Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 251, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1924 — Page 4

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Publlabad Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. X H. Heller—Pree. and Gen. Mr E W. Kempe—Vlce-Pree. 4 Adv. Mr A- R Hclthouae—Sec'y. A Bui. Mr Entered at the Postoffice at Decatui Indiana, a* second class matter. Subecrlptlon Ralea: Slngle coplee . —I cent One week, by carrier — _lO cent One Year, by carrier ——- lt.Oi One month, by mall —cent, Three Months, by mall — .... 11.01 Six months, by mall ———ll.7l One Year, by mall— >3.<J< One Year, at office . ■ .... —?8-0( (Prices quoted are within first anc second sonea Additional postart added ontslde those sones.) Advertising Rated Made Known ea Applleatleu Foreign Representative Carpenter A Company, 123 Michigan Avennue, Chicago, Fifth Avenue Bldg., New York City, N. Y. Life Bldg.. Kansas City Mo. The democratic campaign in this county will close with a big night rally in this city latter part of next week. Arrangements are now being made for a national speaker and plans consumated to make the event the biggest meeting of the campaign. The democratic women of this county are organizing, a fine thing for them to do and the greatest help| the committee can have. They can secure a larger vote and can help in numerous ways on election day and in the time between now and November 4th. The meeting in this city Friday night should be largely attended and should result in much good. The r.iliy"^^Tierne”Text Monday night should attract a large crowd. The speakers will be Hon. T. A. Gottschalk. leading democrat in the last session of the legislature and a candidate for representative from Adams and Wells counties this year and the Hon. George Emerson Francis, great platform leeurer. Everybody is going to Herne Monday night. Join the crowd. The democracy of Adams county presents to you a splendid list of candidates, several of whom have served you in office and who have proven their ability. That’s what you want. You are about to employ the men who will look after your business the next four years. Judge them by their honesty, ability, manner and their past records. Indiana will collect thirty-six milmion dollars in taxes of various kinds thi 8 - vear and the state is near ’y tour million dollars in debt. The last year Governor Ralston served you the state collected eleven million deltas and the balance in the treasury was over three million dollars with no debts. Which administration appeals to you? The talk about conditions in Indiana is not idle gossip and you know it. The record is written in every newspaper in the United States. Hoosierdem ha§ been disgraced and the taxpayerZwill continue to pay the bill for years to come. It is your duty, regardless of other matters, to see that the peseut administration is removed tnd ;he!- place taken by democrats. Ed Jackson who is the candiI date for governor is at present seer laiy of state and has had a part in those things which have more than trippled expenses, added thousands of new officers whose greatest labor is to draw their salaries. Voters awaken and help to clean the state house. Nearly a thousand farmers registered at the “Better Bull Special" at the Erie here yesterday and several i u,idled others who did not register visited the train, one of the most interesting which ever came to this city. The farmers of Adams county are interested in better cattle and they showed it yesterday. The program was good and those who assisted in making the day a success are ' to be congratulated and deserve com i s

Flashlights of Famous People

* Face Ao Face IT. ” WitK it, John Pierpont Morgan Os Morgan and Company t* (By Joe Mitchell Chapple) " At the mid-day peak of a busy day's business, I saw John P. Morgan. th< •0 financier, rushing to take the elevat I® or. He turned and smiled at his vis itor. This gave a side of John Pier *0 pont Morgan that is not understood ® The question is asked: “lg he as se ’ e vere as be looks?’' “Is he as big a man as his father?” The answer is that he is John Pierpont Morgan, himself, as you want to be yourself and become a master of your work. Isolated in away, he nevertheless understands the public—all sides of which he has studied with the one object of public and business service on ’• a broad scale. Far from the domin- '• ant. lordly figure that he has been s pictured. John P. Morgan is first of ( all a modest mam. Meeting his re- | sponsibilities he has become a world in his own right and has f kept his head. Aversion to having . his picture taken, he is ready to face . anything rathVr than a camera. When an atack was made on his life he proved his courage and first consid- ■ eration of others. Incident after incident of his kindness has been suppressed. His tender regard for his mother and his reverence for his I father have its influence in develop- , ing a man who seeks not the spotlight. | but accepts his position in the whirl of fate and fortune and has proven that his primary object is to_accomfi lish results rather than merely make | money. During the war he loaned the army department a million dollars without security and bridged a crisis. Like his father and grandfather he has unlimited faith in his country and Its institutions. He insists that optimists whose faith never wavers in confidence are usually the ones that reap the real reward. John Pierpont Morgan today has made his way despite handicaps of popular prejudice which he has proven in emergencies of all kinds. Cool headed, he knows how to keep his head and push forward with an unswevering purpose to maintain the high position of the house of MorganIt is not always the exploits in the lime-light that furnish us the clear“l have always felt that every really

Editor's Note: Send ten names of your favorite famous folk now living to Jos Mitchell Chapple, The Attic, Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York City. The readers of this paper are to nominate for this Hall of Fxme.

