.

, o NOTICE OF SALE OF DELAWARE CpUNTY NOTES

of said notes and information con* sional District

cerning the same are oh" file “IS the office of said Auditor and may he obtained on application therefor. • » - The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. Each bidder must state the full amount' of cash which will be paid b$f the bidder for the notes proposed to he purchased. Each hid must be accompanied by certified check for three per cent of the par value of the

notes bid upon and drawn against se t my hand and affix the seal

Notice is hereby given that up £8 ten o’clock a. m. on the 21 day of November, 1932, sealed bids Will be received by the Auditor of daware County, Indiana, at the ice of said Auditor in the Court House in the city of Muncie, Indi-

for the purchase of the CounDelaware Poor Relief notes

in' the amount of sixty-one thousand five hundred dollars ($61,500)

Hearing interest at the rate of six > De *]’ a war e

per cent per anmim, from date and payable at the office of the Treasurer of Delaware County, in the

pity of Muncie, Indiana.

Said notes will be dated, November 15, 1932, numbered 1 to 62 inclusive, and will be in the denominations and. mathre as follows ! , ■»«•)- No. 1 to 30, inclusive, for $1,* 000.00 each and No. 31 for $750.00 shall mature and become payable on May 15, 1934; No. 32 to 61, inclusive, for the sum of $1,000.00 each and No. 62 for $750.00 shall mature and become payable on November 15, 1934, with interest at the rate of six per cent (6%) per annum from date thereof payable On May 15, 1934, and November

1.5, 1934.

Said notes are being issued pursuant to Chapter 73 of the Acts of 1931 of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana and Acts Amendatory thereof, for the purpose of paying claims incurred by trustees of various townships in relief of the poor of their respective townships and which claims have been filed with the boards of commissioners of the county of Delaware, Indiana. Specifications

moneys in some reliable bank in Delaware County, Indiana, said check to be payable to the board of commissioners of the county of Delaware which will be held as a guaranty of the performance of said bid should the same he Accepted, and also accompanied by affidavit of non collusion as pro-

vided by law. ,

Bids must be made upon the .form provided by the auditor without additions, alterations or erasures, and no other form of bid will he considered and no alteration shall be made in the form prescribed. Said bids shall be sealed in an envelope marked .‘‘Bids for Delaware County Poor Relief Notes” and shall have no other writing or printed matter or distinguishing marks on the outkide of the envelope. Said notes will be ready for delivery on day

of sale.

W- MAX SHAFER,

Auditor Delaware County, Ind.

Oct. 28 andNov. 4.

Prosecuting Attorney. State Senator. State Representative. Treasurer.

Sheriff. Coroner.

Surveyor. Commissioner Second Districts Commissioner Third District Proposed Amendments to the Constitution. In witness whereof, I hereunto

said Court, this 8th day of October, 1932. (SEAL) MABLE B. RINGO, Clerk Delaware Circuit Court. I, Fred W. Puckett, Sheriff in and for Delaware County, in the State of Indiana, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true and complete copy of the certificate to me made by the Clerk iof the Delaware Circuit Court of the General Election to be held as therein indicated in witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of the office of Sheriff of Delaware County, Indiana. Signed this 20th day of October,

1932.

(SEAL) FRED W. PUCKETT, Sheriff of Delaware County.

LEGAL NOTICE OF GENERAL

, ELECTION

State of Indiana, Delaware County,

SS:

I, Mable B. Ringo, Clerk of the

Circuit Court of Dela-

ware County, Indiana, do hereby certify that a General Election will „be held on the 8th day of November, 1932, between the hours of 6 o’clock a. m. and 6 o’clock p. m., in the County of Delaware, in the State of Indiana, at which time the following offices will be voted for,

tp-wit:

Presidential Electors at Large. Presidential Electors. United States Senator. Governor of the State of Indi-

ana.

Lieutenant Governor. Secretary of State. Treasurer of State. Auditor of State. Superintendent of Public In-

struction.

Attorney General. Reporter of Supreme and Appel-

late Courts.

Supreme Court

Judge of the Third District. Judge of the Fifth District. Judge of the First District. Judge of the Second District.

Commissioner Second Dstrict. Congressman^ Tenth Congres-

Supreme Court Appellate Court Appellate Court

Past Presidential Polls of the Present Major Parties

Malden, Mass.—Edward Rogers,

aviator, no ability to

flies. Recently he was driven from his home by a swarm of angry hornets that emerged from a wall.

