Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 161, Decatur, Adams County, 9 July 1928 — Page 3
T*X COLLECTIONS SHOW DECREASE Indianapolis Ind.. July »—<U-R)“ ' agricultural land valuations . |_ i| lf > semi-annual 1928 tax ments us of June being $124.Ooi less than to rthe same period in ,9 ? otal collection forth. «r.t aix months of this year were $6,957,061.71, and for the same period in 19.7 !»,• six months period ending December 30, 1927 the state collected ’’iSunces of various state funds as of lune 3 are: General fund. $3,493,011,15 school tax $2,008,268.72: teachers oenslon fund. $484,429.57: World War Memorial fund. $161,475.59; State board of agriculture. $67,269.44; Dunes Park fund. $53,826.56; forestry fund, <•*6 539.62; corn borer fund $130,830.76 George Rogers Clark Memorial fund $98,664.12; Schoo) fund interest '>s6 93: permanent endowment fund" interest $25,259.86; unclaimed fees, $1,341 and docket fees $11,887. ———— —oI— ——— i„n ARRIVALS HL \.'** ' J Mr. and Mrs. Ford Tinkham. of Bronson, Michigan, are the parents of a boy baby which was born on Monday. .Inly 2. 1928, at the Sturgis hospital in Sturgis, Michigan. This is the third child and first boy in the Tinkham family. It has been named Charles Edward, after its grandfather, the Rev. Charles E. Tinkham. a former pastor of the First Methodist church of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kirsch. 929 Walnut street, are the parents of a boy haby which was born today. Monday July 9. 1928. at the Adams CountyMemorial hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Butler, Decatur route six, are the parents of a boybaby born today. Monday. July 9, 1928 at the Adams County Memorial hospital. Leonard Dewayne, is the name given to the boy haby, which was born Thursday. July- 5, 1928. to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Funk of Decatur route five. - —o— — UNION SERVICE WELL ATTENDED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ique manner. He said in part: “It does not matter so much what a person says, as what he does and what he is. I will speak about a person this evening that said very little, but did much. You rarely ever hear him spoken of. yet he did something that really turned the tide of history. When Joseph went to Egypt, he filled the granneries with corn and preserved the Israelites. Joseph of Nazareth overcame all difficulties and preserved the Savior of mankind. The Bible records another Joseph, who saved the day for the Savior Jesus Christ. He occupied a very unique position. If you can imagine the United States congress and the supreme court dissolving itself into one body, the head of this body would be equal to that of Joseph of Arimimathaea. He was a man of political power and he was rich. Each one of the four Gospels laud his wisdom and concil. When Jesus was upon trial, he voted his conviction, although he was in the minority. Joseph was ready to stake his, wealth and social standing for that, which he knew was right. Joseph openly went into the presence of Pilate and begged the body of Jesus. Pilate thought, Joseph
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was dippy, but it never changed his conviction. As u Jew, it meant to be ceremonially unclean, to touch a dead body. It deprived him of partaking of the great feast. All this made no i difference to Joseph, since he had witnessed the trial and crucifixion of Jesus, he took him to be the Son of God. He hurried him in his own 1 tomb hewn in a rock. Jesus did not need the tomb very long, but he needed it very badly. In three short days, Jeans returned the tomb to Joseph with a hearty thank you. The tomb was worth just us much when Jesus rest it as it was before, if that tomb could he located today, it would be worth a million times more, because Jesus was in it. The riches and service we give to Jesus, jlwnys enriches the giver." The union service next Sunday night will be held at the Presbyterian church. The sermon will be preached by the Rev. M. W. Sunderman, pastor of the Evangelical church. Bodies Os Drowned Orphans Are Recovered Mexico. Ind., July 9 —(U.R) —Bodies of three boy inmates of the orphan's home here have been recovered from Eel river following a triple drowning Friday night. A combined funeral service will be held Tuesday. The dead were Durwood Mnffley. 12; Raymond Todd,.ll, and Bruno Logman, 14. o Ex-Senator Chamberlain Os Oregon, Dies Suddenly — Washington, July 9—(INS)—Ex-Sen-| ator George E. Chamberlain (D) of Oregon, who sponsored much of the army legislation during the world war, is dead. The veteran senator, who was chairman of the senate military affairs committee throughout the year, expired at his hotel here last night from apoplexy. Announcement of the death was made this morning. Since his retirement from the senate in 1921, Senator Chamberlaih had been engaged in law practice in Washington. Two years ago he suffered a stroke which kept him in illhealth for some time. He later recovered. however, and again became active in business. A second stroke last night proved fatal. o — Infected Milk Blamed For Deaths Os Two Persons La Salle. 