Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 175, Decatur, Adams County, 26 July 1933 — Page 5
WLOYERS WILL REPORT INCOME ftdiana Employers Must Report Employes’ Incomes To Slate ’ RMJWrst’jite And . July 26 ggoelftp — iaduiu i employers will i., ( required to report next Janita)' f r ypwww, and Incomes **• inBlanks for malting tho r. turns re bring prep •'<! now and these ill be availa' e for distribution trly in Da-eniber so that the om)oye" eats ae> what information ill be required Jackson Mid. The information returns will be ’ ■:ked only OBve each year, coindent with the annual tax return ami it. .vnient ''“This information return i.s only' of the many resources at hand |. > Jug to in»Wt > uniformation anil ' the gross income 1 jj,” Jackson said. "We Intend to I ■ this law fairly. To be l i/btr, every person « .<• <>w..- th" M Ute will haV- to pay what he ' M brae. Wi? will fl ard-bollexl’ With the taxp r who I 1 idently is i to comply ■ I <a <he law .and who makes an onest error but for the man who les to evade| there are severe ponties and we intend to use them. 'L ,'o one can} afford to take a .'tit fiance.” Jackson said the employers of i "*idiat> i fiavit giv n the gross inutne tax division much needed co- , ■'’iteration by assisting their emtoy. - to make proper returns. "Without the h Ip of the execu » veß of Indian,, industries, our jolt i A i July would h ive been much more i|«difficuit and eostlj." Jackson d< ’.I Bared. "We are ■onfidont they will Juafe aqually as helpful during the * k-toher taxpayinr period.” njEftlfßoners Are (Jiven Paroles indianapoi-- • ' r i> toman and six inmates of the stat
* Announcement 1 We are pleased to announce the removal of our funeral parlors to our new funeral home located at 225 West Adams street. Our ambulance service is ready for instant call. We will be pleased to greet our many friends at our new location. 1 S. E. BLACK —, E- FUNERAL DIRECTOR Because of our wide experience in conducting funerals we *1 are able to give perfect service at a very reasonable cost, t* Dignified But Not Costly. Lady Assistant 500 —Phones—727 Ambulance Service WI > “Makes Fertilizing Easy” s Experienced farmers give this as ° ne reasons why they like t fl —•*" iv 4/ The * McCORMICK-DEERING Manure Spreader THE country over, spreading so easy. It’s formers are boosting easier to load. Eight I this newly improved roller bearings make it Spreader. Built well to light-draft for the team, do its work well, the Throughout it has been McCormick-Deering is built to simplify and I I the outfit you can rely lessen the work of fertion to give fast, uniform l> : >ng. spreading down to the The new Limr-Sprpad-iasr forkful- i"H Attachment is a ' $ knockout. It’s worth The big thing is that coming in to see forthat it makes the job of good alone. The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS.
prison were paroled today by the state clemency commission The commisaion denied leniency j to 18 prison Inmates, commuted the sentences of one and continued theases of three others. I The woman paroled wag Parthenla O’Connor, sentenced to 1 year I In February on charges of tarrying stolen household goods from a Putnam county farm home. ORDER PROBES OF FATAL CRASH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I a regular training flight to Hock I well Held, San Diego. Lieut. Murray was at the controls. Over Oceanside the plane was seen to veer. One of the fliers climbed out upon the wing in an apparent attempt to repair a broken brace. Suddenly the wing snapped oft dose to the ship. Willi a dull roar it crashed nose first to the ground. It was apparent that Lieut. Murray was making a desperate attempt to right the heavy two-mot-|ored craft. Dis switching off the i ignition apparently prevented an i explosion. I Bodies of the victims were | mangled. Identification was imj possible until other army pilots 1 flew here from Rockwell Held. For | several hoars the number of dead ! was undetermined. March field authorities reported only five men left for Rockwell field in the ship. One Is Hoosier Warsaw. Ind., July 26.— (U.PJ — George Herrick. Warsaw, was informed last night of the death of his son. Bonnell L. Herrick, in an army airplane clash at Oceanside, Calif. The elder Herrick Jid not know j his son had been flying, believing he had been assigned to clerical work at March field. Young Herrick came to Warsaw ■ with his father frSm Columbia I City six years ago. A short time later he enlisted in the army although he was only 18. He was 24 at the time of his death. Survivors include the father, a brother. Bert. Columbia City, and two sisters. Mrs. Roy Kenner, Canton, 0., and Mrs. O. E. Phillips, Warsaw. o — firmueM Goet With Gentleness It is only those who possess firm ness who can possess gentleness.— La Rochefom-anld
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1933.
One Happy Hollywood Couple
. IS I It V* ~ Two Mj / k «... t ■ - Ab -Wij?- ” * Happy kt 7r > •. 1 H. .UWCC? I I Citing her own experience Norma Shearer, famed film actress, answered “positively yes” when asked if happy marriage is possible in the movie colony. Miss Shearer, wife of Irving Thalberg, film executive, returned from an extended vacation in Europe with her husband and their three-year-old son, Irving. Jr., enroute to their home in Hollywood. It is the home Thalberg bought for his bride-elect six years ago and in which they were married and have resided since. Miss Shearer said she does not believe in so-called "marital vacations.”
