Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 109, Decatur, Adams County, 7 May 1935 — Page 5
Exline To Go To The San Diego i a posit ion? wanted i<> go Io Southern California t<..- a vavarc gE.. g „, the best excuse you ever had—the ms California ■KJBLiZi national 1-Jx“• »»« Olego. Our Washington i,aio for you a bulletin of facts about the Exposition, ■F3K naans of transport allot) mid accommodation: everyto know. Kill out the coupon below and send lor CLIP COUPON HERE E Washington Bureau, DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Waxhington, D. C. il„. bulletin THE SAN DIEGO CALIFORNIA PACIFIC fl. EXPOSITION, and enclose five cents in com »i-.u'l" 'I 1 <»• loose, uncaneelled, U. S. postage stamps, to postage and handling costs: Kfltkinl BHl * Ugifll . .. STATE te.ulei of the Decatur Daily Democrat. Decatur, Ind
Kk|K ( h a nee To ■ SkM" hat , hinks f -Ben ilucy I’- Lonn <& BL ■ inail ' i , «f"‘i„,Acrful political Ek iS l ' aspirations? of th*' | . Io tlx s-9
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career, takes no sides, lets the I facts speak for themselves. , I The picture shows him in his I youngish days in peaceful, pic- ‘ turesque New Orleans when with silver-tongued utteances and Biblical quotations he entranced the foiK "up the bayous.’’ It shows him as Governor 1 , greeting the commander of a visiting foreign battleship in pajamas, spending millions for jobs on roads and public buildings, facing impeachment charges on nineteen counts. Through his rowdy, boisterous days it follows him to Washington. D. C. where he modulates, his way’s, adopts Senatorial polish. ! His social aspirations receive a I national black eye in a Long I Island clubhouse, but his political ! career gains national cogniiance, as he proclaims himself through 1 radio, press. and movies, the economic savior of the nation with 1 his SHARE THE WEALTH plan. What is public sentiment towards. "Senator Long? Do U. 8. citizens admire him, fear him. laugh at him, praise him? As THE MARCH OK TIME Huey I Long sequence fktshes on more than a thousand screens of the country, the public will have an opportunity of manifesting its opinion with cheers or hisses, applause or boos.—Advt. - -o Oldect Filling Station Memphis, Tenn., —(UP)—What is gen rally believed to be the oldest drive-in filling station in the world is being wrecked here. The ; station was -erected in September. I 1914. by the Standard Oil Company. When it was estabished. many thought it was foolish to cater so ! mu-ch to the .motorist.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1935.
DISCUSS CODE FOR INSURANCE Series of Meetings Planned To Explain Indiana Insurance Code (Special to the Democrat) Indianapolis. May 7.—ln a series of meetings to be held throughout the state starting this week, Harry E. McClain, state insurance commissioner will discuss Indiana’s new insurance code which was enacted at the recent session of the state legislature. The meetings opened at Marion , Monday with a meeting at 6:30 at the Spencer hotel from a district comprising Marion, Miami, How- ’ ard, Wabash, Grant, Tipton, Madison and Hamilton counties. The state has been districted to facilitate attendance at the meetings in this most important work to the people of Indiana. The state insurance department under the 1 new code, which was enacted for ' the benefit of the people and companies alike, directly affects the pocket books of thousands of Indiana citizens. During the year 1934, 1 Hoosiers bought and paid for insurance policies carrying premiums 1 amounting to approximately $122,- ■ 000,009. 1 This huge sum totals vastly more ' than the combined capital stock of ' all the banks in Indiana, which ■ runs only approximately $79,999,1 000. ’ The meetings are intended to be 1 educational in apprising the com- ■ munities with the provisions of new code for the benefit of the insur- . ance purchasers as well as the lli- . surance companies, according to 1 Mr. McClain. ‘‘With this huge sum spent for ■ insurance, certainly the state ■ should protect the people in the 1 kind of insurance they buy,’’ Mr. 1 McClain said. Mr. McClain point- . ed to another angle in this huge business, in the fact that the state collects approximately $1,000,000 J annually in fees and premiums > from the insurance companies. . which is more than the property 1 tax collected by the state and used , for state purposes. The first insurance laws were enacted in Indiana in 1852 and . since that time hundreds of laws , have been enacted until tlie insurance laws of