Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 88, Decatur, Adams County, 12 April 1929 — Page 5

LdMINISTRATION to BE AIDED BY "HOOVER HOUSE" Vast Republican Majority To Give President Assurance Os Support , ,1 i-if s Start Correspondent) . 71s t House or Representatives .onv-ne* at noon Monday to * h Lr farm relief and tariff revision g ,”-™uy de m>• 8 . iiouNt* ” because of the KepllXs majority Os 268 against 164 Eders'sax the majority strength indicates conclusively the House is , administration body this session d the views Os President Hoover on I two major items under consider- | Xn will be carried out to the last first business taken up is to be tbe swearing in of the members As terms of all 4:15 Congressmen expired on March 4. it will be necessary for William Tyler Page clerk of the Hooae to administer the oath to all. Organization will be next in order and ReP Nicholas Longworth, RepubHean Ohio, will be elected Speaker on a strictly party vote. The Democratic speakership candidate, Rep. Garner. Tex will be named minority leader and and Rep. John Q. Tilson. Republican, Conn., renamed majority leader. After the usual opening ceremonies the House will adjourn until noon Tuesday when the long-awaited message from President Hoover on agriculture relief legislation and tariff revision probably will be received and read. The House Agriculture Committee has a farm relief bill ready for introduction. This measure was drafted after 10 days of hearings and it is understood to contain many of the views to be expressed in the chief executive's message. The Ways and Means Committee is stil drafting the new tariff act and it will be ready for presentation in a week or so. Many New Faces Some of the most picturesque rep-1 resentatives who were prominent in legislative battles last year will lie missing as the new Congress opens. Finis Garret, Tenn., minority leader in the last Congress; Dan Anthony, Republican, Kansas, former chairman of the Appropriations Committee: Victor Berger. Socialist, Wisconsin Ralph E. L'pdike, Republican, Indiana are to be among the missing There will be 79 new faces in the

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House this session. Well-known members back in the new Congress include Longworth, Bertram Snell, repn., New York, chairman of the Rules Committee; Chairman Britten of the Naval Affairs .Committee; Tilson. Garner and Rep. Edgar Howard, dem, Neb., who resembles the late Williams Jennings Bryan. There.are eight women members In the spot light. The women's bloc Is headed In seniority by Mrs. Florence P. Kahn, repn.. Cal., now a veteran of four years service. Other members of tliu feminine group include the "Three Ruths”— Mis. Ruth Bryan Owen, dim. Fla., daughter of the late commoner; Mrs. Ruth Pratt, repn.. New York, widow o f the Standard OH official, and Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick. repn., widow of former Senator Medill McCormick. The other five women members are Mrs. Peat I Oldfield, dem., Ark.; Mrs. Edith Nour.se Rogers, repn., Mass ; Mary Norton, dem, N. J. Mrs. Katherine Jatnkley, repn.. Kentucky. For the first time in 22 years a negro will present himself to be sworn in as a member of the Honsl—William Oscar De Priest, repn., 111. _____ OBITUARY Harvey M. Daniels son of Robert C. and < aroline Helen Daniels was born Feb. 9. IM><» in St. Marys Township, Adams County and departed this life in this city April 2. 1929 at the age of 69 years 1 month and 24 days. He was united in marriage to Ellen Degarmo, September 20, 1878. This union was blessed with six children, four sons and two daughters; namely Alfred T. of Rival re, Ind., Harry W. of

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1929.

Pleasant Mills, Ind., Otto B. of Huntington, Ind. Hugh C. of Decatur. Mrs. C. W. Moser and Mrs. J. O. Tricker, Decatur. On August 11, 1901 his beloved companion was called to her reward leaving the 6 children under the fathers care, all of whom were most tenderly reared by the loving father to man and woman hood. Several years later he was married to Florence Harshman who passed away 2 years alter He continued to reside on his farm 5 miles east of Decatur until the year 1912 when he moved to Decatur, where be has resided since. He became a member of the Calvary E. V. church in early manhood and served as class leader for a number of years and was a teacher in the Sunday school for sev< ♦al years. Fraternally he was a member of the local Yeoman and Ben Hur lodges. He leaves to mourn his departure the six children, 25 grand children 5 great grandchildren 1 half brother George Cramer and 2 half sisters Mrs. Anna Brodbeck and Miss Nellie Waitent all of near Decatur, 1 step brother U. E. Cramer, one step sister Mrs. Emma Mauller at Wren Ohio, and one step sister Mrs. Sid Wolford at Marion, Indiana besides a large circle of other reaitives and friends. Q — Legion Drum Corps Notice A meeting of the American Ix-glon drum corps will be held at the Legion hall, Friday evening, at 7:30 o’clock. All members of the corps are requested to be present as business of importance will be transacted. 86-2‘x

CEMETERY GHOST AT BUFFALO FOUND MORE AIRY THAN EERIE

By Harry Van Lunger (United Press Staff Correspondent I Buffalo N. Y., April 12 — (UP) — Sounds of music and the quavering voice of a woman issuing from a mausoleum in Pine Hill cemetery at last has been exposed as those of—but it’s a bit too early in the story to tell everything. It all started a few weeks ago when a couple parked In a car near the cemetery heard a voice of eere sweetness singing in the darkness. The couple taried no longer. The word went around that the ghost of a woman saug nightly in the cemetery. Crowds collected along the road side to listen to the voice that issued from the grave. Some a trifle bolder than tj»e rest, entered the Graveyard to search for the source of the voice. Coming upon the mausoleum, the bold ones heard a woman's voice and the notes of a pipe organ. Fearstricken, they rushed hack to tell the t'aint-

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hearted ones outsid the fence of their discovery. Tho crowds grew larger each night. Where no policemen were needed before to handle traffic on th roads near the cemetery, five were called upon to direct the great number of cars that drove by. And then things reached a climax. A small group of investigators Including a reporter decided to get at the bottom of things— ghost or no ghost. In they weut, leaving a gaping crowd at the front gate. “Hear that," one said, as they approached the mausoleum. Sure enough a woman’s voice came quiiveringiy from the tomb. And then out of the darkness strolled a ]s>llce oflfcer. "That's no ghost” he said “Listen more closely and you'll find that's an outdoor speaker on a radio shop over there on Harlem Road. The mausoleum catches the sound waves and when you stand close by you can hear

the music and talking.” Thus the voice that was though by many to be supernatural was later revealed as that of WGR, one of Buffalo's largest broadcasting stations. Evidence Presented In Huff man Trial At Goshen Goshen, Ind., Apr. 12.— <U.R> —The taking of evidence continued today in the trial of Walter A, Huffman, former state representative, charged with issuance of fraudulent checks. The state won its first skirmish when Frederick Reed, cashier of the South Side bank, Elkhart, testified that there were not sufficient funds in Huffman's account to pay a check for $2,500 Issued by the former representative. Huffman was named in 21 similar

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Indictments, each ‘on a separata check. The current trial being for the Issuance of the $2,500 check. Robert Proctor, defense attorney, in his opening statement, said evidence would be instituted that would prove deposits totalling $5,937 were made the day tbe check was written. Reed, however, testified that while $5,937 had been deposited that day, $5,500 had been withdrawn. The state also Introduced other checks.

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