President

Vice President

Elect. Popular Coll.

James Buchanan

1856 J. C. Breckenridge

Party Dem.

Vote Vote 1,838,169 174

John C. Freemont

William L. Dayton

Repn.

1,341,264 114

Millard Fillmore

Andrew J. Donelson

Know

Nothing

874,534 8

Abraham Lincoln

1860 Hannibal Hamlin

Repn.

1,866,452 180

Stephen A. Douglas

H. V. Johnson

No.Dems.

1,376,957 12

J. C. Breckinridge

Joseph Lane

So.Dems.

849,781 72

Abraham Lincoln

1864 Andrew Johnson

Depn.

2,330,552 212

Geo. B. McClellan

Geo. H. Pendleton

Dem.

1,835,985 21

Ulysses S. Grant

1868 Schuyler Colfax

Repn.

3,012,833 214

Horatio Seymour

Francis P. Bair

v Dem.

2,703,249 , 80

Ulysses S. Grant

1872 Henry Wilslon

Repn.

3,597,132 286

♦Horace Greeley

B. Gratz Biown

Dem. and

♦Greeley died Nov. 29,

Liberal 2,834,125 47 1872. His electoral vote was distributed.

Rutherford B. Hayes

1876 . Wm. A. Wheeler

Repn.

4,033,768 185

Samuel J. Tilden

Thos. A. Hendricks

Dem.

4,285,992 184

HORNETS ROUT AVIATOR |ures for said Township during thejtownship trustee* at Royerton in MM ■ ‘ " “ f “ as follows, [the said/Township of . Hamilton, on

Lthe 3,1st day of October, 1932, at $150.00 12: 30. o.’clock of said day* at which

urrent year of 1932,

longer boasts of his lo-wit:

master anything that Fund No. 28, Insurance

Correst. this sentence: “They didn’t show any gratitude for my help,” said the man, “but I wasn’t sore about it.”

NOTICE

Notice is hereby given by the undersigned that^an emergency exists for a meeting of the Township Advisory Board of HamiltoirTownship, Delaware County, Indiana, to make appropriations of additional amounts of money for expendi-

Fund No. 25 School Supplies 250.00 time said appropritions

And that a meeting of the town-! considered.

will be

ship advisory board of said township, and the trustee thereof, will be held at the office of the said

GEO. W. 'BRINSON, Trustee of Hamilton Toivnship.

Oct. 21 and 28.

One reason why a man’s coat looks that way is because he doesn’t rear back as he did when he tried it on.

lllllllllllllillllllllillllllllllllllllllllll

Out of the air onto the screen, all of the stars of radioland .... STUART ERWIN BING CROSBY LEILA HYAMS BURNS & ALLEN KATE SMITH MILLS BROTHERS BOSWELL SISTERS ARTHUR TRACY (The Street Singer) VINCENT LOPEZ And His Orchestra CAB CALLOWAY “The Big Broadcast” Sun. - Mon. - Tues.

B.—The popular vote above is the Republican count, cratic count was Hayes, 4,036,298 and Tilden 4,300,590.

1880

The Demo-

U7

whole World prefers,

Jbg>ut>Wx

Jas. A. Garfield

Chester A. Arthur

Repn.

4,454,416 214

Winfield S. Hancock

William H. English 1884

Dem.

4,444,952 155

Grover Cleveland

Thos. A. Hendricks

Dem.

4,874,986 219

James G. Blaine

John A. Logan / 1888 Levi P. Morton

Repn.

4,851,981 182

Benjamin Harrison

Repn.

5,439,853 233

Grover Cleveland

Allan G. Thurviau 1892

Dem.

5,540,329 168

Grover Cleveland

Adiai E. Stevenson

Dem.

5,556,543 277

Benjamin Harrison

Whitelaw Reid 1896

Repn.

5,175,582 145

Wm. McKinley

Garrett A. Hobart

Repn.

7,111,607 271

Wm. J. Bryan

Arthur Sewall 1900

Dem.

6,509,052 176

William McKinley

Theo. Roosevelt

Repn.

7,219,525 292

W. J. Bryan

Adiai E. Stevenson 1904

Dem.

6,358,727 155

Theo. Roosevelt

Chas. W. Fairbanks

Repn.