the state were more 1 or less of a hodge-podge. The new insurance code clarifies these laws into one compact volume of laws, eliminating all the various contradictions and duplications until the „ state now has a modern, fair and complete insurance code. The new laws now provide that a company must have a mimnimum 1 of $25,009 cash deposit with the , state before a company can be started. Prior to this time any ' company with sufficient money to . pay a premium could start up in ( the insurance business. The new code sets up high standards and 1 where a company is in receivership, permits the insurance depart- 1 ment to step in and conserve or 1 liquidate the assets. District meetings scheduled in- 1 elude: May B—Eiftli district, 0 p. m.— : Roberts hotel, Muncie—Blackford, Jay, Delaware, Randolph, Henry, Wayne, Rush, Fayette and Union counties. May 15—Eighth district, Indianapolis. May 28—Third district, 3 p. m — Chamber of Commerce, Et. Wayne, LaGrange, Steuben, Noble, Dekalb, Whitley, Allen, Huntington, Wells and Adams counties. June s—First district, 6:39 p in. —Gary hotel al Gary— Gary New-
' ■ “ • J ■ • ■ • i MADISON • The Family’s Theatre «i LAST TIME TONIGHT « 2 - FEATURES - 2 x| — No. 1 — [wi “SHIP OF Ik W ANTED MEN” H — No. 2 — !»; ■« “ONE YEAR LATER” fe AH For 10c and 15c | I CORT . TONIGHT Shew starts at 6:30 tonight. WILL ROGERS “LIFE BEGINS at 40” with Slim Summerville, Sterling Holloway, Rochelle Hudson, Richard Cromwell, Jane Darwull. Plus-Mickey Mouse and Fox News. 10c-25c Wed. • Thurs. Nancy Carroll - (ieorge Murphy ‘■I'LL LOVE YOU ALWAYS" Coming Edward Everett Horton in Peter B. Kyne's “10 RAISE" A Lass Riot. i
May Day Brings Dust, Snow I • Texas duit tlorm i ijfe-ar--: V UK: - .. v-Mlkw Minnesota blizzard Owfc- / .fc- / ? ! ‘U i y BPwHSMa X. z (i fnrwLJk I ™ The “merry” month of May was ushered into Minnesota and other northwest states with a blizzard, while Texas battled stilling clouds of dust. The remarkable photo at the top shows a dust cloud descending on a small Texas town. Below is a scene near Minneapolis where linemen were called out to repair ravages of the snow storm which paralyzed traffic and broke off communication service.
ton. Jasper, Lake aud Porter counties. o JOHNSON TALK CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE up and die.” Johnson denounced third party movements in general, and. although he organized the first federal government attempt to regulate business in detail, warned of the dangers of a well established buieaucratic system. His secretary, Miss Frances Robinson. had heralded the speech as "the greatest of his career.” Johnson’s attacks on Long and Coughlin was pitched in prepared copies of his speech on their potentialities as 1 third party leaders. But Couglin's repudiation of third party aspinttionp 1 and his endorsement of the Patman inflationary bonus bill Sunday night, caused last minute revisions. His attack on Coughlin was more generalized, and his address was directed into a senitching attack on the left, wing opposition to the new deal. He singled out the Pat-1 man bill and Long's share-our-
Twins—But Far From Identical ■<»—x»yrv'»ww — ■*)>**■ v. ■ •> ~ r >. <r t /Hub i ,-> hMV ' x iJ l> / v LA ' J JOT 4 w; ..< Jr . if ' Vt* w 8 Mt ■ /'■*■ W’-' K > bl y v y< . \ ~ C I • f w * / w. 1 4 -B Umberto Riol Rudolph Rio* They may not look it, but the.,* youngsters, four years old, aye twins just the same. Unibeytq Rioi, left, is a pure albino and hi* brother, Rudolph, right, closely resembles his Mexican parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bios of Santa Catalina island, Cal.
wealth program for particular attack. "If, through some such freak <.f fate as a defeat of democracy liy a third party split, the return of tlie old guard should be threatened, it would bring us as near to revolution as anything that has happened in our life times l ,'’ he said. After mentioning Coughlin’s union for social justice, Long's share-our-wealth plan, and tlie Townsend old age pension scheme Johnson said: "Young voters in this country will do no more than throw away their ballot and their money if they ally themselves witli any such political will-o-the wisps and nine day wonders as these. We have had man}’ in this country from know-nothings through greenhackers to populists — but none ever got anywhere and nobody who followed them did anything more than fatten a, momentary ‘triumph for some ambitious local leader. We must maintain the two party system unless we want to turn our political futures over to minority groups”.
