Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1931 — Page 5

'BELEBBATE 'fl HILI FOURTH Lake June 29—A patriowhich promises to be in the history of Winore staged here next Satur'"f • lhe outstanding feature ' h - ril da. s elaborate program will ■E appearance of Hear Admiral |^K ( | Byrd at 8 o'clock Saturin the big "Billy" SunAdmiral Byrd now I hero, will speak on "Litera a" and will show moving ~ es this trip to the South sat Tabernacle accomodat. lie ’iis and a capicity crowd i* lel lor this unusual Fourth event. Warsaw American Legion is mu with the Winona man'an in making the Fourth of till red letter day. A big recep!r,t ‘ ! be tendered the distin"f visitor. He wil he met at and escorted to his hotel park and later to the Talierhis address. The Legion is in arranging an *W program of athletic ’’H: and contests. These contests m the morning and cont rhe afternoon with a base- | n( between the Warsaw and the Fort Wayne Eagles. Tier nr'l merchandise prizes will (n» w «^M|.. ir ,| 1 d lhe winners in the vai--—jßo-nt.f's. Three water battles staged. Other events will Ide the following: Out Board 17 Race. Rowing Race, Free Swimming Race for both boys Canoe Tilting Contests "Vii I,ays and girls. Roque CquHorseshoe Pitching Contests. lfai < ‘ for ,M>V3 ’ ,!oller Skat • Obstacle Races for Boys. Women, and Men. American Jxtgion and Win Bands will give concerts | 'lie en ire day. The park B will be open throughout the there will be no charge tm etal^B"" 1 1>: ‘ s an <> various contests, will mark the close of the nidi I week of the annual Winona I Attendance this year is large and indications point to breaking season The chan wßii will continue for six weeks. — 1 (■pone seeks 30-DAY STAY apply for a Btav of 10 days weeks before going to LVG'IB" } pointed out to judge (J Brrsnn that no motions of con or writs had been asked. Capone had appeared volun- ’ and pleaded guilty, and that had been no "jockeying" in case as is often true win n face trial. Wilkerson turned to Green, assistant district and asked if a continn was acceptable to the state. assented and the judge set 30 at 10 a m. as the new date sentencing. fares a maximum possentence of 34 years irnprisBnent and SBO,OOO in fines. It authoritatively reported, how that the prison sentence will ■ not less than two nor more five years and the fine al*i it ■t least several thousand per believe, however, that Capone be given the heaviest sentpossible. Their views have expressed in letters received authorities. have received several letters and not one of suggests a light sentence for said one official. "Most ■ tin tn request at least 25 years for him and many of th.' demand that he be bnnge I our opinion, this is evidence ■' the aura of false heroism that Capone has Imeti reThe public has learned j lie is just another criminal." MVu recent moves by the federal have done much to the waning power of ('agang. The latest blow re- : in indictment ol 61 men on of operating under Co j direction an alcohol syndiwhich distributed l.OtMi.uOi' of alcohol yearly throughMfr the midwest. was not named in th it case, but ho and 6s of 1 henchmen were charged tn a ' indictment with conduct- - ‘

IHEBMATISM can easily rid yourself of th!* You must get well and satisfied or votir mon- J trouble, get a treatment ”f Kohnr._ ■ -ORENCE HOLTHOL’SE I Stenographic Wove ■ I Typewriting ■hdge J. T. Mcrrynmn's L;nv H Office, K. of 0. Bid;;. a v ou have any extra typewritins n stenographic work 1 will be a 'l to do it. Phone 42 for v a

\ork in Buried Tubes F °rty-Four Feet a Second B - WWMWFa io'■'s&ssr - I Jr?*> ' 1l&wIM _®BBBBBg pneumatic Mail Tube J|r- Jw Statiom. t i 'i V *« KW S 3 I'®* y - Mt ’ißmi l 'W /MB i ®x-. atKi. £ >.. t bmß Loading Underground Maiv Carriers. In this day and age when speed is the ereat fore. k..L -t . thaTund C S nt • r ” in . di I Vidual * a , nd it’s interesting to kn" 3 the tii, . S h m * P °k M ’T ,<:e ha ‘ n °‘ fallen below the ’tandard set by e t mes. It s probable that not one person out of 10,000 knows that t'h k“ 7 d” ,On * °j f e i ter ‘ are ? h °‘ a * a Speed of 44 fee ‘ P er « c °nd through underground tube, stretching the length of New York in order .hat mail for the city and the country at large may be speeded on its ay. through the use of a maze of pneumatic tubes, steel carriers carrying between 500 and 600 letters each, are raced about the city under !ts busy streets. It is estimated that the carriers travel 150 000 miles a day and if the total capacity of the high-speed mail system was employed continuously 9,000,000 letters would be dispatched hourly. Some service, what?

