Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 21 April 1926 — Page 4

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. 3. H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Bec*y 4 Bub. Mgr. Dick D. Heller— Vice-President at the Postofflce at Decatur, Indiana, a* second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copies 2 cents One week, by carrier....- 10 cents One year, by carrier —15.00 One month, by mail ..... 35 cents Three months, by mail —5.1.00 Six months, by mail — 1.75 One year, by mai1......—.......— 3.00 One year, at office- 3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those zones). Advertising Rates: Mads known by Application. Foreign Representative: Carpenter 4c Company, 122 Michigan Avenue. Chicago. The Huntington factory fund is now over $30,000 and still going up. The goal is $50,000 and then conies the biggest task —selecting the industries in which they will invest the money. How do you like the weather? After complaining all winter, and by the way we don't blame you for it. feeling the same way ourselves, but the balmy air this morning brings the hope that the Chicago man who predicts no summer weather, is just another “nut.” Wonder why all the candidates are picking on Kokomo. About every candidate has made his keynoter there and we should think it would be just as well to scatter the information. By the way there hasn't been a political meeting over this way. Your mortgage exemption must be filed by the first Monday in May or you can’t take advantage of that law which saves you in taxes. The same date is tiie last day for paying your spring installment of taxes without a penalty and April 30th is the final day for soldier's exemptions. Better watch these dates unless you have taken care of these matters. V Ward Hiner, candidate for the re- | publican nomination for United States I senator is touring the state in a $15,-1| 000 car, all painted up in a fancy way and with a piano to attract attention. That may be alright for a puller of , human teeth but we doubt if it gets over as a puller of votes. The sent atorshlp should be a serious job and the selection of the man to fill the ] seats from Indiana should be serious for the voters. Tiie Kendallville News-Sun published a sixteen page special edition yesterday boosting the Better Homes Exposition which opens there tomorrow and continues during the week. The event has the support of practically every business man of that community and promises to be the major one of the section for spring. Efforts to launch a similar show here have been on for several weeks under auspices of the Industrial Association, but lack of x public community building makes the location of an indoor fair a difficult problem. Are you down in the dumps and do you feel there is no use trying? Henry Ford declares there are plenty of ideas which will take any community, any individual, tiie world, out of its sloughs and banish poverty by providing employment al more thau living wages, for all who will worly We agree with this successful man and its safe to say that it a hundred people in this community would honestly try tor the next thirty days to plan things for the benefit of all their results would be both pleasing and surprising. Why not try it? Rabies or hydrophobia, now so prevalent in Indiana among dogs, live stock and humans is a terrible and a dangerous disease which we can well afford to inconvenience ourselves about. Usually it requires from four week:, to two months before the germ which is conveyed in the saliva of th e rabid animal at the time the victim is bitten, develops. Hydrophobia means fear of water and the suffering of the human who has

Matiw as Ywtarday'g FunM R1 T E A c7> RJJ s.kATI pnCElsI i LB-QSUAgI] > R A'N KP A LN ffi L RO n rßiAiHniogi w lar the disease is almost beyond physical endurance it is said. There are two forms, known as the furious or the dumb type, either of which may occur from the germ. As the terras imply the one is wild and the other paralytic. However there is no excuse for the disease to gain hold these days if every one will be careful and it necessary secure aid from the Pasteur hospital. The local newspaper in the United States is each year getting on a firmer foundation and becoming more and more useful to its home community. It is the home newspaper which boosts the town, year in and year out, which takes the lead in every enterprise which has for its purpose the upbuilding of the community. We frequently hear it said that the oldtime independent spirit of the newspaper is gone, that its editorial policy is now subservient to the business office. Yet this is not true. There is, more unselfish idealism in the average local newspaper than in any other business enterprise. It frequently speaks out in the way which it believes will be for th e good of the nation and of the community, regardless of what the consequences may be from a business standpoint. The local newspaper is the principal booster for the community, and it does its boosting often without hope of material reward. Unfortunate is the community which neither appreciates nor supports its local newspapers.—Wisconsin State Journal. o xxxxxxxxx x x x x x x x g X TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY K X K X From the Dally Democrat File K X Twenty Years Ago This Day X H ■ xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx April 21, 1906.—Morn than $10,000,000 has been subscribed for Hie San Francisco relief fund. Decatur lodge of Elks is raising a fund for earthquake sufferers. 1). N. Erwin secures contract for the Erwin ditch in his bid of $1,048. Peter Gaffer and force are redecorating the interior of the Burt House. Citizens Telephone company are putting up cables at Berne. Dick France, of Rochester, Pa., is visiting here. Daughter is born to Mr. and Mrs. Willis Johnson. Miss Anna Winnes receives message from Mr. and Mrs. Harry Winnes, Fresno, California, that they are safe. Several men caught looting at San Francisco ar e shot by officers. John Gentis, 98, of Linn Grove, is dead at Elwood. * Big Features Os * • RADIO ♦ WEDNESDAY’S* TEN BEST RADIO FEATURES (Copyright 1926 by United Press) I Central standard time throughout WEAF. hookup, 9 p. m. —Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Gondoliers,” WEAF Light Opera Company. WGY, Schenectady, 380 M, 7:05 p. m. —Kilbourn quartet. WGN, Chicago, 303 M, 7:30 p. in. — “Carmencita and the Soldier," Moscow Art Players. WOR, Newark, 405 M, 9:30 p. m. — Joseph M. Barnett, baritone and director of WOR. WLS, Chicago. 345 M, 8 p. m. — WLS music festival. WC ', Jefferson City, Mo., 441 M, 10 p in. —Miles Carpenter, Dulcimer soloist. KTHS, Hot Springs, 375 M. 9:30 p. m.—lndian music. WLW, Cincinnati. 422 M, 11:15 p. tu. —Organ request program, Johanna Grosse. WHO. Des Moines, 526 M, 8:15 p. m. CHEST COLDS Apply over throat end chart —cover with hot flannel doth. VICKS

