Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 234, Decatur, Adams County, 4 October 1926 — Page 2

TWO

****** l " M *"*i**""***""“""■ 1 ■ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except ■"• Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H Iteller Pros, and Gen. Mgr A. R. Holtlpuius B»c'y A Hue. Mar Dick D. Heller Vlce-Preefdebt Kntend at the Poatofflee at Decatur, Indiana, a* second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single cop M * °3 One week, by carrier.... —. .I** One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mail ...—... .M> Three months, by mall 1.00 Six months, by mail w 1.75 One year, by mail - 300 Une year, at ottiee 3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second acmes. Additional postage added outside those tones.) Advertising Rate*: Made known by Aptdlcatßm. Scheerer, ln< . S 5 East We-fcer Drtve Chicago !o’\ Fifth Avenue. New York - Louis Cardinals hare each taken one - game in the world series, adding to « required before the champion can be * Earned The next three games will be in St. Louis w majority that a ill prove tha* Adams * those who toil with their hands, eeonthe formal opening of the $75,000 im "* at s he local crearnerv. will * courage sue o< nuu giri® iu mv «*• made by the connuit.ee e» repa-i-tau six ui embers of the state senate and admitted by Mr Adams are serious ** . » n T't*s corn ad I heet ■* •• - .- -"t. .. *• Mr Hamrick is a farmer, not just **an im<sipary one out a .eai one. ne M jife s work His talk Saturday nirhr of '•tato taxes and how they can " Time. «d « suppose there will be som s wn ? said * they didn't know it was necessary. • Though we have called your attention .„. to It asd the importance of the duty everv dav for a mouth and cohse' . .eeme® *a *rdfat es anc workers canvassed the entire rouarr. but any M .j. a sarcets and every Pa.;j- y Day are planhing set * t-x jaurt>e<w.:e. a program ** Mad free acts that will ea DeltgatiM* ar* coming from man: ta tb» section, from Ot.J x S4Mai awd :ke oeoasion shoa’.i * ~ be a srleftdMi c®s* for every o®e. ve-’ * make “he event what i* cu<b“ to t* , — the b*st day tn the history of the. I: a acw tbn fifty •stir ‘.xc doLSars - te ew*t« tie Aat* f lamaaa. Its ilxrtsiAg xii =us-. i

lake but ltd a part of the cost of 3 what too man'’ have been voting for 'ln thin tunw. the past few years Its 'time to get back to genuine home \ rule. Every time you let a a little * power ret awiy from jour township •. you are losing more than you may I think Keep the power in your own r»‘ Registration It over anU now comes D ed the first boom Saturday night J .when Evans Woollen, candidate for nnd Arthur Hamrick, candidate for ■ which filled the court room. Prior to ' number of voters'and workers at y a showing of enthusiasm that spells victory in November The candidates ’ the state and reported that indications * at thi« time are for an assured sueWe hope the voters of Indiana do ♦ amendment i come tax to be added to your already 5 heaw burdens, Thev naay tell you it . I * . . . r.. if if aiiiii't more ' money they wouldn’t want it. An in come tax will soon, if not immediate1 on crasoline. an me automooiir nvm. * 4 inopev the inheritance tax and a gen* >eral tax to Indianapolis and the share ' ■ severe but you can bet ycair last thin dime that before very long it will bei .jji Ami *t <4-W’ wii» to ret rid **f 1 , Vote against it. luwss or tvan* 1 that be is a man of broad vision and ' and other subjects of interest to ever* (tree trade: neither does t he believe gMMHOWri nai *e*«4 -< =. : peritv but there is a great difference I Het ween that opinion and those ox me ! Watsons and Robinsons who desire a fit i»f a verv few Mr Woollen is a i s n ro*'r* ’.Ti the coming etev... j *>“ ■w > s credit to Indians as a Member of the V” ’<(! States senate 4 . + + 4 , + ++ ++q.+ ** ++ + ♦ Bit; FEATI RES ♦ ♦ OF RADIO ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ SUNDAY'S RADIO FEATURES TUESDAY'S FIVE BEST RADIO FEATURES ! WCrN —Chicago M. > pm Acts 1-i ■ ■. y». * < ew k -w4 x. «.*«. . «»►—.«* —.- a.«s j- ■' *«• ttosiC* aceftarsdinedI SV*i>R — Newark > "•.- pm --A’I r»«'***-"? v'< I S"'v. - onv i k | WSM•Xxshvi.ta*.. s.3# pxsi—An-! * I niver'sazy prcgraui. f ♦*♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ ♦ F.i— tNe D»>ly F‘t ♦ ♦ Twe ~ty Y«*rs Ago Tfe)* D»y. ♦ Ort I—Niw cs»t» Srast at Harffe- > lW< Pl . SS •.<•■**«»<. I Sixty stseti k£Se4 :e ratae tire »t W. Vx I Gwwraw Hxaly Sfoaks to !.?•? people at Bere*. Her - y Moyer tarp: Seed oa Mj S?r£ | I tut May. ■ I x. X McayrMa editor < th* Fon ■ * 1 x

ftECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. OCTOBER I. 1926.

i' Wayne Journal Gaaette, visits hero ' J Blutfton harbera raise prke <rf .rhaves to fifteen cents. r , Surprise for Mrs. Jennie Studebaker i 1 on ber birthday i W. W. Whltcotnb opens reataiwant , ou Madison street. ' J T. Ylerrytnau and J W Tyndall y' are speakers at a democratic meetlug r at Geneva. . VEMORY OE MRS. PORTER HONORED i _ <coNnNrßn from fam "The Lorraine trio gave a group of | I mu.Mc numbers and Dr. Josephin* ■ r I Fernaid read a paper on “The In- ’ I fluence of Mrs. Porter.” 1 1 “Jeanette Porter Meehan, daughter | Inf the writer, and her husband .1 ' Meehan, spoke of Mrs Porter s ideas ’ of life and literature and her con t ’ ception of human nature as something s ‘to be interpreted in its noblest as » J Mme Emma Loeffler de Zaruba. i dramatic soprano, sang three num • Service At Fort Recovery. j The following news item from Fort I ( Recovery. Ohio, tells of a Porter i i Memorial service held in that city last! I \Volinp~ rfav | "The high school devoted an hour I I and a half to honoring the memory of! Gene Stratton Porter on Wednesday r | afternoon. > • “Xfiiiß Iva Nliller the head of the I It* 11 K k w, m -.nt flxgx 1,10 H c 'hrkrxl I lives in Geneva where Mrs. Porter I " w Mr K.-nneth Shoemaker who is associated ,Ith Mr Porter in the Ge- ,- j neva bank and who is quite well in-1 Jings of Mrs Porter, gave the high I school a very instructive and enter-1 r Zcited some of (he poems I Ijof Edgar Allen Guest. James Whit ! i ‘ n mb Riley. Robert Burns and others] J before speaking of Mrs. Porter and | her writings.” WOOLLEN AND HAMRICK SPEAK AT RALLY HERE • ♦ CONTIXTED FROM PAGE I - r vtrtw wkh tn introduce to vou I I now wish to muoui.ee t .cu ;the late Senators successor, Evans J j Woollen?* Mr. Erwin concluded in in I* traducing Mr. Woollen J Senator Woollen, said. 1= part, con renting the tariff: J The Democratic party proposes ! j to face in the other direction, to be-1 * gin a movement downward, to re-| ■‘place the present aet by one general-! I ly similar to the I’nderwood act. toi ’ ItS/to aT i d Are we justified in the use cf‘ punder? Let me answer in the lan--*e* -*-4 —MMLIT- T .T' i.s'en of the Fordney-McCtr über b il. said: ‘The Payne-Aldrich bill whs crooked is v?rv l Ifttfe difference between the Payne-- | ’The late Senator Nelson, cf Min-1 ; nesota. a stalwart Republican, a I ‘(theroFgh-going protectionist. had’ ( this to say of the Fordney McCnm ! j ber (ar ff when it was under conits entirety is a more radical and ! moth extreme measure, so far as pro-; h law ! hj hoped, j Mr Pres dent that protection <euld ; 1 1 **'( fur fi as *t ha> 1 arß W ~ KS ”’T ATMind the . they got the r in well, so we?. How Farm Ri-nter May Become Farm Owner Mknv rpv firs* *en*e?w j ' W .' ,»««. V lK,m, 1 M . ■ ered to vacate. The rent caauot be ! I raised He eaa change and !mpt tyre las be sees fit and the time spent adds . »« the valwe of Sts otm property lie fee'.s more seewre aad wore enecur\“S*d to make it attraetira and pro>fi- ' taMe. The t~Jepeaden.ee and esea«P- --« •tCTmes’ adds te> energy xud the i®- ' , -creese « yoets ( 1 east mike it possible for soa»e < nater to o»a its cwa tana and >• ’ ',tfce rent ytte WnaJd pay a land lord ■p.-y the *e>- w*-th a re«-e- pays 1 never begoeses the t*rner. Let n?.e give rente rente- tM* ■ ‘ chance. k»w rate <rf qitecest and crap rwr paymec y'aa. Opes for i shot" t ti2!» only DAMIEL ERWtb De rat---, led-ana Thirty UEBves walk. Sve naaws jstsey tpo® this farm wiS uke yon to •Oecaiar, x*ri.er school, or chared, j rate St •