OWEN ROBERTS DRAWING FAVOR Supreme Court Justice Favored Hy Some For G. O. I*. Nomination Waahlngton, Muy 7. — (U.R) — Speculation on the 1936 Republican; preaidential nominee turned suddenly today to associate eupwme court Justice Owen J. Roberts, a native of politically potent Pennsylvania, who led the conservative attack which wrecked the railway workers' pension act. Roberts is 60 years old, best known to the public for his prosecution of Harry F. Sinclair aud Albert B. Fall in cases growing out of the Elk Hills and Teapot Dome oil scandals. He meets many of the Republican presidential specifications. If his name appears with the conservative group In the court’s forthcoming Schechter case opinion involving validity of NRA. there might even be some little clamor for “Roberts-for-President." Henceforth his opinion will be scrutinized for political Ideas, thoughts and prejudices. Precedent for drafting supreme court justices was established by the Republicans in 1916 with Charles Evans Hughes. Examination of Roberts' legal and judicial record reveals a mid-dle-of-the-road, moderate liberal whose fortune swelled upon the retainers of such clients as the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., and the Pennsylvania railroad. Except for three years early service as Philadelphia county assistant district attorney, Roberts held no regular public office until May 29, 1930, when his nomination to the supreme court by President Hoover was confirmed by the senate. Meantime, he had become professor of law at tlie University of Pennsylvania. His practice and his bank account grew with the years, i Robei'ts’ liberal tingo, most evi-
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| donced on tha bench, Is l>ulanced by distinctly conservative connections. With his big business practice, Roberta combined director- ' ships in such big time money institutions as Equitable Life, Phila- | delphia Bell Telephone Co., and the j American Telephone aud Telegraph Co. But ho quickly attracted attention on the supreme bench by joining the theretofore liberal minority, Increasing its habitual voting strength to five and, thereby, permitting it to control the court on I several interesting If not vial issues. Ho aided with Justice* I Holmes, Brandeis, Stone, and Hughes to uphold New Jersey’s I
|ai> am< I TH E A T E R
YOUR LAST CHANCE TONIGHT To SEE and HEAR the MOST WONDERFUL PRODUCTION, that is has ever been our pleasure to present to our many patrons! Our NEW Wide Range Sound brings out the Full Tonal quality of the gorgeous voices of JEANETTE MacDONALD and NELSON EDDY—in “NAUGHTY MARIETTA’’ The Miracle Musical . . set in days that were made for Adventure . . and nights that were made for love! ADDED—“THE LOST CHICK” in the LATEST Colortone. Wed. & Thurs.—“GRAND OLD GIRL” with MAY ROBSON, Mary Carlisle, Fred Mac Murray (Star of Car 99) Alan Hale. When ‘OLD GUNPOWDER’ Exploded . , she blew the door off the town’s back room! The grand old Star of “LADY FOR A DAY” in the story of a fighting school teacher! ADDED—The LATEST issue of "MARCH OF TIME”. Also Comedv. This WONDERFUL program at ONLY 10 and 15c COME EARLY! COME EARLY! Sun. Mon. Tues.—Gene Stratton Porter's—“LADDlE." niMMmstt rt 11 ■■■ ■i ■■
Page Five
state regulation of fire inmirance • rateu and helped keep Indiana's ■ chain ktore tax operative. __————o—— — City Os Fortville Joins Fight On Tax Greenfield, Ind.. May 7— (UP)—• A new euit attacking the oonetitulionsllty of the 1933 law taxing municipally owned utilities was on file in Hancock circuit court here today. The action wa« filed by the town of Fortville to restrain the | county trea.surer from, collecting taxes on the Fortville waterworks. 0 Dance Wednesday Sunset.