BANKING CODE MAY INTERFERE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) building and loan associations in exchange for Home Owners' Loan corporation bonds. The state hanki.ig department ; today was in somewhat of a quandary over the question. Richard A. McKinley, director, said the banking commission had voted not to object to building and loan associations acceptance of the bonds. He pointed to minutes ; l of a recent meeting which read: "It was taken by consent that I the department would raise no I objection to the acceptance on the part of building and loan asso- ■ I Hattens of Home Owners’ Loan ' corporation bonds in exchange fori I mortgages now held by such associations.” Hut Earl C. Bucher, building Ii I and loan supervisor of the depart- : ment, said he had heard of no I such ruling. I He said he had acted on an in-I" formal ruling from the attorney’; general and had written numerous i associations that the bonds would 1 not be acceptable. McKinley said that the question will be cleared up by the commis- i sion at its weekly meeting tomor-1 ’ row night. He said he expected i 1 no opposition from the commis-t sion for acceptance of the bonds. ■' The home loan act is the second 1 federal relief measure to encount-; 1 er difficulties as far as concerns, f administration in India.iq. The 1 United Press revealed last week; that the state $1 and $1.50 tax t limit law and the constitutional ’ restriction holding government I units’ bonded debt to within 2 perl cent of their total assessed valua- 1 tions threaten hardship upon the i state's public works program by issuance of bonds locally for fed- j eral loans. o—• I ( Get the Habit — Trade ai Home
Big Chief Flying Eagle Now U mb/ iiithML • * & f '"'<l « jE> » ■ gtitJS ■, Jaw w aBK i SEA ' /£“ \ WiW Z> 1W - '%»■' iIlWj- - »’'■ n tf. : • rfl - I. h -a' B’ r =r T w None of the many honors showered on General Balbo in Chicago pleased | him more than his adoption by the Sioux Indaans now at the World’* Fair. Chief Black Horn is shown conferring the chief’s name and headdress on the Italian air leader. Balho’s Sioux name, appropriately . enough, is Chief Flying Eagle.
GOVERNORS ARE ASKED TO AID (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) problems that extend beyond the power of single slates. I can use | as illustrations two which happen |to he in the foreground in Washington at this moment. "The problem of oil production, for example, must be viewed and measured from the standpoint of the national total of production and of consumption. But, in coming to grips with the problem of limita- | tion, the states have a function to perform which is of great importance. 1 am happy that the oil producing states are co operating with each other and with the federal government in this matter. | "Another problem is a consideration of a wider and more effec- | five use of the land over wide areas in such natural units as the Tennessee or the Arkansas or the I Missouri or the upper Mississippi I valleys. Here are problems where the individual state and regional; groups of states and the federal government may well find possi . bilities of fruitful co-operation.” Mr. Roosevelt invited the governors to a conference here next' winter and thanked them for backing him and his administration in 1 carrying out the recovery program. In renewing his appeal for co-I operation and accomplishment in the direction of national recovery, he said that it was his purpose to strengthen the bonds between state and federal executive authorities. , Ainethy*. One. Bviivv'JC Chfcrm Worn as un amulet or charm, as amethyst for ceutnrie* was held tr ward off the evil of witchcraft. “If the name of the gun or mcon were engraved on it.” says a recent | writer, "and the stone hung about the neck from the hair of a baboog or the feather of a swallow, ft’» wearer would be saib Srom hall i •terms a* well as <ll- I,o«l<
GRAIN PRICES SPURT BRISKLY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ed void in tny judgment on the name ground stated by the supreme court ot Maine in reply to an Inquiry from the senate of that state. The court said then: "It is evident, therefore, that In every constitutional convention of which we have knowledge, delegates have been chosen, not at •large, hut from the various localities within the state. By this method, the requirement has been met that the members of the body selected to make modifications of the fundamental law should fairly represent the people whom they serve. "In view of the foregoing we do not deem it permissible for the states under the terms of article five of the federal constitution, to organize a convention wherein the delegates entitled to participate are elected at large'.” Chase said that on the basis of that decision it would be contended that conventions in most ot the states which have acted so far were not truly representative and that they were “not deliberative bodies as was clearly contemplated by those who wrote the constitution.” “I am confident the supreme court will uphold this view and that repeal of the 18th amendment will be defeated,” Chase said.