that Republican Senator McCumber, whose name the law hears, made this admission in the Senate: 'I admit,' >ho said, 'that the schedules we have placed In this ball are too high. They will permit the exploitation of the American farmer and the American laboring man. but we hope the manufacturers of the United States and the beneficiaries of the tariff will not j oxeretae the power which the bill I permits.’ 1 submit that was a rather ( w mple-mlndcd hope. We would be jeonnted rather simple-minded if we j would ‘not exercise the power' to deI vour sheep. "Such then Is the law. so charac[feiixed by three Republican Senators,: I that we attack in this campaign. ’ a ■ law opposed at the time of its pass- i I Ing by such Republican papers as | the New York Tribune. New York ’ H<*rsM ««k J SUff C*h‘- ‘ I cago Tribune We are attacking ex- • i'loitation If that word is affected to. I reply that 1 take It from Re-' publican Senator McL'umber We are I attacking a law which was the ex-' i pression of the spirit of sordid self- i 'shness thht triumphed in the elect.on of 1920 We are attacking a law I born of greed such as that of 'the ! Ohio gang which conspired in the , fkttle green house In K street' and rained our history by the oil scandals. We are attacking that of which I the Indianapolis News said In 1922 , that it was ‘the worst tariff bill in I the history- of the country.’ Knows Farm Troubles "While making no profession of j row born political friendship for the I farmer. I may. I think, claim some cquaintanco with his problem. Our homo Is on a farm whereon six gen I orations of my family have lived. I I neighbor with farmers in that coun I ’ry-rde. I know something of their I difficulties. One of them, born on I our farm, acquired, through the dili-. cence and thrift of himself and his I wtfe. a forty and a farm equipment ' I He tilled the forty and much rental acreage with uncommon skill and success. Last winter he said to me that he had decided to quit. I remonstrated with him. ‘Why, Ford.’ I sand, ‘do you quit that which you I .now better than you will ever know anything else'and in which you have acquired all that you haveT ‘Be- -

Typewriting Stenographic Work | If you have any extra typewrit|>ng or stenographic work I will! ■be glad to do ii. Phone 42 for l appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge J. T M errs man’s I-iw Office. K. of C.. Bltlg. ■ iin ill ib - • r - . &