New York. June 29—(U.F5—N >'. one person in 10,600 realizes that every day millions of letters are shot at high speed IHwi-'ii the main and branch postoffices in New York through arteries running on an average < f four feet underneath the city's streets This unique rT-rvice makes it possible for anyone to mail a letter in uptown New York in the morning and have it received in Wall St. - miles away—within a few hours. Some service! But if one will visit the Gen oral Postoffice or any of its branches, one may see mail clerks shooting long “torpedoes" filled with mail into steel chutes which lead into iron pipes through which the steel carriers whizz at high velocity under the pressure of compressed air. Seventeen hundred new carriers will go into NewYork's pneumatic tube system in July. Each carrier is 22 inches long and seven inches in diameter. It resembles a long, thin milk can and carries between 560 and 60 i letters. The iron tube through which the carrier races to its destination consists i f 12-foot long sections of pipe. Change of direction in the tube is accomplishen oy sections of tube bent to a long radius to permit the containers to slide along without reduction in speed. Friction is reduced by special (levies. Well built as tiny are, the carriers. each weighing about 20 pounds, must be replaced aft. r they have gone some 2.000,1M0 miles in Uncle Sam's underground postal service in New York. I lie tubes form a continuous circuit >f Manhattan, tip and down both sides <l4 the Island. They also run across the Brooklyn Bridge set-

ness in Chicago. Capone has plead-' ed guilty to that charge, some of his aides have giv n bond and the , others are in hiding. Several former gangster powers ; have t>c<-!’. suggested as candidates I to care tor Capone , remaining business while he is in jail They 1 include Frank 'The Ehforcef’i Nitti. who has almost completed p, sentence for ineotne tax fraud, and Johnny Tort io. Capone's part-; ner in crime until he fled Chicago; several years ago to escape retrl-l bulion for the killing of a rival, gang leader. _— _ BOY RESCUED FROM CAV E-IN | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) solid rock in the shaft and could , not continue. They they began a| new tunnel and I felt better. “Pretty soon 1 forgot all about dying and began hoping they would,, hurry. It was the nicest thing in i all my life when they dragged me out of there." Despite the fact that his legs : were temporarily paralyzed. How-: ard insisted on thanking bis res-1.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1931

| vi< ing a large area of Brooklyn i with five miles of tubes. Every day of the year the mail i carriers travel a distance of 150,1000 miles beneath Gotham's busy streets. They are in operation 20 I hours out of the 24 and their speed iis 41 ft t per second. Whew! I The flying carriers, choked with i mail, are impelled through the i tubes of a column of air which 'exerts a pressure of about five pounds per square inch, the air be ' ing provided By huge blowers in the basements of the postoffices. Each postoffice on the pneu-matic-tube line is equipped with a receiving and sending apparatus, j commonly called a “receiver” and j “transmitter.” At 10-second intervals between departures a i tiansmitter will dispatch six carriers per minute or 360 per hour. I Since each carrier will hold beI tween 500 and 600 letters, the rate [per dispatching machine one way |is 180,000 letters an hour. But i there are 50 dispatching machines I in the New York system and their | total capacity on a 10-second headway. if all were continuously occupied, would be 9.000,000 letters per hour. The transmission of written dispatches through long narrow tubes by the agency of air pressure was first practically introduced in England in 1853. Pneumatic mail I distribution has been conducted I underground both in America and Europe for many yeaas and st.ll i remains the most rapid and effi- ' cient system for the speedy trans- ; fer of mail in large < tt s. Berlin. | Paris and London all have effi- ' c.ient pneumatic mail systems tin--1 derground. in addition to New York's wonderfully speedy plan.

