Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 259, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1925 — Page 4
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Publish Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J H. Heller Pres. and Gon. Mir. A. R. Holthouse Sec y. A Bue. Mgr, Entered at the Postoffice st Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copies .2 cents One week, by currier 10 cents one year, by carrier $5.00 One month, by mall 35 cents Three months, by mail.. 11.00 Six months, by mail .'. $1.76 One year, by mail $3.00 One year, at office $3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those sones.) Advertising Rates: Made known by Application. Foreign Representative: Carpentier & Company, 122 Michigan Avenue, DEMOCRATIC TICKET For mayor—George Krick. For treasurer —Luella Magley. For clerk—Catherine Kauffman. Councilman at large— George Miller Councilman at large — Fred Ashbaucher. Councilman, first ward—Fred Linn. Councilman, second Ward —Joseph Hunter. Councilman, third ward — O. L Wince. STICK TO KRICK AND HIS TICKET. VOTE TOMORROW. BE A GOOD CITIZEN. ATTEND THE SMOKER AND CLOSING MEETING OF THE CAM PAIGN AT DEMOCRATIC headqi’arters this evening. Just place a cross in the rooster ring tomorrow and take no chances on spoiling ymir ballot. Remember Hint the election will be won or lost tomorrow anff do your part towards winning it. Stick to Krick, stick to the rest of the ticket, remembering that to get the best results there must be harmony in the administration. This js jusl a big corporation and you are employing those who will manage it. Vance. Linn. Hunter, Ashbaucher and Miller are candidates for the city council. They are all business men of experience, excellent -citizens who are willing to serve you iri a conscientous manner. Vote for them tomorrow. Mrs. Luella Magley is the candidate for- city treasurer and Mrs. Catherine Kauffman for city clerk. They are estimable and deserving women. Give them your vote tomorrow. Alright, everything is set, tomor.row js election day. Let’s make the majority a decisive one anti then lets oil buckle down and make this a better town in every way in which to live. Vote early and then get your friends in. With a democratic majority of five hundred there is no reason why the ticket nominated this year on a platform of sane progress, should not be elected by that majority. This will happen if you do your full duty tomorrow. Get odsy. STICK TO KRICK. There is absolutely no reason why you should not vote the straight democratic ticket here tomorrow. The platform is excellent, the men are worthy and jualifiod. the past record is good. The majority should be a decisive one. A program of speeches and organization work for tomorrow’s election will be carried out at headquarters tonight. You are invited to attend and you will enjoy taking a part in this election. Bring your friends along and help arouse an interest which will get the vote out. Remember that this city now has one of the finest plants-in the middle west, that we have ornamental lights, excellent streets, that we are progressing each yea”, that the debt is being paid off and that the city is showing a profit. If you had such a condition in your own business, you would make as . little change in the organization as possible, wouldn’t
1 Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 1 ■IL p ™ EjR t A■ L; E[N iTj “ R A gJBs ofo A SBS I R 11 EiDlE r R A IJBm a * AIR a .wßa> L L o|s r’ Il O n hMm 11+1 i" r i i , “ you? Isn’t it just as important in , city affairs? Midnight circulars and final appeals of whatever kind are usually made because those who circulate them are afraid to stand an analysis. Vote tomorrow on the real issties of the campaign —is Decatur to continue her march of progress, well managed and well conducted by experienced mon or are wc to throy away the advantages gained during the Past dozen years ? The campaign is closing and has been an unusual one here. The republicans have issued no statements that coukl be discussed or replied to. have made a silent canvass, are playing polities, which should not win, for in an election of this kind when tho e chosen tomorrow are to serve you four years, the people have a right to know the issues far enough in advance to discuss them. We believe the democrats will carry tomorrow’s election and wo-bclieve it is best for fill the people. Defiance. Ohio, sold their municipal plant to the Toledo-Edison company, a few years ago. Now the city is torn with a fierce battle over a proposition to bond the corporation to the extent of $125,000 to build a new plant, because the rates have