Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1925 — Page 5
NEW PROHIBITION REGIME in effect Enforcement On Military ' Business Itanm Begins Under New Rule Wa ,hinKton. Oct. 18 - United Press.)-Prohibition enforcement or ■ military liuslnesa" banta began to 4, y when the organltation of Asslzf secretary of the Trewnry An . officially took over the work nf the adminieterlnw the Volatead law rhP o.ganiMtion with which Fed 0 ..| prohibition Commfeeloner Haynei idminiatered the law for four year, WM automatically extinguished by at order that theoretically discharge. two thousand agents and clerks Iron (be service last night, terminating tin nld regltnO. A large number of the old forces, probably 1.500. were, however, con •inued in the new service through reappointmeht by the 24 regional administrators iu Whose hands enforcement now is centered in the United States and its territorial possessions ' These administrators are solely responsible for enforcement ih their re spective districts dnd if they fail or falter they have the word of Andrews that t hey will be replaced. the mobile force of 1,80(1 agents was abolished with one wave of the wand In it s place Walton A. Green, chief prohibition investigator, has set up a bureau with about fifty detectives. Decentralfcation has virtually abolished prohibition headquarters here The permit section has been reduced from 11' employes to 20 and all per mit work henceforth will be handled bv directors. The publicity section under Prohibition Commissioner Roy Haynes—the section that was denounced by the research department of the Fed eral Council of Churches—is no long er in existence. In -its place hat grown a statistical' departmefit t< keep track of how the organization is functioning, its expenditures and its results. Haynes. Assistant Commissionei Jones. James J. Britt, legal counsel and Commissioner of Internal Rev enue Blair continue as a prohibition board of strategy that will assist An drews in general supervision of the work. • o 1 Warm Welcome Awaits Bank Bandits At Gary Gary. Ind., Oct. 16.—Any bank ban dits who come to this city looking for something- easy will be Surprised to find a Warm welcotne. With a reward of s2,o(m for a dead
~ a|WMB^y<gW y W^g|WHr^CTmB3MTaB a S aWgMMMWMMM»MWaWI»IHIM gg-g- % Wy "kIS Mur lE* fi fevW-A ’JP IbljlEi • it&Sl&fitoL T\/T ARY ELLIS AMES has written the Pillsbury Club IVI Course of 20 lessons in Cookery Arts and Kitchen Manf>/- agement in a most interesting and entertaining rhanner, No I theory—just the new and useful facts given in the leading Domestic Science colleges. This course costs you nothing, An anthority On household not even postage. Each month four lessons come to you post- SflSS.’.'XSlU’.'id paid. Thirty minutes each week is time enough to study them. serving of foods for all ocNo blanks to fill in. No examinations. No correspondence h™. unless VOU wish to secure the personal advice of Mary Ellis Management Club and author Ames on any household problem. This remarkable otter is cwttfy Arts and Kitchen made to acquaint you wit', the exceptional quality of . Management. Pillsbury’s Best Flour FIMB FOR BREAD, CAKE & PASTRY .g| z / 7 W Your first batch of bread or vour first cake 48-lb. bag) to Mar y ||| | W) ./ '/7,-y-\ L ' or pfe baked with Pillsbury's Best Flour will Flour Mt Is iK? / 7 //>? 1 demonstrate why this famous flour is used bls en J.° S ‘’2. cl b and the first four /dm I II I / ' 1 by millions of women for every baking pur- Home _ ka bi ’ cour se will be v / H rifiS i / ‘ pose. Pillsbury’s Best Flour is milled to meet lesson.-, o ‘ 7nd then four of the V\ A I 111111 Hill 11 r ItU / I • i ; '■) therequirementsofln-liana housewives and mailed to youat once.and. th^^ r ° r " u 1 I W [ f l£ T wm your favor. Aments close March 1,1926. dll HdU> to Enrol? as a Member of t’illsbury’* - Home Ma/ tagenient Cluh and Obtain \l7- -7 -r — This T.einarkableFvcc Course Asl f Z?? r rhtk / Iftk ■VAtSI J ! Send only iour Pillsbury’S Best Flour particular. Pifisbhry i Ilk j ’ i i) pEZl‘B«tKu?-T?ou^s-^eac O h Flour Mills Company, Minneapolis, Minn. / '