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21,1926.

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; Horizontal. X—Hair trimmer s—To leave s—Clsarad a room of amoke ill —Scheme 14—Preposition lit .« plait 11—Titled nobleman 'HI 'I. vamant ot bead <22—Celerity 24 —Falsehood '26—Expires 2?—To begin >29 —Father SO —Observes S3—Slumber 14—Leather strips hs—Small candles ,'3B -Ccn-artment In a stable —Coal pit 41—To proceed 143— Tc band over 45 Woman of rank (»’ Fart ot a circle its —Persons 81— Part of mouth I 12—Scarce (64 —Shoahonean Indian [56 —Preposition ST—To jump 48 —To strike IX—Order of law [B2— Limb iolntlea will appear In next leans. ■

; -_ rJast IblKsfl KngaA.jfcestjHJ CANTERBURY BELLS I stand and look alrout today In worlds I cannot look upon And somthing plainly tells The roses plan to bloom. The gardens are expecting May And Canterbury Bells. But I can only guess lheir plans And wait and watch them toil. 1 cannot hear the slightest sound. Convinced a greater work than man's But somehow I can feel Goes on below the soil. A certain bustling underground That’s very near and real. The power of God I feel and see In every bud that swells, , Strange mysteries are going on In blossoms on the apple tree Within the damp and gloom, And Canterbury Bells. ( ”■ (Copyright T 925 Edgar A.' 6uest ~ 1 ■ , , . 11 1 =—arr-E, ■■■, 11 I:■ —'

—The Four Musketeers. < KFAB. Lincoln, 341 M, 8:30 p. m.— 1 Request night, Staff artists. o — ( ♦ ■ ■ — — - 1 ♦ Congress One Hundred Years Ago * Senate Considered bill authorising the purchase by the United States if 1,000 shares of stock, of the Louisville and Portland Canal Company. House Daniel Webster urged approval be given president’s plan to send ministers to represent this country at the congress of South American nations in Panama. CONGRESS TODAY Senate Votes on $2,000,000,000 Italian debt • settlement at 4 p. tn. Judiciary sub-committee continues “beer hearings.’’ 1 Muscle Shoals committee considers bids. House Considers bills from foreign affairs committee. Naval committee considers aviation ' legislation. Agricultural committee considers farm relief. Irregation aud reclamation commiti tee considers Boulder dam. -————o Broken Heart Partly To Blame For Death Os Filipino Boxer Milwaukee. Wis., April 21. —(United Press)—A broken heart because ) he failed to wiu was no less respon--bible for the death of Sencio Moldes, 121 year old Filipino boxer, than the fact an artery in his brain had burst, I according to clever Sencio’s trainer, . “Whitey’’ Ekwert. i “The boy had a big heart, - ’ Ekwert said. “And his big heart -was set . upqu becoming a champion. Maybe s Taylnr’s popnding caused his death —bu * Relieve ’he might have overcome his 'injuries if he had won the fight s’* i‘ Se trio. who died yesterday as a rcru of, a hemorrhage he suffered in a tebitug with Bud Taylor, toile "Terre Haute Terrier" prob- ♦