mendation. Quite a number of the bulls were sold and two were given ’ away. It was a splendid day and showed that the business men of Decatur are trying id every way to assist the farmer. In this day much of I the money to be made on the farm 1 come s from livestock and any thing I which helps to make that part of the farm more productive is an effort in r the right direction. • ,—-— ' We don’t know what the other coun--1 ties of Indiana are going to do in the y coining election, but every indication it ( _ js that old Adams county will vote a decided protest against the misrule in Indianapolis and Washington: With i- every precinct organized and with the greatest interest manifested that has [. been seen here in ten years, look out . .for a real democratic majority. The . people of this county are sick and j tired of the centralized government now in force, wearried of the boards > and commissions, the misappropria- . tion of money, the employment of needless officials and they intend to vote in such manner there will be no . doubt as to how they feel. Whether or not Ed Jacfson belongs to the klan, he has proven by the fact that • he has so greatly increased the cost I of government in his office, that he endorsed the Dollings and in numerous other ways that he is unfit for governor. Most of those on his tick- ■ et are of the same stripe and it's time to check the present program by placI ing in office men who promise you ■ better thing H and have the ability and - the courage to do them. t — o —— ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ . ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ '!♦ ♦ 'j* From the Daily Dcrfwurat SiOS » 20 years ago this day ♦ *♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ • ♦ ♦ !, ’j Oct. 21# 1904—St. Vincent de Paul

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21,1921.

• / A gp’’ M * | . . «•' i pr I iJriE ; ,e fcUi .... t- - , r1 JOHN P. MORGAN says: f “To try to deceive and blind the s public in political matters is just as j reprehensible as dishonesty in financial matters.” a est discoveries of virtue in men.

1 good purpose that is right will stand f the test. To try to deceive and blind the public in political mutters is just 1 as reprehenslve as dishonesty in 1 financial matters. Honesty and truth ; count just as much in private actions as in financial transactions." In meeting John Morgan face to face I found a tall, sturdy man with a mustache, a red blooded, large hearted. jovial human, the last person in the world to be specified as proud, arrogant of capable of doing or saying anything mean or petty. There is no amount of prestige or financial consideration. you feel, that Would cause him to do unjust or unfair acts. Like hi s father, he believes first and last in character as the basis of confiden< e. When a financial Moses is needed to lead out the wilderness, the unimpeachable trustworthiness of John P. Morgan is looked upon as the magic name that has stood the test and inspires confidence even among those people who have been ready to berate the name of any firm on Wall Street. He may be brusque, but th? reputation of his firm is one thing that the J. P. Morgan of today would maintain even if he were compelled to leave Wall Street forever and retire to private life. The one impelling purpose of his career is to carry on in the same way the business of his father and grandfather attuned to the need s of the times, as it has been carried on for generations past . building strong and secure for each succeeding future generation.

Society gives pedro party, proceeds ifor charity. | Mrs. Florence Bain elected Great .Wenonah of Pocohontas lodge for In-, idiana. ■ Rev. L. W. A. Lucky of Indianapolis'' i buys Cadalac car fro mthe Schafer i Hardware Company. | L. Atith is at Fort Wayne on business. Baby boy born to Mr. and Mrs. James D. Brown of Kirkland town .ship. Young people of Decatur Reformed church will entertain twenty-five from Berne church next Sunday afternoon and a big program is planned. 1 Excavation work on interurban pow- ( er plant starts. H. H. Harruff places , first stake. Harry Straub and Miss Amelia 1 King of Urbana, Ohio, will be rnarri ‘ ed October 27th at Dan Straub home, s it is announced. t Mrs. Charles Smith of Portland B visits the Hammel family. *j < Big Features Os ( -! RADIO o < 1 ° ( Programs Today \ r > f t TUESDAY’S RADIO PROGRAM (Copyright 1924 by United Press) ,t WEAF, New York, (492 m) WGR. e Buffalo. (319 m) WEEI. Boston. (303 r- tn) WCAE. Pittsburgh. (462 m) and r WJAR. Provident. (360 m) 9 p. m (E. S. T.)—Joint concert by the Rus sian cathedral choir and the Mai e Jacobs string quartet. -■ WDAR. Philadelphia. (395 m) B:4f u p. m. (E. S. T.) Address of Brigadlei d General Charles G. Dawes, direct iron Academy of Music. WCX. Detroit. (517 m) 10 p. m. (E S. T.)—The Red Apple club. * WIP, Philadelphia. (509 m) 8:30 p * m. (E. 8. T.) —International collegi Ji debate Cambridge university veruu ' University of Pennsylvania. J Special General Electric program lat WJZ, New York (455 m at 8:30 p 1 m. (E. S. T.j—WGY, Schenectady