REGISTRATION LAW EXPLAINED continued from page one, chairmen of such political parties. The registration period begins January 15, 1934 and shall continue up to and including the twenty-ninth day prior to the primary. It will be resumed again on May 15, 1934 aiul continue up to and including the twenty-ninth day prior to the general election. Thereafter the registration shall begin on the first secular day of December of each even-numbered year and shall continue up to and including the twenty-ninth day prior to the election, after which it shall be resumed again on May 15th as before. “This law throws a tremendous amount of work upon the county clerk as it will necessitate the making out of a data card for each voter ia the county. Then all voters must be placed alphabetically on a master record which must be continually changed and purged because of removals, disfranchisements, deaths, change of addresses, etc. This will make it necessary that the records of the crimial court, board of health records and others are utilized to gain this information, in order to keep this record up-to-date at all times. Then, too, the clerk prepares registration books of all voters who reside within corporation limits by precincts, arranged in numerical order of the houses located on each street separately.
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The atreets shall be arranged in alphabetical order. The rural registration books are listed in alphabetical order. "In addition to the master county record and the 34 registration books the Clerk must prepare, not later than 20 days prior to an election, typewritten or photostatic copies of the lists of registered voters for each precinct. The names appearing thereon shall he in exactly the same order as in the registration luxtks. Two copies of such list must be furnished | to each precinct Inspector and I one to each party chairman, making a total of 70 such lists in all. After the election when the registration return books are filed with the clerk the clerk must examine i all returns of each precinct and I note the names of all who failed I to vote. If a person fails to vote 1 within a period of two years the I clerk must notify him by mail and 1 ask that he re instate himself, i Failure to reinstate within thirty days will antomatically cancel his status as a registered voter and in order to vote he must register as at first. "Registration will be received at the office of the county clerk, at. the office of city clerk and at the > township assessors office. The deputy registration officers may register voters at such places
7 W" -4 L km || iIJJi I HI il J! 'Vi eriLIsJL Avoid the crowded highways —go Erie —you’ll get there quicker and | arrive refreshed with extra time for fun at the Fair. OVER-SUNDAY ALL-EXPENSE TOUR —a real travel bargain; includes round ; trip rail transportation, motor from station to Fair and return, admission to Fair plus 2 motor tour of Exposi- I tion under personal escort of a lecturer. ! Going every Sunday — OTHER ALL-EXPENSE TOURS AT BARGAIN PRICES For In/ormttion Cail M. N. BLAIR, Ticket Agent Phone 36
VOICE In A WILDERNESS A SHOPPER may wander, aisle after aisle, counter after counter, through a wilderness of “bargains.” Things so cheap that yesterday’s prices seem to have been ridiculously high, yesterday’s purchases unwise and made too soon. It is a fact that materials and manufacturing costs have been cut. Sound merchandise does cost less. But how often the “bargain,” put to legitimate use, proves entirely a phantom. Furniture should be made to live with, not just to be sold. Shirts and socks should give service on the person and through the laundry, as well as appeal to eye and pocketbook in the store. Dress fabrics, cut into little frocks, must be exposed to sunlight, hard wear and repeated tubbings. How, in this wilderness of manufactured things, can a person be sure of buying the genuine? What is to be his guide? Advertising is the answer! Advertising is the “voice crying in the wilderness.” It is a message to you from merchants who have merited your confidence in the past and to whom that confidence means business life. Advertising brings the announcements of manufacturers who would not and could not presume upon your credulity. In today’s market it is more important than ever that you heed the advertisements—that you ask for and receive the kind of merchandise that can he advertised.
within the couiHy as the clerk of the circuit court shall designate without reference to precincts. "The expense or registration and the preparation thereof shall be paid out of the general fund of the county by the board of county I commissioners In the same man-1 nor as election expenses are paid,
Prepare Now For Winter! • FIX THAT LEAKY ROOf : ft SCHAFER’S ELEPHANT HIDE ROOF COATING AND ROOF CEMENT Leaks are expensive — there is no denying that fact! A leak in a water pipe can double your water bill; a leak in your gas line might be the base of a disastrous fire; but a leak in your roof very often makes it necessary to redecorate entire rooms, ruins stocks of merchandise and becomes a source of worry to every building owner. Elephant Hide Plastic Asbestos Roof Cement is made from an elastic heavy bodied vehicle to which is added asbestos fibre in sufficient quantities to make the resulting product of a paste consistency. It can be used on practically any type of roof for patching and repairing. It forms a water-tight covering that will contract and expand with the changes in temperature. Elpehant Hide Liquid Asbestos Roof Coating goes hand in hand with the plastic cement. It is made of the same ingredients, using more oil and less fibre so that the resulting product is thin enough to be applied with a brush hut thick enough to seal all the pores and small holes that allow the rain to seep in. Elephant Hide Asphalt Roof and Metal Paint Has Many Uses Can be used for Painting Tin. Iron, Felt or Gravel Roofs, Gutters. Tanks, Pipe Bridges, Fences and Posts. It is an excellent preservative for anything, whether it is under ground or above. Come In and Let Us Quote You Our Low Prices On This Fine Roof Coating. The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
PAGE FIVE
and the county council shall make the neer-HHaiy appropriations therefor. Expensos incurred for regli. tration lists for use in city elections shall bo paid by city-council appropriation after the amount Is determined by the county cominlasinners and certified to the city clerk by the county auditor."