been advanced several times. Its serious for them and its a serious proposition for any community. Municipal plants prosper when properly oper-' ated and when the changes in policies and business management are not too radical. Its worth thinking about. All the issues of * campaign should be discussed openly and above board and we hope and believe the voters of Decatur will feel that way about it. We have conducted a clean campaign, presenting to you in a fair manner, the platform and policies of\ the democratic candidates. These men-'are experienced, honest, good -citizens, willing to serve you. During the past years under democratic administrations, the city has progressed steadily and is now in excellent condition. Don’t change at this time / when many matters of importance are ahead. Elections are won on election day many times. Get up on your toes, voters, go to the polls, show an interest, get your neighbors to vote. A town can go forward some or back up-a long ways in four years, which makes this a very important election We believe you should continue the progress now being made by electing the entire democratic i.eket, we feel sure these men who are experienced can handle the job better than those who must learn their duties and who may have different ideas as to how it should be done. However you feel, we hope you vote, so that the decision is that of the entire population of the city. • We congratulate J. W. Rice who had charge of the Callithumpian par- . ade in this city Saturday evening. It i was a big success in every, way and i the great crowd which attended enI joyed it thoroughly. The event was [ carried out exactly as advertised and s tho winners were awarded their prizes t as they passed the judges stand on the counter march. There were several hundred Splendidly masked peos pie in the parade-and the judges had a a difficult job. As was hoped for and i, asked for. the young people refrained >- front destroying property, marking s cars or windows, carrying away every s thing which was loose. It was un a fortunate that one of the paraders u suffered severe burns, the only thing e which marred the event and sot ’t. which no one was to blame. Tht I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1925
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Horizontal. I—u»ed for blackboard crayuno •—Fathers 11—Sanity 12—Riddle !♦—lndefinite article 15—A unit 17—Pertaining to farming (abbr.) 12—Impereonn) pronoun 19—The original draft of an unusual composition 21—Railroad (abbr.) 23— Note of scale 24— Tibetan ox 15 —To stitch with a needle 17—Tellurium (abbr.) tl -Slumbar SO—Not tifrht >2—Hun pod 33—SJcyward 34—To divide wyh 1?—To steal surreptitiously 40 —Personal pronoun |1 —To pester IS—Spanish epic hero 44—Preposition 45—Each (abbr.) 44—Inflexibility 48—To perform 49— Thoroughfare (abbr.) 50— To promise faithfully 51— Hebrew month 42 —To correct, as a manuscript 54—Images <o—Titles • I—To cook over sn open Are lelntloa will appear tn next (■■■e.
jM byEdg'atA.Guest>l| SPEAKING OF LOSSES
Speaking T l * losses, look at these, Whivb I have suffered through the years. Observe how swiftly fortune flees However guarded it appears; Time was that 1 was rich and proud And feared no shadow that could fall. I was with priceless gifts endowed. But somehow 1 have lost them all. I’ve lost my appetite for pie. I’ve lost the strength 1 once possessed. I’ve lost the baseball batting eye With wheih my days of sport were blest; I’ve lost that old-time intnger which Made every meal a rare delight, Time was that I was very rich.
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event was well accepted and will be ♦ + ♦ + ♦♦♦♦♦♦ + + ♦ + + made an annual affair, according to t Rig 1 Fcatlll’CS Os * plans under way. j, RADIO * George Krick, democratic candidate * Programs Today * for mayor is at present a member >♦ + ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ of the city council with a good rec- MONDAY'S RADIO FEATURES ord. He is also a member of the firm „ r . ... , WSM. Nashville. 233. 7:30 p. m. (C. of Krick-Tyndall Company, tile and „ ~ ... ‘ • S.T.t— Community night. brick manufacturers, a good business WCC t), Minneapolis-St. Paul, 116. S npn. a clean and upright citizen; p. m. (C.S.T.)—t’ooke ensemble. .Mrs. Catherine Kauffman, for clerk, WOAW, Omahj, Sp. m. (C.S.T.) — has served four years and is worthy; orand opera program. , WJZ. Nc* York. 454; WBZ, SpringMrs. Liiella Magley is a well-known , held. 333; WGY, Schnectady. 