Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 212, Decatur, Adams County, 7 September 1932 — Page 3
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>r ~ jir. W DO THESE CHILLY MORNINGS ■ REMIND YOU OE YOUR COAL BIN? K MASTER, ELLA HELEN Qfl and TOPSY are awaiting your calls, ready to warm you. stopping at the CASH COAL YARD same is last season w here they can be seen and called. Bash Coal Yard
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Company. McKee denounced the' printing contract as a "wholly unjustifiable monopoly to which the' k city paid 12.000,000 a year." The i board of estimate supported him, 9 J to 7. overriding Tammany Hall members. Near the close of the day McKee ' , announced he had cut his own salary down to what he received as ' president of the board of aldermen. I the salary Walker received before an increase was voted for city of- . fielals by the city officials a few I years ago. . "To show the way, I have instructed the budget director to preI pare schedules before Oct. 1 where- | by the salary of any commissioner I whose appointment depends upon the mayor shall not exceed $12,000 a year." McKee announced. This cuts the salary of Dr. Wil-j liam Schroeder, Walker's personal' ’ physician, who was slipped into a 1 ’ $22,000 sanitary commission by a; J Wa'ker maneuver. It also hits .'many other Tammany Hall Walker , appointees. "There will be resignations after this,” reporters commented. "Will there?" McKee queried innocently. Shortly after McKee's session at city hall, he hurried down town with Controller Charles W. Berry and within half an hour had arranged a $10,000,000 city loan at 514 Per cent. The last large city I loans required weeks of negotiations by Walker and cost 5% per cent. That the speed was the result of confidence in the New York mayor was forecast last Friday when Mc--1 Kee assumed office, and city bondsj immediately rose in Wall street I dealings as much as two points. | McKee had told the budget direc- • tor Tuesday that he was "not to ■ consider the budget as $(31,000,000 budget but as a budget of $425,000,- - - ■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1932.
lioo exclusive of debt service. I j shall confer with the controller very soon about what can he done towiTrd lowering the debt service ” That meant the budget was to Ibe determined by what revenue the |clty actually received, and not by! .what departmental heads wanted to spend. The mayor also announced plansi for a police survey of the jobless.' and. said he intended to find out what New York bought amj paid I for with Its $3,000,000-8 month re- , lief expenditures. There have been j charges that Tammany hull "polit-l lea' jobs" were financed with relief i money. The city's press. Republican and I Democratic, greeted the new may-1 .or’s policies with enthusiasm. As for Walker, he announced I nothing had happened to make him I "change his plans." He didn't exactly say what were his "p ans." ADAMS COUNTY TEACHERS ARE LISTED TODAY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE | Robin. Bryant; 5, Naomi Yager.! Craigville; 6. Elizabeth Cramer. I Decatur. Hartford Township A. F. Baker, Trustee Geneva, R. 3 Linn Grove Schools: Edna Glendening. Geneva; Mary Schlagenhauf, Linn Grove. Hartford Township High School: faster Kerr, principal. Geneva; John Whicker. Portland; Mary Ann Pusey. Geneva; Mary Sullii van. Geneva; Ruth Mahoney. Geneva. Hartford twp. Grades: Lester I Reynolds, Linn Grove; Louise Neusbanm. Linn Grove. Wabash Township Ed Stahly. trustee Geneva. R. 1 1, Harold Long. Geneva; 2. Rus- | sell Steiner, Geneva; 2. Gladys | laing, Geneva. Geneva High School: R O. Hunt Geneva, principal; Nell Pyle. Geneva: P. W. Vitz, Decatur; Geraldine Runyon. Geneva; Margaret Rhodes, Geneva; Blanche Aspy.i Geneva. Geneva Grades: Andrew Cook.l Geneva: Mary Brennan. Geneva: ■ Goldine Butcher, Geneva: Eliza-: ; belli Kraner, Geneva: Magdalena' Hirschy. Berne; Mary Wheat, Gej neva; Catherine F'ravel. Geneva. Jefferson Township Charles Abnet. Trustee Geneva. R 2 Jefferson twp. High School: Olen Marsh, principal. Berne; ! Merrill Tharp. Berne; Dorcas Peti ty. Berne; Mina Collier. Decatur. Grades: J. Chalmer Edwards. I ' Willshire. O; Helen Kenney, Gene-' ; va; Madeline Robin, Bryant. Union Township Arthur Blakey. Trustee Decatur, R. 3 1. Esta Fleming, Decatur; 5. i Bessie Carter, Decatur; G. Dorothy
Bringing Punch Into Politics , B fir JI i - Mt a L_J Gene Tunney retired heavyweight champion of the world, is shown as he greeted Governor Franklin D Roosevelt. Democratic nominee for the Presidency, when they met at the McNeill dinner in Bridgeport, Conn. Both Roosevelt and Tunney made speeches, the New York Governor pleading for harmony in the party and praising the work of former Governor Alfred E. Smith. This was the firs’ time since the Chicago convention that Roosevelt mentioned his erstwhile opponent by name.