111., July 9—(INS)—Two per sons are dead and four other members of a family are seriously ill here today as a result of drinking what is believed to have been infected milk. Boniface Conway, 19, Notre Dame student, died today, five days ago his brother, Robert, 16. died on a similar poisoning. Two brothers and two sisteis are confined in the lor Salle hospital suffering from the same malady. Physicians believe they drank milk thad lieen poisoned by the cows eating snakeweed. o Greek Chamber Os Deputies Resigns Athens, July ?—(U.R)—The chamber av deputies was dissolved today in accordance with the demand of Premier Venizolos, who plans an early election. President Coundouriotis is opposing firmly Venizelos’s demand that the voting system be changed, and a direct clash between the two leaders seems imminent. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cole and children were over Sunday guests at the J. R. Glancy residence in Bronson. Michigan.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JULY 9, 1928.
ATTEND SCHOOL AT WINONA LAKE fl — i ! Winona latke, |nd„ July 9 Indiana 1 | University's new summer extension school, which opened at Winona Lake ’ June 23. has an enrollment of 303 stu- , dents, including four from Adams i county. Glennis D. Elzey. Elols M. 1 Lewton. Dora M. Magley, and Florence ' i H Magley, of Decatur, are enrolled. ‘ The registration record lists stud- ■ ■ ents from 54 counties in Indiana and • from seven states outside of Indiana, including Florida, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Qhio and Wlsi consyi. Most of the students are from [ the nottli central part of the state, with large delegations from Kosciusko and surrounding counties. Thirty courses are offered by a teaching staff of 20 members Full University credit is offered. Dr. E. M. Linton, associate director of the Extension Div|sion, is in charge. He was manager of the privately operated Winona summer school for seven years. 1 This school has been discontinued. The 1 building formerly used by the private 1 school is now used for the full-time University courses. The Winona public school building is used for practice i teaching. An ideal combination of recreational , facilities at Winona Lake, of the world famous Chautauqua program offered here by the Winona Assembly, and of the educational advantages of the
CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH W N £ AND UPWARDS // i Coupe J 670 fU I Roadster I _- - - » i-Door Sedan ~. 690 I ** ' Touring .... 695 Zf// De Luxe Coupe . 720 6 \ 4-Door Sedan 725 ,| 1 AH prices f. e. 6. Detroit .35 if 6 / ‘ 1 I Chrysler dealers are in a petition r. —.5 Sy / -U- - ™ fz.* I e.xtenj the conM-nierae of —- ',.7*77 W| Ss Mfe time payments -Z3 ! r A New Car.. A New Car Style.. A New Zenith of Low Priced Car-Luxury and Performance Nrw {lender profile chromium-plated radiator— AU Chrysler research, engineering and motor car dollar, that you will surely want Long, low bodies.—Generous room for 2to s passes manufacturing have been inspired by the to sec it and drive it. gm , u body model - Luxurious deep up. XT/ TX above all you must see its beautiful f.otoyandappoinrmenrdeMil.-No. Sr/rer-Dome CM , p uMic rccog „ ition o f tl ,: 8 principle, in " n ' s i, "‘ l 6»«k an=l streteh at ease m its high-compression engine, for use with any gasoline. f our years advanced Chrysler from 27th to deep-upholstered, fu.l adult-size bodies, to -Smoorb speed up ro 60 more miles an hour.- Srd ptaee i„ sates in the N. A. C. C. - h-XIV u„£ Chrysler light-action internal expanding hydraulic With a new product —the Plymouth— ( four-wheel brakes-no other car of this price Chrysler is the first to give, at so low a Plymouth is today displayed by every • l- ra. price, the advantages of performance, riding Chrysler dealer. He wants you to see it and possesses tis feature. case,dependability and full adult size which to ride in it. characterize fine cars of higher price. p leasc su ], mit thc p( ymout h to this tria( R The new Chrysler-designed and Chrysler- We believe you will discover there has never built Plymouth is so revolutionary an ad- been a car anywhere near its price that can ■M : vance over other low-priced cars, it is such approach the Plymouth for power, pick-up, [ conclusive evidence that the past year’s smoothness, easy handling, safety, quietness j strides in the science of manufacturing have and roominess — nor that can equal it in multiplied the purchasing power of the beauty and style. IW * W. H. Dettinger Phone 344 Decatur, Ind.