380, and deserving woman of the city and 8 .., 0 p m (E.S.TJ—Mcngelberg and is a candidate for treasurer. For the orchestra, and Earnest Hutcheson, council, Fred Ashbaueher, well-known pianist. business man. member of the present "DAI, Kansas City, 366, Sp. m. ... ... . (C.S.T.) — Ivanhoe band and Glee council with a record of serving to , , club. please his constituents; Joseph Hunt- ' n er. superintendent of the Citizens KSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS Telephone Company and a fine young ;; TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY X imm; George Miller, grocer, success- rr ■; . X From the Daily Democrat File 5. ful and enterprising business man; •< Twenty Years Ago This Day I" , Fred l inn, former member of the w I , L SRSMXKXS X X X X 55 X XX X council w;ith a record of having de- , ’ voted much time to his work, because I!a, " k robbers ca P tured at River5 , .. . , „ , ton, Ky., after being wognded con- , he loves his home town, and O. L. >, t . , . . .... ~.. I fess to having , robbed Ridgeville Vance, clothier, leader in civic affairs, t, anl{ wajl-knowu and trustworthy. What’s Supreme court reverses the John, the matter with that ticket? W I‘erreli conviction because the o indictment charged that the crime h «•«*•••** •*••••**«« was committed in 19903 instead of 1 * * 1903. • POLITICAL MEETINGS * , „ , r t 1 » » J. B. Corson sale of personal properi ‘ ‘Note-Anuouncju‘ent‘s ‘of ‘politica‘l ,v on « ” f ulosL BUccessful ever held -‘meetings may be inserted in this col- 111 ( ' oulll -'- umii tree of chargej G ' orB “ Geelti ™<-«ives handsoffie y ■ St. Bernard pup as gift from his i- Democratic* headquarters above brother. s Daily Democrat office will tie open Birthday surprise on Rev. W. H. g I each evening from now until elec- Mygrant of the Evangelical church. |tion. Cojne up and visit us and help Bank robbers secure $39,000 at r 'us win the election. Dr. Burt Mangold, Sulphur. Ky., and $4,000 at Sande chairman. IJLII 20 YEARS AGO I ( -•
Vertical. 1— Weight of 100 pounds 2— Exciamaticn of surprise 3— Like 4—Behold! s—To rap •—Equals 7— Indefinite article 8 — Disarranged type \ 9— Same as 17 horizontal 10 — Stings, as by a whip lash 11— Bars forming runways for railroad trains 13—To coincide in an opinion 15 —Negative 19— Tn drain of strength 20— Slippery snake 24—To long for 24—A stab, cut or laceration 29—Period of years 31—To unclose (poet.) 34— Tn smudge, as paint 35— Paradise 31 —organ of hearing 37— Ti f le used in addressing a gentleman 38— Helpful 19—Handles of doors 42— Donates 43— To shrink with fear 47—To proceed 53— Southeastern state (abbr.) 54— Prefix meaning ' not” 55— Point of compass 57—Maiden whom Zeus loved 51—Knight St. Andrew (abbr.) s»—Bon*
For 1 slept soundl/ every night. Through many a fortune I have run. I've lost the charm in little things, Now winter’s cold or summer's sun A fear of dreadful illness brings; No more 1 mock at warnings grave Or laugh at hurts which may befall Then I had strength, and 1 was brave. But somehow I have lost it all. I’ve lost the care-free way 1 had When («rets 1 th,»ught would never come. Instead of being always glad There now are times when I am glum. Hut still 4n spite of all I’ve lost. And all that was and is no more And all that withered neatb the frost Life still has charms at forty-four
TO SEEK WAGE BOOST Brotherhood Os Railroad Trainmen To Demand SubetaMial Increase In Pay Chieugof Nov. 2.—(Unit*! Press)—, 'Chairmen of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen are scheduled to meet here tomorrow to prepare demands for a substantial wage jncreasb, according to word to the railroad labor hoard ( today. Several chairmen held a preliminary meeting yesterday. I The brotherhood lias a membership of 180,000. employed on 200 class one railrofids. Restoration of war-tinie wages may la- demanded. In 1921 the labor board cut wages 12 per cent. The other railroad brotherhoods also may ask for Im rXevd wages. New wage contractu between the brotherhoods atpl the railroads must b<’ signed by tho* end of the year as the present contracts expire Dee. 31. Railroad labor leaders are said to feel they will secure an increase, being encouraged by the increased railroads earnings of the past few months. —o— Dawes Will Speak At Indianapolis Thursday Indianapolis. Nov. 2.- The Indianapolis , Chamber of Cbmfherce has compitted elaborate pains for the address ot Vice-president Charles G. Dawes here Thursday. The vice-president will speak in Cadle Tabernacle on his plan for revising the Senate rules. A reception committee, headed by Frank S. Fishback, president of the ehamber of lommercf-. and on which Senators James E. Watson and Arthur R. Robinson, will serve will meet the vice-presid'iit at the station and es cort him in a parade over the downtown streets. 