— |(390 m)’iit 7:45 p. (E- 8. T.) WMAQ. Chicago. 44 5 m) at 9:15 l> m. (E. 8. T). KOO. Oakland, (312 m) 9 p. m. (P. C. S. T.) and WFXXA, Dal — las (458 m) 8:30 p. m.( E. S. T.). -— o— — To One Who Has Not Long To Live A few short weeks or months, at most, To tarry here with friends Receiving gifts and kindness, As love above you bends. A little while to say goodbys. To dry our flowing tears; To whisper that sweet hope and trust I That comforts, so and cheers. e I i g And then to pass within the vail h Beyond our mortal sense And for all sorrow know at once Heaven’s perfect recompense. To find more fragrant, fairer flowers. ■ Than earthly eyes have seen. I Than firtie fields more lovely * lands—--1 More fruitful and more green. j 1 1 1 To meet the many gone before, — Dear ones of other days, To be with (hem and talk with them • With them walk wondrous ways. i To see the Christ and find the home His goodness power gnd love Have now prepared for you. dear heart, For you,— yes you—above. ‘ f ‘Tis sweet to live. I know, and ties That bind you you here are strong But heaven is sweeter still —grieve not To join that happy throng. And though we shall not see-you more Until our great glad days You, —though you live with Him in heaven. — Are with us still—alway! —A. D. Burkett. — o ELECTON HOLDS UP FRENCH LOAN Bankers Decide Not To Float Loan Here Untif Outcome Is Known ‘ (United Press Service> I Paris. Oct. 21 —There will be no , French loan floated in the United States until the outcome of the presidential election is known, it was ’ learned today. Negotiations betwen J P. Morgan and French statesmen and bankers have proceeded satisfactorily and Morgan's support of the project is ■Understood to be practically fissured. Much will depend upon the out< come of the election, however, and the French, in consequence, are taking an increased interest in the American campaign. o OTHER MEMBERS ' OF CREW SUFFER SERIOUS BURNS (Continued from Page One) Tlie accident recalls the catastrophe aboard the IT. S. A. Mississippi off San Pedro on Jude 13, when 48 men were killed in a gun explosion which was laid to' a four bore of one of the forward guns. The accident occurred during target practice. The dead in the disaster were: Ensign Harry Clay Drexler, Bethany Beach. Del. . f Roland Philips Hanson, Solder, 1 lowa, seaman. William Alfred Walker, Mayo, S.

| TO TESTIFY ■ ■■■ immw.r,,-,,,- »<■ I * \ r 1 > ie ■ : W: A i 1. f ■„■ yww »• 5 W 4” ' r WrW„ n .. !'■ ;« JSS3EH?!-—^S!!!!!—s. is EDWARD D. STOTESBURY This photo introduces Edward D. 1S Stflteebury, financier and chairman of a campaign fund committee, who P’ also will be subpoenaed to testify in X» Washington regarding collections.

) 1 (’., seaman, drowned. ' i. Bernard B. Ryan, Bristol. Conn., i I seaman. ■ George Robert Cholister, Merchants I ville. N. J., seaman. ■..1, - — O 1 " — FINE MEETING HELI) IN GENEVA BY DEMOCRATS (Continued from Page One) I Flynn ,of Logansport, national com- I ml tee woman, and Mrs. Mary E. Gub- I bins, of Muncie, district chair woman. I will be. the speakers The'women are I organizing for election day work. The I women from a4l over tire county are I urged to attend the Friday night ■ meeting. j

> <"MM IHH lIimiIIIMMMBWWRMBnniIMIIHIII ÜBAat.. ___ ' There’s no reason I* for even consider- fO | ( ing high prices this I ft I Fall! I 1 .We can understand how a man feels when he wants a By certain something and is willing to pav a few dollars extra rather than take “No” for an answer. I “I II pav £60.00 if necessary, to get the suit I want," K said a customer to us last Saturday— E Here is our reply: ■ < "I he exact suit you have described—the particular I \\< fabric—the very model—right down to the stitching I • IH ? n the button holes is here in these cases at S4s—and E > 4 y° u ’d like to see it—just say the word.” ■ ■ ■ ‘‘Go ahead,” he said. ■ R t’O ahead, we did—and within 2 hours our delivery H * ? fg boy was headed for this particular man's particular E Z address with the perscription filled ala saving of sls E “ —to the patient. ■ Z l /e ■A V Michaels-Stern Value First Suits and Top Coats— ■ T? \ k S 20.0 0" 545.00 ■ fetizb-T-Ay&cb Go I J BETTER CLOTHES fOfi LESS J MONEY-ALWAYS- I •DECATUR • 'INDIANA • • I Make Your Plans To Attend The I • E Mooseheart Concert I Auspices Loyal Order Os Moose i I HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM I • tW' Friday Evening Oct. 24th I This concert company is composed of first-class musicians I who are touring the United States and are meeting with great ; . Kg receptions wherever they play, All are, artists and they give r you a program of classical, popular and jazz music and songs. | 1 heir program is exceptionally good and will be worth your at- | tending. I Secure Your Tickets From Any Moose Memper ■ 50c Admission Price 50c I | Don’t Miss This Concert J I 1 — — jr . ■

lx>ts of Satisfied Customers— B | | sa .' «i! I fy/mji/vuiL' B JEWELS STORE /Il I