' — ______ I wfll offer for sale at public auction at my residence, 1 mile north of Magley. on THURSDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1926 Commencing at 10 o'clock The following property: One Gray Mare and one Roan Cow. - FARMING IMPLEMENTS Surrey, Milwaukee binder. Champion reaper. 2 wagons. 2 I beds and one hay rack; Mtlwaui.ee mowing machine: hay rake; ( hay tedder; hay loader and hay lings; land roller; corn planter; 3 harrows; drill; .3 riding cult).atom; Oliver riding plow; 2 breaking plows; fanning'mill: platform scales; 2 sleds; corn shUler; tools: 2» ! ot.s Ywood; harness. 354) bushel of good oats. HOVSEHOI D GOODS | 2 heating stores; 1 range; 4 beds; tables; chairs; cupboard; | copper kettle: new phonograph; sewing machine. 3 dozen Chickens. TERMS—S&.<)») and under • «h. Over that sum a credit of 12 months will be given. purchaser giving bankable note with ap- . proved security. b> »rn.. 8~ interest the last 6 months. No goods removed until settled for. WILLI AM SELLEMEYER Oct -LS-12 t * KNOW WHERE YOI~R MONEY GOES I There is nothing like a Checking Account to keep tab on the whereabouts of one's mcnev. The record i there tn the check book whenever ■»a want ; to examine it. ; No question «h*‘her you caa or cannot, afford to buy a i thing. Yotur record of Ready Money tells you. ISE A CHECKING ACCOUNT TO REGULATE SPENDING., • 1 f THE PEOPLES LOIN i TRUST CO. Bank cf Senion * <

' Ing longer to take from the savings 'of myself and my wife to make up I losses In farming.' That went home to Ute. "The problem revealed in that incident. cannot, ns Senator Ralston said In one of our many conversations on the subject, be solved by any single measure. It goes too deep. It goes deep into our economic and pobtical life. For fifty years wc have been accumulating our present farm 1 er's problem. During that time our national policy has been one of inI lustrial development The moat Important item tn that policy has beep J a protective tariff designed to stimu 1 late manufacturing by raising the prices ot manufactured commodities A second Item has been the control 'of transportation rates for the advantage of the industrial centers as J against the agricultural areas. A J ililrd item of our national policy of i industrialization has been a tax sysi cm whereunder the fanner has paid 1 -f his income ten per cent in taxes I u hlle the remainder of the popula:on has paid of its income si* I*t I cent. “The effects on agriculture of this predominantly industrial policy bet ran to dtsclosr themselves about the ■ eginning o’s >h!s century. Since then

fNNE ton of coal out of » every five is wasted, according to the U. S. Geological Survey, because it is used wrongly or bought wrongly. You can save a large part of that 20% by using Consolidation CLEAN Coal — the closest approach to 100% fuel because it is all coal. For your furnace's sake try a load of our Consolidation CLEAN _ c °al- f Carrol Cole & Coke Co. PHONE 770. Ji

the rta’. agricultural wealth In this I c’ountrv hi<B dpi’liiicfl, fcltrtcultttrfii vx ! ports hnve tended downward and the farmer's share of th» national income J has been cut in half. • These conditions, unreluted to the difflcultes brought to the farmer by the war. le«i the late Secretary of Agriculture Wallace to say that we j wore confronted in this country by ' the question whether we shall strive for a well rounded. • self-sustaining national life In which there shall be i fair balance between Industry and CARD OF THANKS Wv wmil to iiiituk our frieniis an<l « neighbors who so kindly assisted us ! h»>inv#»d husband and father ITenrv’ i

W Your Mettle If your saving purpose is aim- fi » ply to find yourself better off at jj > the end of this year, you have II < a good one to challenge your K ■ mettle. Have a purpose, put It S some spirit back of it; come |j S , often to the savings window. jf S Ask the receiving teller about rt W our Systematic Saving Plan. m iomtol and Surplus r &^qtur^lndiQiSl' j r THE motor car A industry’was startled when Buick presented the new Buick with an engine vibrationless Beyond belief. If vou have driven this great new car, with this remarkable engine, you know why. Its fluid smoothness makes other motor cars seem rough, harsh, noisy. People who have driven Buicks for years and people who have owned much more expensive cars, are captivated by the luxury of this one. ’ the Grevtest BUICK EVER BURT W. D. PORTER Monro* and First Streets Phone 123 | .... ~ |

I Voglewedc We gho wl.h < *Z j tor til* iiidiiv kind words of «v extended to us. Mrs Marv Viwln»mi« « voftiewmp and FamiN Get the Habit—Trade st Home, it

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