7,628,785 336

Alton B. Parker

Henry G. Davis 1908

Dem

5,084,442 140

Wm. H. Taft

Jas. S. Sherman

Repn

7,677,788 321

Wm. J. Bryan

John W. Kern 1912

Dem,

6,407,982 162

Woodrow Wilson

Thos. R. Marshall

Dem. -

6,298,019 435

Theo. Roosevelt

Hiram W. Johnson

Prog.

4,119,507 8S

WTlliam H. Taft

N. M. Butler 1916

Repn.

3,484,956 8

Woodrow Wilson

Thos. R. Marshall

Dem.

9,128,837 277

Chas. E. Hughes

Chas. W. Fairbanks 1920

Repn.

8,536,380 254

Warren G. Harding

Calvin Coolidge

Repn.

16,152,200 404

James M. Cox

Franklin D. Roosevelt 1924

Dem'.

9,147,353 127

Calvin Coolidge

Charles G. Dawes

Repn.

15,749,030 382

John W. Davis

Charles W. Bryan 1928

Dem.

8,760,557 136

R. M. La Toilette

Burton K. Wheeler

Prog.

4,667,312 13

Herbert Hoover

Charles H. Curtis

Repn.

21,392,190 444

Alfred E. Smith

J. T. Robinson

Dem.

15,016,4^3 87

“THEY’LL TOW AMERICA OUT”

Lester E. Holloway PRESENT CITY CONTROLLER

Such is the Opinion of Los Angeles Advertiser,

yt?’-

1 I

DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY TREASURER VOTE FOR HOLLOWAY A Vote For Honest Efficient and —Courteous Service—

My Record for Reducing Governmental Expenses Stands As My Pledge for Future Economy

’S' H*

“Yes, some darned fools are still buying new automobiles,” declares the Los Angeles Motor Car Dealers’ association, in advertising in several Pacific Coast newspapers. ‘Who are they?” asks the advertising, and supplies the answer

thus:

“Well, they are people who' are unshaken in spirit by the past two yeabs, and who still have something in their pocketbook “They are not the sort of people who halt business conferences and bridge games to boast of their financial losses. “They prefer to plan future victories rather than glory in past de-

feats.

Curious Beliefs (“They refused to try and keep up with the Joneses when they discovered that the Joneses were in reverse gear. “They hold the curious belief that the majority of people are still going to continue to drive automobiles. '“Not one of them has bought a bicycle, or gone shopping for a good second hand horse. When an electric light bulb burns out at home, they buy another one, instead of getting an oil lamp. “They are the sort of people who would! climb out of a trench and find the enemy in the open and lick him rather than stay endlessly under cover, building impossible defences and fighting cooties. “They have the old American failing for wanting new and better things, for wanting to live a little today. . . . And some day, when enough of them get together, they’ll tow America out of this mess.”

“Cane” Molasses Still Being Made

Noblesville.—A few notes on the sorghum indystry. The season is about over. Factories had a big ct year because farmers wanted the home-grown molasses for their tables. The cane crop wasn’t as good as usual: too dry this year. Sorghum prices are off one-thid; sells for around 60 cents a gallon. Many factories refused to work up the cane on a share basis with the farmers. Cane will yield about twelve gallons a ton and something less than two hundred gallons an acre. A one-grinder factory

o

Wars will end when non-combat ants realize that they must inhale as much poison gas as the soldiers do.

USE LESS

than offiiqh Priced ’Brands If/* BAKING flV POWDER SAME PRlCt •^OROVER * 40 YEARS 25 ounces for 25 ^ Save the Difference

MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT

Marvelous flavor!

xf/L fuithjij&Gitafl AdJCUtq ML + + + tf (TRIPLE PIUS) What rich mellow flavor of fine old Cheddar cheese you get in sandwiches and cooked dishes made with Kraft Velveetai Digestible as milk itself. With a nutritional rating of plus, plus, plus/ A delicious treat for all the family—approved by the Food Committee of the American Medical Association. Get a package from your grocer today. ■W* KRAFT Welveeta yf The Deticiotu New Chscse Food

Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat In Just 4 Weeks

TDWifonvt Mimrm

to FORTY THEATRES k AND ALL SHOPS.