cuers immediately after reaching j safety. Then lie asked to be taken , to his room "to get some sleep. ' Five thousand spectators at the * scene cheered as be was carried | into the house. ; “He's the bravest person I've ever l seen." said Edward Reinsck, a vet- ' eran c til miner who survived the 'cherry Mine disaster in which many , lives were lost. Reinsch, with Howard's older brother, Floyd, directed the rescue work. o Heat Takes Toll Os Many Valuable Horses Indianapolis. June 29. — U.RJ — Losses amounting to thousands of dollars have been suffered by Indiana farmers through deaths of horses due to the heat wave, it was revealed in reports received here. One hundred titty-seven horses have died in Shelby county, it was reported. Thirty-six died Saturday and 28 yesterday. The ajprago value of each animal was $57, making the aggregate loss $8,949. At Brook. Ind . 13 horses were reported dead due to the heat, and similar losses were reported from other areas.

EVERETT, HITE WHOLESALE CO. CHANGES HANDS (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) owner would install a cash and delivery system. Mr. Duguid is an experienced merchant uid banker. He formerly was president of a bank at Freemont, Indiana. and was engaged in the dry goods and grocery business for many years. The wholesale firm is one of the substantial and well known business establishments in this section of the country. It was organized in 1912 by Henry Hite and John Everett, veteran business men of Decatur, who after nearly -w years in the retail grocery business, engaged in the wholesale business. Mr. Burdg became associated with the company in 1914 and has been active in the concern for many years. Mr. Hite retired from the firm about 10 years ago. The selling of the business also means the retiring of Mr. Everett from active business. He is one of the best known business men in Decatur and is a director of one of Decatur s banks. All the old employes of the Everett and Hite firm will be retained by Mr. Duguid, it waa announced today. RAINS DRIVE MERCURY DOWN .CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) by weather forecasters for permanent relief from the heat, but the rains of yesterday and today helped much for several hours. A cool

w riill , 1 s|g i THE ANSWER to substitution JyßW| *M ,s always Q" ZnSlißßß| ill 1 KAsw* . s Ojßh.sr.AlL! IjwTwa. *<?^BflEE~ h A^cfcr ,>A *^w a y -•--- ~• 1 <■ ~ V y •*'^k*"' -£\"'W! 7. ?<Z s s gS; ■' >.t* • <■; p '■ii&v / v9BkS '- zfdk.gy Wr •*< <\ /uK 4WKJ wA22>* - 4 <CzW\rJ JXsJwvl wgSwEk.- .*• : &t Mk ~« ✓ ■ jhFyk. ga&i.- fc-'« •<. <a >%* ZT\ • MSEBSk s- A»Wk>\r - < f ”thjt — B > ■ MBMMBHwML . jHPkv/ & - /», ;jff fi^!±j- r *fs‘sß&-''. \' 'MORE FOR YOUR bgJraßE MO N E Y"- • • but W - t ■^'^ / ' Bjlr s MORE WHAT ? How can any shopper know what Then how can it be “just as good?” \ffl* $ '' i '' F ' she is getting when she accepts Hmest value ig a ducfs onl g% untried, unadvertised products? inlet to the adver f ising glj She can't! of this newspaper. W - '-- ;? ' . In appearance, these substitutes The packaged merchandise which ® /? ? " may imitate products of recognized you read of here has a reputation 1 % '^r' ' o•' qU *’ ity ‘ at stake. Wl But quality goes deeper than a It must make good to hold your * VBRE pretty label! confidence, and ours. It cannot You may be told the imitation afford even one false claim. package “holds a little more” for Whenever you shop, ask for these V. 7 H the money. standard, advertised brands. And / Often, it holds little more than peHhem. Always be warned by the disappointment! words just as good that there is c i, k l i something better. Such substitutes arc urged upon , , ~ \ \X_ jV unsuspecting shoppers for just one the names you know guide you reason. to constant quality. To definite '•' .*n ™ '• r: • n- n purity. To honest weight. To good 1 here is more prof it in selling them. products that give full value in The merchant who tells you these return for the money you spend! \ imitations are “just as good” as brands you know, and commands his clerks to do likewise, is looking , only at today’s sales slips. Not at &*sA a rFU ■ | |R| tomorrow’s loyal patronage. I i 810 ilO I*o When a product is sold cheaper |J(j||V gj H|1!0 L| O I than one of recognized quality, you WV X *M ■ VI ■■ J Wi L a B W <. u may be sure it is made cheaper.

