Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1935 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office aa Second Clues Matter. J. JI. Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. pick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: Single Ot pit ■ 9 .02 One week, by carrier - ....... .10 One year, by carrier ~—.— $5.00 One mouth, by mail ——— .3J Three months, by mail SI.OO Six months, by mail —— I's One year, by mail...„._ —_ 3.00 Jne year, at office— 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere $3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCHEERER. Inc. 115 Lexington Avenue. New York 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago. Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dailies. "Safety always all ways' was the winning slogan submitted in a safety campaign conducted in Indianapolis. Read it over again. Make Halloween an occasion for fun and a good time. Join the crowd, march in the parade, sec the sights and help make it a big community party. Vandalism has no place in the observance of Halloween. Boys bent ou destroying property will have to pay the penalty for police officers will arrest those, who cause damage under the guise ot cedeb Filling. Governor McNutt lias announced that if a special session of the legislature is necessary, it will not be called until after the first ot the year. That stand is right and meets with popular approval. If legislation must be passed in order to meet requirements of the federal social security act. the session should he limited to those acts. A radio manufacturer is author ity for the statement that 31 per cent of the families in Indiana do no have radios. The average person thinks everyone has a radio, but evidently there is a field open for sal.-s in this line and with the long winter evenings ahead many pleasant hours can be spent in listening to the amateur and professional entertainers that "come in" over the air. Members of the Rotary club will be favored next week with au address by Clarence "Pat" Manion, state director of the National Emergency Council. Mr. Manion is making an enviable record for himself in the direction of the federal program and also bringing great credit to his state. He is! a forceful, magnetic speaker and th' local club is anticipating his visit with genuine pleasure. Clinton street in Port Wayne is to In- opened under the Pennsylvania tracks, a project that city has been working on for 25 years. It will- mean much to the south end of Fort Wayne and will do much in increasing property values in that district. The improvement is made possible through an allotment of $330,000 PWA funds and the cooperation of the state highway commission and the city government. The Marion county auditor is going to have a sweet job of refunding $135,000 to about 75,000 Indianapolis taxpayers. The Supreme court has ruled that the city is not entitled to the two-cent levy made in 1333 and that the money must be refunded. Figuring the two cents on every piece of property at least will acquaint one with the lower percentages and the joke is that it took a two and one-half cent levy to raise the tupie amount this year, due to Hie lower property valuations.
| The importance of the beet r» J sugar industry and the successful operation ot Indiana* only beet sugar refinery was again impressed on Indiana retail grocers yesterday. when several score gatherit od here as guests of the Central Sugar company. These meetings serve to bring a close relationship . between the management, the I farmer who raises the beets, the man who sells and the person who ~ buys the sugar. They create an U; understanding of what is meant u by "What Indiana makes—makes Indiana." 5 J While the cost of Indiana's state L> government was reduced approximately five million dollars, the cost of Ohio's was increased $29,- ■ 182,00 b in 1934 over 1933. In al report of the Ohio Government Survey, tax facts in Ohio startle' the average taxpayer. The report I t shows that in 11'34. the total cost! of government in Ohio was $413,-I 033.000. Os the total, the inuuiei-j palilies spent $120,615,000; coun- ■ ties, $101,690,000; townships, $9.I 221.000, and school districts. $lO4.I i 359.000. The 1931 state disburseI I meiits amounted to $139,244,014.63. according to the survey. This tremendous increase in state government costs and other governmental costa in Ohio, with de- ( crease in revenues due to the de- i ’! pression unusual relief demands land delinquent taxes, was rcspon-! slide for the enactment of the I bracket sales tax in Ohio. , | _ v Answers To Test j Questions Below are the answers to the , Test Questions printed on Tage Two. * ——• 1. English chemist and physicist. William A. t Billy ' Sunday. Massiu husetts. f' 4. American playwright and proI ducer. , ; 5. West Africa. 1 6. Frances Drake. 7. American playwright. s. Gahrrd Daniel Fahrenheit.; ! German physicist. The week immediately preceding Easter. j It'. No. o ♦ — ♦ Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee > ♦ The Porch Furniture When preparing to store the | ' 1 wicker porch furniture for the! I winter, brush off all dust, then , I scrub with a solution of salt and! I water After the furniture is dry.; j wrap it as well as possible with , newspapers. You will be repaid I when pit paring the porch next | spring. The Waffle Iron I An electric waffle iron should he : k> pt clean by wiping it each time I after using with a damp cloth, and then brushing thoroughly with a steel waffle iron brush. Volatile Substances Always cork the bottles tightly J that contain ammonia or gasoline. 1 to prevent evaporation and loss of strength. 1