stnto university uro rapidly making Hilk a leading summer atudent center . of the middle west. —o- ——— Three World’s Track And Field Records Fall New York, Ju,ly 9.— (U.R)’—Three world's track and field records were broken and one tied last week. Ed Hamm of Georgia Tech leaped 25 feet, II 1-8 Indus In the final Olympic tryouts at Cambridge to set a new record in the broad Jump. Lloyd Halin of Nebraska and the Boston A. A. run tlie 800 metres iff 1 minute, 51 2-5 seconds in the same meet, dipping one tll'tli of a second off Dr. Otto Peltzer’s world record. S. A. Lay of New Zealand threw the javelin 222 feet. 9 indies in the British amateur meet at Stamford Bridge, Eng., to break the accepted worlds record. I.arva, a Finn, beat Paavo Nurmi and tied the latter's world record of 3:52 6-10 for the 1,500 metres in the Olympic trials meet at Helsingfors, Finland. COURT HOUSE Miller Estate Opened Letters of administration have been issued to to Ella E. Miller in the estate of William J. Miller, She filed bond in the sum of $1,200. Marriage Licenses Sylvan Rupeit, clerk, to Mary Lucille Oliver, both of Monroe. Howard upholsterer, to Florence V. Leichty, both of Berne.
STORE OWNER IS SHOT IN BATTLE WITH A BURGLAR (CONTINUED FROM UAIiK ONK) | Glenniore and joined with a posse of officers and citizens In searching ‘ fields nml buildings in the vicinity of • the town. I A Ford touring car. believed to , have been abandoned by the burglar ■ wqis found in the driveway at a vacant • house, about a quarter of a mile north 1 of Glenmore. A suit case containing 1 clothing, was found in the car. The ■ license numlier on the car was 482,599 ■ and was issued in Indiana this year 1 to Herman Parker, of West Point. Indiana. The license was issued for . a Ford touring car, lint the engine . number on the abandoned car hail , been obliterated and officials were unable to ascertain if the license hud been issued for this car. The bullet was removed from Mr. • Hunter's arm and it is believed that the would will not prove serious. It entered the arm a short distance above the elbow. The shot was fired fiom a .32 calibre revolver. o —. Keep Your Skin Looking Young 1 Protect your beauty in all kinds of weather with this new face powder MELI.O-GLO. Does not give the skin a dry feeling; does not clog the pores; is not affected so much by perspiration. Stays on longer. So pure and fine. MELLO-GLO is made by a new French Process. It's truly wonderful. The Holthouse Drug Co.
A l not I I with gm-heated homes/1 No to No calloused hands, broken nails, or begrimed fingers. Gas heat is clean, con- , venient, and comfortable. Heat your home with gas. * Northern Indiana public Service Company WCBAT mfmGET RESULTS
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