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HOTEh

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rtjhSfc volte v b X

Sind postal far Pfitts^Bookiek * JOHNSON QUINB

htstienL

Boy gloves wifh what it saves (t i.n’t necessary to pay 500 or more to get quality In a dentifrice. Listerine Tooth Paste, made by the makers of Listerine, comes to you in a large tube at 250. Nota bow it cleans, beautifies and protects your teeth. Moreover it seres ypu approximately $3 a year over 500 dentifrices. Buy things you need with that saving—gloves sra merely a suggestion. Lambert Pharma cal Co. LISTERINE TOOTH PASTE 25*

Mrs. Mae West of St. Louis, Mo., writes: “I’m only 28 yrs. o’ld and weighed 170 lbs. until taking one box of your Kruschen Salts just 4 weeks ago. I now weigh 150 lbs. I also have more energy and furthermore I’ve never had a hungry moment.” Fat folks should take one hall teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in the morning before breakfast—it’s the SAFE, harmless way to reduce as tens ol thousands of men and women know. For ypur health’s sake ask for and get Kruschen at any drugstore —the cost for a bottle that lasts weeks is but a trifle and if after the first bottle you are not joyfully satisfied with results-—monej back.

For Your Next Cake Use UTBAKING flV POWDER ‘llotice theJinelexiuce 5AME price * FOROVER J 4 40 YEARS « % 25 ounces for 25£ M

fffINELj EyES may 136 made ^

OUR THE MURINE COMPANY

kept clear and healthy byapplying Murine daily. It dissolves* the dust-laden mucous film, and overcomes bloodshot condition resulting from oyer-use. Soothing and Refreshing. Contains no belladonna nor anything harmful. Successfully used and recommended for infant and adult since 1897. „ BOOK SENT FREE ON REQUEST * Dept. H. S. 9 East Ohio Street, Chicago

CRUSHED STONE

Roads, Auto Drives, Garage Floors Concrete Aggregate. Muncie Stone and Lime Co.

Phone 1266

P. 0. Box 1212

Youthful Strength Dr. Magnus Hirschfield, the world-known authority on Sexology and Director of the Institute for Sexual Science of Berlin, Germany, created TITUS-PEARLS to help the millions of men and women who have lost or are losing their vital physical power. In his 35 years of practice and research, however, he realized that the weakening of man’s glands was also responsible for other troubles: High blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, physical exhaustion after work or exercise, dizziness, depression, neurasthenia, etc. •_ All these troubles can be removed with Titus-Pearls. Numerous cases were treated by Dr. Hirschfeld in his Berlin

Institute.

L. S. (State Official; 60 years old, married) complained of phyeical exhaustion, dizziness and tremors. Was easily tired. Mental powers dull and slow moving. Physical powers had been incomplete for previous 5 years. Blood pressure too high. Given 2 Titus-Pearls 3 times a day. 2 weeks later the medical report on this man was:—General health better,more vigor; dizziness much less and returning of power. Treatment continued and 2 weeks later L. S. reported again, this time to say that all weariness and exhaustion had gone; he felt fresh and buoyant. His blood pressure had fallen, and at 60 years of age he had regained the physical power and virility that he had krtown in the prime of his life. Start regaining your youthfulnese now! Today! In 2 weeks time you will be aware of the new; virile force within you. Send $5.00 (cash registered or money-order) for 2 weeks

treatment.

To avoid mistakes please fill out the following coupon: TEUTONIA IMPORT & EXPORT SERVICE CO., DEPT. 3633 211 Fourth Avenue, New York City, N. Y. Gentlemen: Please forward to the following address

Boxes Titus-Pearls, for which I enclose $. My name is City

address is State

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SCC Niagara/tills

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ONLY *3^ One Way $6.50 round trip between CLEVELAND and BUFFALO Autos, any size, carried for only *3.75 ($4- 75 July 1st to Sept. 14th inclusive) Why drive when you can put your car aboard for less than the cost of oil and gas ? More restful... cheaper... and saves a day. Steamers each way, every night, leaving at 9:00 P.M., May ISth to November lat. CLEVELAND AND PORT STANLEY, CANADA, DIVISION July 1st to Sept. 5th inch on Friday, Saturday and Sunday only #3.00 one way; $5.00 Rd. Trip. Any car only #3.73. THE CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO TRANSIT COMPANY Ask your Local Tourist or Ticket Asentfor new C&D Line Folder, EaSt 9th Street Piet including Free Auto Map and Cleveland, details on our All Expense Trips.

BLUE CAB COMPANY PHONE 2X99 Under New Management PROPRIETOR OF PUBLIC CAB CO. Any Place In City for 25 Cents We Carry Full Liability Insurance. ROSS SMOOT, Mgr.

Seiser & Miller INSURANCE That’s All 603 Wysor Blk. Phone 1585