bandit, and 11,080 for a live bandit, employes of the banks, who are armed with automatic pistols, cun be expecti ed to "shoot to kill.” In luike county a "Vigilantes" comml.tee has been formed and the memherr of this organisation are aquipped with high powered rifles. There are 46 bank* In Uike county and bath bank Is organized to halt (he attempts of any bandit gang. —' o _ I). A. R. Elects State Officers At Evansville Evansville, Ind.. Oct. 16. (United Presa.)-state ofllcers of the Daughters of the American Revolution have all been named for le-eleetlon without lominatiou, assuring them of another term. Officers are Mrs. Charles W. Ross, Jrawford: ville, state regent; Mrs. HarVey Morris, Salem, vice regent; Mrs. R. C. Byrne, Brookville, recording secretary; Miss Elisabeth Sappen deld, Evansville, corresponding secretary; Mrs. John Stoner, Valparalto, treasurer; Mrs. Samuel Perkins, Indianapolis. historian; Mrs. Frederick Bates. Richmond, registrar; Miss Carolyn Ford, Madison, librarian; Mrs. Frank Felter, Huntingtottfchitplain; Mrs. William Matthew. Gary, auditor. Mrs. Frank Felter has also been endorsed ’ for vice president general from Indiana, succeeding Mrs. Henry Beck, retiring. Mrs. Henry Wilson. Delphi, has been nominated for hon orary state regent. Wednesday's session so the conference was featured by the society's silver anniversary celebration. Mrs. James Fowler, Lafayette, first state regent, was guest of honor. —————o NO HUNTING The undersigned forbid hunting or trespassing on their farms in Washington township. James McCullough, Albert Burk, Will Engle. Zlaser Bios. . _ x
——■■■ 'I" 'IM _ J . ■■■■■■> .ll— «!.■■■■■■ ■ —— FtHE CORT | TONIGHT ONLY I I “TIDES OF PASSION” I A Feature Attraction with ■ E MAE MARSH . 1 A diania of love and ronianee with a srntlll SB coast village as the back ground. fit I ■ "HE WJK) GETS CROWNED” comedy. fi 19c Fox News —25 c H Saturday—Richard Talmadge in "’‘The Mysterious Stranger” H S Simtlay ami Momhiy “KEnIT CKA PRIDE” m taMmgamaaaaaMWawamiMgi
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1925.
Mushroom Weighing 18 Pounds Found At Wybash Wabash. Ind., Oct. 16.—What ia believed to he the largest mushroom ever found in the United States was discovered near here by the Rev. P. W. Bond. Tho mushroom weighed more than eighteen pounds. Herman BtelgliU, of Milwaukee, held tho former record having found a puff ball weighing nine pounds. — 0 ;—'■ American Labor Does Not Want Party Os Its Own Atlantic City, Ort. 16. — (United Press) —American labor dobs not want a party of its own. This stand Was definitely shown here today when efforts to bring about the formation of an Independent political abor party were decisively defeated by the 45th annual convention of the American Federation of latbor. The failure of labor to support the lute Senator lit Folleete on an independent ticket Illustrated the mistake of attempting political action along independent lines. President Green said. o Mrs. Cunningham Begins Life Term In Prison Indianapolis. Oct. 16. — (United Press)—Mrs. Anna Cunningham, convicted of poisoning her son, was today a prisoner behind the walls of the Indiana Women's prison here. Mr/ Cunningham was brought to th eprison late yesterday to begin serving a life term. o Fish, (ia meAnd Forest League To Meet Oct. 29 Indianapolis, imi., Oct. 16. —Special.,) —The fourteenth annual meeting of the Indiana Fish, Game and Forest League v ill be held in the Palm Room - . .