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ably will be buried in the Philippines, but definite plans have been held up i pending the arrival from New York of Frank Church, his manager. War Romance Ends For French Bride Indianapolis, Ind., April 21—(United Press) —War’s romance ended today in an Indianapolis laundry for Mrs. Bertha Davis, French bride of an American soldier. The French girl met her future husband. Joseph Davis, at an officers' club in France during the war while she was employed as a waitress. When the war ended, they were married and returned to America on an army transport. Difference of race aud interests proved too much, Mrs. Davis left her husband, took employment in a laundry to support her three-year-old son, J and brought suit for divorce. Qjxick / safe faj j relief CORNS In one minute your misery from corns is ended. That's what Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads do safeljr by ret moving the cause— pressing or rubbing of shoes. You risk no danger of infection. Zino-pads are thin, medicated. antiseptic,protective, healing. At all druggist's and shoe dealer s—3sc. Isr Free Sample write The Scholl Hfg. Co., Quags Dl.Scholl’s Zino-pads Put one «n—Ac pain is gone : e 1 ". 1 IL “] Mark Your rP B I I Ballot E j jfi ns i Within The Square GE - K to Vote for jrfei nUj jl J. F. Snow 1 1 w For Township TrubUe. rtf " 1

• POLITICAL CALENDAR, * • Political nnnounonm*ntt will bn • • printed In thl» column on ordnr • • from oandldat* for $1.50 per week, • • each. Thia column will be pub- .» Ilahed until the primary, Tueeday, • May 4th. aeeeeeeeeoeeooeeeeeee DEMOCRAT FOR COUNTY” SHERIFF Dally Democrat I— I Please announce that lam a candi’date for the Democratic nomination for Sheriff of Adams County, subject to the decision ot the voters al the primary, Tuesday, May 4tb. Peter Amspaugh \ Daily Democrat:— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for County Sheriff, subject to decision of voters at the primary, Tuesday. May 4th. Harl Hollingsworth. Dally Democrat:— Please announce that I am a Candidas for the Democratic nomination for County Sheriff, subject to decision of the raters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. Joel Reynolds. Dally Democrat t— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for County Sheriff, subject to decision of the voter* at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. This being my second race, your support will be appreciated. Roy Baker. Oally Democrat:— Please announce that I am a candidate flor the Democratic nomination for Sheriff of Adams County, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, Muy 4th. Oliver Heller Daily Democrat: — Please announce my name as a candidate for Sheriff of Adams county, subject to the decision of the Democratic primary May 4, 1926. Any support will be appreciated. I Dallas M. Hower. FOR COUNTy”cOMMISBIONER Dally Democrat :— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for County Commissioner from the First district, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. August Busick. Daily Democrat:— ■ Please announce that 1 am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for county commissioner from the First district, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. John G. Hoffman. For Commissioner, First District Daily Democrat— Please announce that I a ma candidate for the Democratic nomination for Commissioner, Finst District, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday. May 4th. Simon J. Bowers. FOR COUNTY TREASURER Dally Democrat:— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for County Treasurer, subject to decision of voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. Ed Ashbaucher. Dally Democrat:— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for County Treasurer, subject to decision ot voters! at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. I. G. Kerr.

X —, ■ To I DEMOCRATIC St»l Voters of Adams Co. IBDuring my three terms as State Repre- WF sentative of Adams and Wells counties, I have tried to the best of my ability to render conscientious, satisfactory service to my constituents. That I have in a 'J measure succeeded is somewhat reflected MEWI Ww/cJ in the following vote which 1 received in jp my own county. 1821 Majority 618, Second on ticket. 1923 Majority 1909, Led ticket by 5 votes. 1925 Majority 1994, Led county ticket by 686 votes. The experience I have gained during these three terms, having sitsed on various important State committees, should enable me to render even better service in the future, which I promise if elected. ? Being unable to meet all the voters personalty, I use this means to kindly ask for your vote on May Ith, for the Democratic nomination lor State Senator. 1 WILL APPRECIATE YOUR SUPPORT. THURMAN A. GOTTSCHALK Pol. Adri.