(S Ohe rfger j - IF ; < The SAP PHI REFLECTS TiH€ A Blue Os Autumn Skies It is the symbol of truth, sm« —, ~ centy and constancy, typify 4 |r«J Jr hng calm and tried affection. — r ' and is the appropriate gem of- — ---Hl ; •,~ feg ~~ ' Autumn when the sun shines --—- . ' ri'A • 'crJ with a tempered brilliancy. I 1 ffi 7 ' "" ■ 1 Ju77\il| F.-H6R. Birthday fe* j)> 3 $ I n Tug' Fall- ‘ <a x .csj A sapphire is the most appropru'.' , 1 4|-M gift of all' This beautiful gem is set A?-jk M in many of the nngs, brooches and w d necklaces which we ate now dis* • rUM playing Select it stock—’t w, ‘" be everything you hope it to be', PUMPHREY'S JtweLßy Storz KL Vol 6lfTi o(C * i,wi " OCCAIUft
t 4 — A i | Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. When making a call of con ; dolenee. it is all right to remain • I for an hour or two? 11 A. Not unless one is a very intimate friend and has been request- * ed to stay; the call of condolence > i should otherwise be made us brief . us possible. Q. May one open a window In ’ i uny public place when others may > be discomforted by it? A. No. Always observe the i rights and comforts of others. Q When a woman is given a i 1 corsage at a formal dinner, should she pm it on immediately? A. Yes. ♦~~TWENTY YEARS * AGO TODAY From the Dally Democrat File • — • October 24, 1915, was Sunday. — o COURT HOUSE Estats Cases A report of the purchase of real estate was filed in the estate of Philip Baker by the executor. It was approved. A petition to sell at sheriff's sale certificate of sale was filed, submitted and sustain- ; cd. A petition was filed by the executor of the estate of Adam Ward Johnson for authority to release a mortgage. It was sustained. o —. RESOLUTION Whe;, ,u-: death has called our friend and brother Eldred V. Shiti ferly from hie labor and in his pa.<sing Wren G.range has lost a devoted and willing member, be It 1 re.'olved: That we herewith extend | our deepest sympathy to the be- ■ caved father, mother, ulstere, brother and other clone friends who m urn hit* departure. And may God o:nfort them in this their time of grief. Be It also resolved that a | . c ; y of th» resolution be spread on the minutes of our order, a copy sent to the bereaved family, also a copy be publielred m the local paper. Clyde Snyder Mrs. Charles Shell Mr-*. Lewin Schilling Resolution committee Town's Rat Killer Dead Norwalk, O(U.S) — Brownie, iq small black and tan terrier, whoj devoted the greater part of his life | toward a one-dog campaign to exterminate Norwalk rats, is dead lat the age of 19. The dog whs ■ i known the town over and was rc-1 carded as a Norwalk institution. — BILIOUS SPELLS Gone Over 6 Months | MRS. CLEO TAYLOR. 1126 W. ■ 2nd St.. Muncie. Ind., says: "I • have been free ■ E.- urn these bfl NMHMg . ,uul ada< he* eve r I took IndoVi n . over 6 ago My Oliver was badly jdisordtred and I . ' •* (caused this awful ; J rendition. Hut I i SSSSsßbless tlm day [ I - *' 1 L'-tnd tin- great medicine. I don't I .have the bilious spells like 1 had j i before and those dreadful head- | aches are a thing of the patsL” The Holtbouse drug store ie selling ’ Indo-Vin. here in De<atur. Also i at all leading druggists.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. OCTOBER 24,
LONG HENCHMAN IS ACQUITTED Col. Shushan Is Acquitted Os Federal Income Tax Charges New Orleans, Oct. 24.--4U.RF-Fol lowers of the recently assassiniit ed Sen Huey P. Long celebrated today with a wild party in the senator's former Roosevelt Hotel suite the acquittal of Col. Abraham Shushan of federal income tax charges. A jury freed Shushan. roly-poly president of the New Orleans levee board, after deliberating two hours and a halt last night. Although one member of the Long organization already has been convicted of evasion of income taxes and six more are under indictment, the "boys" took Shushun's acquittal as a happy omen. The political machine Long left I behind him is preparing for its first big test under its own power in a January election to choose Long's senatorial successor, a governor and other important officers. They interpreted Shushan's acquittal as a vindication of their organization. Under stimulus ot the verdict Shushan and some of his associates made a mass attack in the courtroom on newspaper photographers. Three cameramen were severely mauled. Deputy U. S. Marshal John Wells had to threaten use of a gun to rescue Leon Trice, whom lamg himself once attacked in similar circumstances, from Paul Voitier, once Long’s bodyguard. Wells did not actually draw his revolver but frightened Voitier into retreat by meeting a gesture of Voitier's hand toward his hip