of the Claypool Hotel in this city, Thursday. October 29. The morning session opens at It) o'clock add the afternoon sessloa begin* The Marlon County Fish and Oatne Protective Association will be host to visiting delegates at a dinner at 6 o'clock at (he State Fish Hatchery in Riverside Park, which will terminate the convention. The Fish, Game and Fotest league Is known as the blearing house tot various organizations that tend to further conservation; aquatic and game interests in Indiana. Officials of the state conservation department will speak, and irtany notable conser-! vationlstA from variotis parts of the | nation are scheduled to appear on the program
I / / I Look Around You If you will inquire or stop and think for a few , minutes, you will find that * the practice of thrift lias been the chief factor in the success and career of a majority of those who have reached the goal Os anitiehce right here at home. • Others have attained success through placing theii* money in this bantf What has been done before, can ' be done again. Why not drop In and open an account the next time you are near Us? 4% Interest Paid Old Adams County Bank j 1 1 WE PAY YOU T° c A VE. —
Business In Panama Returns To Normal Balboa, C. E, Oct. 16.—BusInesH in Panama returned to normal today with cessation of strikes by street car employees and other laborers. The American troops summoned by president Chiari when the government was unable 10 halt demonstrations of artfl-rent payers may be wdhiirawii befmi' ilie w<-k >-n<l Baby scolds I are soon “nipped in the bud* without "dozing” by use of—i VICKS ▼ Vapoßub Otxr I? Million Jar* U»od Yearly
The ADAMS Theater LAST TIME TONIGHT IHOIANA UNDER FIRE r lie Ind ins men of the I sOh, Field Artillery. Rainbow ice P.,i l.m. in the battle. of C hateau I hierry, St. Mih.el and the Me>i-e-Aronniie. The "Hoosiers of the 38th and 6 lib i.fcvieion*. Historical acenes of Irdiana soldiers firing the first shot of the wnr—relating the first German raid against American troops. r, Indiana's own fighters in actual combat— men and horses OCC dropping in a shell swept inferno baloons and planes shot down in flames—giant guns blown to bits by bombs. e The horrors, hardships, heroism of the war as your ste*n ACC troops saw them in the struggles for their great victonoa. You’ll Know War Then As They Know It A redAhodcd, ha-nian film with a thrill—and a sermon—in every foot of it Saturday—Rin-Tiri-Tin in “FIND YOUR MAN” Sunday and Monday—“ Wild, Wild Susan” with Bebe Daniels 10c 25c - _ — Quality < Counts Bed Crown —A Premium Gasoline at a standard price—glides up the grade of popular favor with great ease. Thousands of motorists have recognized the force of the “price per mile” argument and switched over to Red crown. The price per gallon contention is weak-kneed —has no bearing. The story is told better by what is built in the gasoline. Os what significance is the question of ateaving of a few cents on an investment of hundreds of dollars? If you pay less for your gasoline than the price of Bed Crown, you are getting less—and that is false economy raised to the nth power, no matter how it is disguised. At the following Standard Oil Service Station: Corner Mercer and Winchester Sts. And at the following Filling Stations and Garages: The Ace Battery A Tire Shop. 234 ft. » Second Nt. 0 Adam* Count/ Auto Co.. 2.12 W. Mi»di«oil z ’’ Au<«i Electric Garage, (Jno. Rright). E. Monroe St. I I ORSNQ* 11 South 13th St. S. 1002 S. 13th St. | \ / I 11. North. PrMHe 1 A / Sn'n Masley. Monmouth Rellmont Service Statloh llilrntnn Garage Chevrolet Auto Sale** Glenn Cronlater, Vlagilpy Hftfhe* Service Station, Monroe F. U. Tablet. Monroe Me Monty tV Crttvrr, Steele J. S. Halverson. Monticello Standard Oil Company, Decatur, Ind. ® (Indiana) 4061 ’ e •