1 roiri.'nent Indiana club women have been named to serve on a committee to entertain Mrs. Dawes. Mrs. Medill McCormick and Mrs. Charles Deneen. of Illinois. y— Included on the reception committee will he all Indiana congressmen, a representative from each of the thirteen congressional districts :in«l many other prominent Hoosiers. The chamber of commerce also has completed arrangments to have vicepresident Dawes’ address broadcast from station WFB.M. of the Merchants Heat and Light company here. Secretaries of all chambers of commerce in the state have been invited to attend the meeting. Viee-president Dawes Ac, t o have I spoken here on the night of bc’oberl 17 but arrang -ment s vote cancelled th- funeral’of Senator' SamuelM. Ralston.' O- ■ New Catholic Weekly . Newspaper To Be Printed Rt, Rev. Bishop John F. Noll, D D.. of Fort Wayne, in an address at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Fort Wayne, Sunday, announced that a new Catholic weekly newspaper would be published in the Fort Wayne diocese, beginning January 1, 1926- The paper will be an edition of "Our Sunday Visitor” published at Huntington, for the Fort
--i ’-"t hMMwi , 'X. f Jr • IL-' - 1 IF -«» it ’IB ■'y. ; FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE Has Helped These Seven Boys and Girls to Keep Strong and Healthy
How to keep the family healthy is one of the great--1 est problems facing every mother 'So many irritating | coughs and colds threaten more serious illness that e constant, watchful care is needed s ~ Mrs. Edward Sheridan of 41 Sault au Matilot St.. Quebec City has every reason to be proud of owing able [. to keep her family of seven children in such robust i. health. She says:—"l have used Father John's Medi,ti cine for years and always have a bottle in the house. l-’My children had Bronchitis for a long time and I used I Fatbe. John’s Medicine it proved to be wonderful, so 1
I 1 Wayne dimeso The dfoccio embraces 42 counties and has a total Catholic population a>f approximately 40,000 families. It is the plan of Bishop Noll to place the paper In every Catholic home in the diocese and Pope Plus Xi, has given his approval of the project. ■ ■'( —o Greencastle — A i>ost of disabled war veterans is to be organized here soon..
31 Million Railroad Crossings Without An Accident Statistics completed recently show that durw 1921 the vehicles operated by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) crossed railroad tracks 31 million times without an accident. This is an average of 85,000 safe crossings per day This remarkable safety record is a de • rved .tribute to sustained effort) on the part of the Management of the Standard-Oil Co (Indiana), to impress all employes with the need and desirability of careful driving. The Company pointed out the dangers of careless driving and furnished placards reading—- “ This car stops at all railroad crossings.” Every driver was asked to pledge him d( to co-operate and to evidence his good intentionby displaying the placard on the rear of hi machine. Thus the result was achieved as by common consent, through an appeal from the Management to the sound judgment of loyal men. It is this remarkable spirit within the organization that has made the Standard Oil Com pany (Indiana) such a constructive force for good in the Middle West. The 29,000 employes are proud of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) they glory in its achievements—they are jealous of its standing. They go at the daily task with energy, intelligence, loyalty, cdurtesy and enthusiasm. That Standard Oil Company (Indiana) service shall be superior is their creed. The success of the Standard Oil Company I Indiana ■ ie due, in no smffil part, to the abilit v of the managerrent to mold an organization which is so conscious of its responsibility and to willing to discharge its obligation that i< responds to a suggestion as effectively as io an order. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) General Office: Standard Oil Building 910 So. Michigan Avenue, 3955
i thought, my test'menial would help some other -iin For seventy years mothers have used Father John | Medicine and have found that it nourishes. siren? 1111 ’ I at)d builds up'the body that Coughs and Colds are '.n en out in the natural way. It is a real food toni< 'on taihing cod liver oil and other valuable ingre<ii< a >•> . blend which is particularly palatable to childi' i an easily divested by theni. I As Father John's Medicine contains no ah' llll " 1 1,1 I tag .-rotis drugs it is safe for anyone.
MEADCOLDS n VJCKS ' l! ' r ’ 1' ‘ 1P ~ , niuulc |R an, l ( 2«u »$ $ 1-WANT AUS