» FOR TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE » Daily Democrat i—- > Please annunce that lam a candidate for the Democratic nomination » for trustee ot Washington township, > subject to decision ot voters at the , primary, Tuesday, May 4th. , Jim A. Hendrick*. > Dally Democrat:— > Please announce my name as a can- « (dale for Trustee ot Washington town- > ship, subject to the decision of the Democratic voter* in the Democratic primary. May 4. Your support wiU be appreciated. Fred Kolter Daily Democrat: — • Please announce that lam a candii date for the democratic nomination t tor trustee of Washington township, i subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4, X 926. i 74-to Apr. 24. Fred V. Mills. Daily Democrat: — Please anounce that I am a candi- ’ date for the democratic nomination ‘ for trustee of Root township, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4. 1926. Samuel Magley. ’ Dally Democrat— Please announce my name aa a candidate for the democratic nomi- ’ nation for trustee of Washington township, subject to decision ot the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4tb, 1926. Thomas R. Noll. Dally Democrat— Please announce that I am a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Trustee of Root TYiwnship, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4th. M-S ts. A. J. Lewton Daily Democrat Please announce that I am a candidate for the democratic nomination for trustee of Washington township, subject to the decision of the voters at the primary, Tuesday, May 4. 1926. e.o.d 4ks-80 Louis Keller. Daily IWmaerati— Please announce my name as a can-' didate for Trustee of Monroe township. subject to the decision of the Democratic primary election, Tuesday. May 4th. eod-tf. Vance Mattox. Editor Daily Democrat: — Please announce that J. F. Snow is a democratic candidate for trustee of Washington township, subject to the decision of the voters in the primary election, Tuesday, May 4, 1926. 68-Tu-Fri-tf J. F. SNOW-

£ “GET ‘SPOT’ HOLLINGSWORTH £ TO DO IT” £ s | How familiar that phrase sounds, and yet it Jfi sticks because Hurl Hollingsworth, better known K tis "Spot" Hollingsworth has been getting things IjE done ever since lie has been Geneva s Marshal. yj UE He's a candidate for the Democratic nomin- ftalion for the highest peace office in the county, jP which is sheriff, and in seeking that position sin- H S cerely is actuated by a confidence, that he can an? serve the jieople of Attains county, where he has g sjient nearly all his livelihood, justly, fairly and JS ellicicntlv. He in no doubt if elected to this high UE office will bring to it sound judgment and a g> knowledge of county affairs possessed by lew. mq Mr. Hollingsworth will sincerely appreciate your g. gP support in the primary election May Ith. ———

D*iiy F i^«sc?. U (^T Y SURv EVOIt ■ for County Surveyor *ub ( ■ Cision of the voters at th ‘ U Tuesday, May 4th th * W Dltk ■ . Editor Dally I Please announce niy nam. ■ ! candidate for state Senate, i “ 1 hI , district comprised of ° r ,h ’ U ford and W, IL counties ■ ■ the decision of the ffi-mocrati?!' 0 H ary Tuesday, May 41h . 19 , W ■ S‘tlß ~t. A . ■ COUNTY ASSESSOR ■ Dally DenMcrau— UR ■ Please announce that I am .. ■ date for the Democratic | for County Assessor subiect . ■ decision of thp voters at th e V° ■ Tuesday, May 4th. e pr ‘ B ‘ r ?, ■ Dally Democrni ln * I Please announce that lam » „ „ H date for the Democratic nomiS' I ‘ for County Assessor, subject tn ? S decision of the voters at the B Tuesday, May 4th. Pr ®‘ r ’ I pd to 5-3. WHliam Zimmaritu, I FOR COUNTY CLERK I Dally Democrat:— ■ Please announce that lam a candi I date for the Democratic nominatim I for County Clerk, subject to decision I M ' ith* Mt thß prlmirT ' Tuesday, I Tillman Gerber I Dally Demorral:— r ■ Please announce that lam a candi- I date for the Democratic nomination I for County Clerk, subject to decision I of voters at the primary, Tuesday S May 4th. I John E. Nelaon. I o — I ELKS MEET TONIGHT | I ■ The regular meeting of the Elka | i will be held this evening. Two new 1 1 officers will be installed. I — o I Cleaning up prices on Nur- I sery stock for this week at I Hilty Nursery, Berne, Ind. Itx I - 'O'* 1 "" ■■ s Beginners Dancing class at K. I of C. Hall Thursday night, 7:30. I Assembly >:U>. |