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I pocket with a flash of his own hand toward a gun. He finished ! the rout by hustling Voitier out of the building I Trice. William McClymott of the I x,« Orleans Tribune and Hardy j Williams of the Times-Picayune J offended the Long men by suappLing flashlight pictures of Shushan at the moment a dozen Ts his yell Ing friends leaped a courtroom rail to slap back and pump his hand in congratulation over the just announced verdict. Williams and McClymott escapled to a stairway but were cornered there, their cameras smashed and they were themselves severe--Ily mauled. McClymott said Shu shall was one of the principal ag g reasons. After court bailiffs quieted the courtroom melee Shushan invited everyone within hearing to a "victory lairty" in suite 1,238 of the Roosevelt, the same rooms that were Long headquarters. The jury acquitted the “colonel" of all ten counts of an indictment charging that he accepted $300,000 graft in five years that was unaccounted for in his income tax statements. Shushan and witnesses for him asserted that any money he handled and did not include in his tax returns was “gift money for the Huey Long patty." The indictment charged that as president of the levee board, a post controlling expenditure of millions ot dollars of state funds for levees and seawalls, he accepted graft from the Standard Ddredging Company of New York. Shushan admitted that the company gave him a rebate of two cents a cubic yard on dredging for a seawall but said the payments were political contributions. "You jurors are practical men and know how elections are conducted." defense Attorney Hugh Wilkinson said in his closing plea. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
F. I). R- RETURNS i. I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONIO . the relief problem. With secre- . tttfy Os the interior Harold I. . Ickes and works progress administrator Harry L. Hopkins both i accompanying Mr. Roosevelt on ■ his vacation, it was anticipated I that the relief situation has been I thoroughly discussed. •I Tonight President Roosevelt will address the nation at 9; 30 p. m . ’ over a nation wide radio network * making an appeal for the annual 1 mobilisation for human needs ' drive. The chief executive in an addresa at Charleston. S. his debarkation port, yesterday declared emphatically that "we are on our way" and attributed industrial L ... _. - LET KIDNEYS FLUSH OUT 3 LBS. A DAY Clean Out 15 Miles of Kidney Tubes Nature put over 15 miles of tiny , tubes and filters in ywr kidneys to strain the waste matter out of th« blood. Kidneys should pass 3 P int * I a day and so get rid of more than 3 pounds of waste matter. When the passing of water is 1 scanty, with smarting and burning, i the 15 miles of kidney tubes may - need flushing out. This danger signal may be the beginning of nagging ' backache. leg pains, loss of pep and ■ energy, getting up nights, swelling. ! puffiness under the eyes and dizziIness. If kidneys don t empty 3 pints a i day and so get rid of more than 3 . pounds of waste matter, your body may take up some of these poisons causing serious trouble. Don’t wait! ' Ask your druggist for Daw's Pills, which have be< n used successfully by . millions of people for over 40 years. Thev give happy relief and help the Sidneys to flush out 3 pounds a day. InaUi ou Doan's Pills.
ning program. Evidences of Im-1 1 provement. he said, were noted on his recetit trans-ooutiuental swing. —O w " Boy Bakes Prize Cake Superior, Wis. (U.R* Cooking
- — — — n.w .. i i yxs jljuxj v--Notice! B I j,, ~ «»i<i II difsrs®* ALL PERSUNS ilr e askfd . I from burning leave. on t streets in the Citv o f h heatfand fire In MA\ place jourleaix the curb and the tin SU (rathe, and ( | v » the leaves have been sathtred « do not deposd leaver fro m « on the street. I At PLEASE cooperate with us bvi I An* mt- us to preserve the streets, City of DecatuU RALPH ROOP. Street Commissioner L*' ~ ■■■_ ..... = = ■ * I I Over 150 years ago k I rugged pioneers > Vbwi braved the rigors of . the earlv western wil- J derness and establish- . / . !■ ed a new civilization. | j There the Hardiweave I fabric was born. v In ’49 adventurous “J 7 R men led west by the gold rush, found this x W sturdy fabric famous ' If A for wear. Introduced ; v to all America, it won ■ the wholehearted ac- j ccptance of modern ’s-r" v men. > ?! Hardiweave has g* proven itself, first by the experiences of ? I those hardy pioneers; 4 *' second by the actual wearing experience of today's hard living, swift moving men; third by scientific tests in the laboratory, illustrated below. i i ■ 5 35 I _ J, ADLER ROCHE STE R TA 11. OH FD V'/ >■ ■ / -4 » 1 ' ~ u— I'_ — ■'rTrOMCTf’ ' ESS AbRASIAWTEST TENSILE TEST ' Fort I* Car 1 Rub 11 Down Won'. Brock II Peterson &
k-SS* ha®. ' H ' lb ?' al " lair, 1