Spuller. Decatur. Parochial: Rev. M. J. Frosch.' Decatur; Benhart Schultz. Decatur. Root Township Phil Schieferstein, Trustee Decatur, R. 7 I, Mary Clem, Monroeville. Root twp. High School: Mervin Hostetter. principal. Decatur; j Ethel Piper. Decatur; Catherine' Weidler. Decatur Root twp. Grades: Harry Johnson. Decatur; Margaret Schenck. Decatur; 7, Lois Fuhrman. Decatur. Parochial: M. A. Greunke. Decatur. Preble Township Ernest Worthman. Trustee Decatqr. R. 4 4. Elizabeth Leyae, Decatur; 5. ! Pajil Spuller. Decajur; fi. Nellie, I Brodbeck. Decatur. Parochial: H. F. Neilson. Deca- ! tur: Frieda Buuck. Decatur: Rudolph Stolp. Decatur; W. E. Uffelmon. Decatur; Barbara Vollrath. Decatur. Kirkland Township Daniel Scherry, Trustee Decatur. R. 2 1. Edna Borne. Decatur; 2. Wil-, ham Griffiths. Decatur; 3. Oscar Geisel, Decitur; 4 Nellia Coppess. Decatur; 5, Pauline Buckmaster, i Decatur; 6. Radel Andrews, Deca- ! tug. Kirkland twp. High School: R. J. Mann, principal. Peterson; Albert Coppess, Decatur; Lucile C.i Beavers. Decatur: Glennys Arnold Decatur. Washington Township T. R. Noll. Trustee Decatur. R. 9. 3. Arline Becker. Decatur; 5.| Clyde Troutner. Decatur; 6. El-! mer Ehrsam. Decatur; 7, Mary E.: Potts. Decatur: 8. Marguerite! I Lewellen. Monroe. - BERN’S DOCTOR OFFERS HELP CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tended Bern for several weeks prior to his departure for Honolulu on a vacation trip. Dr. Frank R. Webb, assistant, county autopsy surgeon, performed ! an autopsy on the body. He said 1 Bern's death was due to a "typical j suicide wound." His examination,' he added, disc’osed "no acute con-1 dition of disease.” Miss Harlow’s condition, which j | has bordered on complete nervous collapse since her husband's nude body was found before a mirror in their Hillside home Monday, caused physicians and her relatives grave concern. Detectives visited her last night and found her hysterical as she dedared she knew no reason why Bern shot himself to end their mar-1 lied life of two months. It was said that, hysterical, the I platinum blonde star leaped from her bed at the home of Marino | Bello, her step-father, and dashed I toward a balcony on the second floor. Her nurse and members of [ the immediate family circle restrained her and finally quieted her | with the aid of sedatives. Detective lieutenants Frank Con- 1 daffer and Frank Ryan attempted to press Miss Harlow for her version of the meaning of the suicide note in which Bern wrote of his "abject humiliation" and referred to "the terrible wrong” he had done her. “I don't know, I don't know," the star moaned as tears streamed down her face. Her answer was the same when detectives asked her if she knew what her husband meant when he wrote of "the comedy of last night.” "1 can't understand why this terrible thing should have happened to us," Miss Harlow cried. "As for the note left by Paul. I have not idea what it means. This 'frightful wrong' he apparently believed he had done me Is all a mystery. I can’t imagine wli.it it I means. | "There was nothing between us; that I can think of that would have'
| caused him to do this.” Miss Harlow then retold her story of her last meeting with Bern. She said she stayed at her mother's home Saturday night because she had worked late at the studio. On Sunday, she said, she worked most of the day and then drove to 1 the Benedict canyon home where i she had lived with Bern since their marriage on July 2. She and Bern I talked about a dinner party to be I held that night at Mrs. Bello s home and she left in the car for her mother's residence. o Ruling May Hinder Construction Work Washington. Sept. 7.— (U.R> —A ruling by Comptroller General J. R. McCarl, which may slash construction appropriations provided in the Garner-Wagner relief bi’l by more than $30,000,000 was revealed today by treasury officia's. McCarl informed Secretary of Treasury Mills that he interpreted the economy act as cutting by 10 per cent all appropriations for construction, even though the relief bill, designed to stimulate employment. was passed subsequent to the j retrenchment measure. o Highway Employes Get Salary Cut Indianapolis, Sept. 7 —(U.R) — A | new salary schedule designed to j save $46,000 annually was drawn up today by the state highway ' commission for all members and I employes. It becomes effective i October 1. , John J. Brown, highway director. suffered a reduction of from j $7,500 last year to $6,018.75. Com- ! missioners pay was reduced from ' $lO a day to $9.15. Last year the department's total payroll was] ' $846,000. Grand Jury Called For Investigation Bedford, Ind.. Sept. 7.— (U.R) — -The Lawrence county grand jury I was summoned into special sess-1 .ion today by Judge John C. Brana- ■ 'man for a “complete investigation; 'and examination” of the office of' Raymond Mitchell, clerk of the dr-. cuit court. Mitchell, a Republican. I iis serving his second term. It exI pires next year. I
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Three Are Arrested For Counterfeiting Worthington. InJ., Sept. 7. —(U.R) Purchase of a 5-cent bag of peanuts has resulted In the arrest of three persons on charges of count erfelting and uncovering of their base of operations on a farm near I here. Ruth Mount and Forrest Need were arrested on a charge of Issuing fradulent 5-cent pieces. Morton
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jstrouHe. 25, a paroled convict from' , near Bloomfield, confessed. United Stales secret service operatives said, to manufacture of tbe coins. The arrests were made after operator of a confection stand at Brfgeport, 111., suspected the value of a coin tendered In payment of ja bag of peanuts by a man and 'woman, occupants of an automo|bi e. He obtained the license number of the auto and It was traced I to Vincennes. Miss Mount and' Need were apprehended.
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