breeze was noticeable for a few hours this morning. Creeks and streams throughout the county contained water today for the first time in several weeks and farmers stated that the rains were of sufficient quantity to moisen the ground for several inches. Albert Numbers was here today and reported a terrific wind storm at Ossian last evening. It lasted fifteen minutes, blew several barns and other out buildings off foundations, wrecked the Parkinson ice house and the R. A. Green garage. Many trees were blown down and the main street was filled with debris this morning. The worst dam age perhaps was to the telephone lines, one high tension line being blown down and many other lines broken by falling tree limbs. NO CONCLUSION IN DEBT PARLEY p AGE ONE) It was assumed that he intend' d to present to the cabinet the proposals as set forth by Mellon, in an effort to gain approval for a compromise agreement. A tense atmosphere spread through official Paris as the eon-i versations progressed. Despite the silence of the nego-1 tiations, the United Press under-1 stood that a most difficult and' delicate crisis has arisen over the i inability of Mellon and Edge to convince the French they should I abandon their reservation to the Hoover plan. The French insist that Germany must pay the “unconditional annuities” under the Young plan, whereas the Hoover plan would declare a complete holiday for one' year.

The United States embassy arranged a transatlantic telephone I conversation between Mellon and aitlng secretary of state Castle at i Washington at 2:30 p in., in which i it was expected that Washington would give Mellon definite instructions. The possibility of a change in attitude toward the French reservations was rumored. In view of the imperative need i to reach a decision before Wednesday—the Hoover plan is to become effective July 1 the utmost Importance was attached to tonight's conference. The prospects admittedly were not bright. BIG DECREASE IN VALUES IS RECORDED HERE l CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE I Figures are Given The following table shows the assessed valuations this year and the comparison for 1930 for personal property: Township ]931 1930 Blue Creek 185,480 222,260 French 234,770 292.800 | Hartford .... .... 262.220 336,110 Jefferson 188.170 191.420 Kirkland 203,720 220,760 Monroe . 417,340 493,610 I Preble . 401,260 421.800 | Hoot 339,050 375,150 |St. Marys 151.070 165,320 ' Union 180,165 227,770 Wabash 316.400 342,160 j Washington 304,780 312.160 1 Berne .. . . 1,068.870 1,219,640 Decatur, Root 132,560 326.820 Decatur, Wash. 1,254.620 1,408,2701 Geneva . 216,430 227.491 H Monroe Corp. 82,450 92,200

Real Estate Not Included The assessments of real estate and improvements thereon are not Included in the table. The drop in the personal property valuations, together with the expected decrease in the state’s assessments of railroads and utilities will give Adams county a total net valuation of less than $29,000,000 tn is year. Real estate assessments stand’ this year without change. Q. Bank Closes At Gary Indianapolis, June 29. <U.R) Gary's seventh bank failure of re- ' cent weeks was reported to the! I state banking department when lhe Gary Trust and Savings Company was closed today, Luther F. Symon, stafe hanking chief, said.

Wake Up Your Liver Bile —Without Calomel

And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go If you feel sour and sunk and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy of chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t get at the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily.

PAGE FIVE

P. E. Mayer, of the state bank- ■ lug department, assumed charge t of the institution and Thomas D. ) Barr, assistant state banking com- - niieitioner, was to go to Gary toI day. The institution had loans of $!,- ‘ 030,000, deposits of $1,080,000; and surplus and profits of $130,000. Harry L. Arnold is president and B. T. Is-nster, cashier. The stat of Indiana had $371500 on deposit in the bank, protected by a $25,000 tiond. H. L. ('outer, treasurer-elect of Lake county, and former Decatur 1 resident Is vice-president, of th ■ | Gary Trust and Savings.' Throe banks now remain open in the Calumet city. o , Get the Habit—Trade at Homa

If this bile is not Oowing freely, your food I doesn’t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, ba.l taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. It takes those good old C A RTE It’S LITTLE LIV ER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up." They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. But don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter’s Little Liver Pills on the red label. Reseat « substitute.