Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 5, Decatur, Adams County, 6 January 1936 — Page 5
■k praised ill 1111 GollHIU’lul" >tate Conserl^'Partnu' nl H|H uP' £&9&Hi M|K ■ . ' ijs ">'" l '' 1,111 . ■ i" 11,1 S|K> IS IH.iill1,1 lts ‘"’ ik-s ami J. f , ■ I "I I" .'ls a-v-nting erosion "" ‘ '" ,,s *” I,IC state ’ liefc ImT- '• !•'>>vi<b <1 lln ruction of our forests; of wild life; despoil- ; oir : .ir I loss of areas and scenic value." i ommended tile < rps, wßch working directly der tilßrvi'ion of the. conserva--0 WtHnient. ‘The pAple of Indiana owe these naMfr a lasting debt of gratiie for ■' work they have done ng and developing our McNutt said. -graw adc in a Good Town — Decatur
TAXI jl CALL 772 or 57 ■24 Hour Service RUNYON’S GARAGE Licensed by Indiana Public Service Commission ■ Published Report of Condition of STATE BANK OF DECATUR Decatur, in the State of Indiana, at ihc close hSKjBE of business on December 31, 1935. ASSETS disc Government obligations, direct and stocks, and securities 239.:i.H.*.> liability on account of acceptances . muis r I and fixtures 5 ,553.2 s owned other than hanking hotisi exchanges, cash items, and balances with banks 555.649.42 ot ot '’er 'tanks and bills of exchange or drafts ! endorsement of'this bank i.oiii I borrowed ... non" i ASSETS $1,746,285.28 I LIABILITIES individuals, partnersips or corporations payabl ■ or within 30 days SG7I. . .I after 30 days or subject Io more than 30 days' I P 656,22a. 22 of States, counties, school districts, inunicipaliWe'" olher P°"Ucal subdivisions 172.406.1" Government and postal savings deposits none other banks, cash letters of credit, certified. ilT ”' travelers' cheeks outstanding ... 12.893.al , DEPOSITS $1,546,077.13 none rSB ! - none capital debentures $ 1)0.000.00 HHB” 1011 stock. 1.006 shares, par SIOO.OO per share 100.000.00 ‘ Stir] , profits—net tt.36X.43 BHi 839,72 including capital account $1,746.28a. 28 proceeds of $1w,000.00 of debentures sold to the Recon Finance Corporation and filo.ooo.no ol debenture- -old Io rests, which debentures are subordinated o th, rich' ol and depositors. ‘■a itrMß in Loans and Discounts are LOANS TO Al'i'lL 1 .) T ' ' ( ’ OMp ANIES none J ll Other Bonds, Stocks, and Securities are SHARES ] , r 1 *' 11 '' 1 ieiATED COMPANIES none l,u tjW 111 Tola! Deposits are FIRST LIEN TRUST FUNDS non" 1 >n Total Deposits uro DEPOSITS SECFRED BY XXI) IN' i ' I'Ml A'TS none I and INVESTMENTS pledged to secure liabilities Government obligations, direct and fully tin sHock and securitiesi ' no’ 1 " TBf"j discounts .... none PLEDGED (excluding 1 eiti-< mintt-) County of Adams, ss: Glendening, Cashier, of the alxive-named bank, do solemnly the above statement Is trire, to the best of my knowledge Signed R. E. GLENDENING. Cashier, and subscribed before me this 6 day of January. 1936, and certify that I a,m not an officer or director of this bank. I3SSB£ EARL B. ADAMS, Notary Public Expires September 22, 1936.
Week of Jan. 13th Busy One for Executioner I?.'"’’ ■ at. .71 i L^iissl' Y >® - : E-Jlligl A 4*X\w^ ISb r • "■ ap ' '* IL •' I. lir .«•*'” ft-’- / S 1 Sffc ’ W W, U ' iA fc i 'U ™s| S 'X fc _ During the week of January thirl- Robert Elliott (left), official executioner for the states of New York and New Jersey, will throw th cliches to end the lives of three convicted slayers. He will first officiate at the execution of Bruno II iptmann at Trenton and two days later will play the same role at Sing Sing when Albert Fish, aged ;;;re .slayer of little Grace Budd, and John Smith, negro killer, pay the extreme penalty.
BALANCED BUDGET (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) dent Roosevelt to permanent federal efforts to control American agricultural crops. If the supretn • court outlaws the AAA the n w dead will seek new legislation. Overall appropriations recommended in this budget aggregate S6.4O<>.CMM»,OOO although the President promised to hold his regular expenditures within the smaller sum expected in tax and other revenue. The $6,400,000,000 recommended today is $1,254,000,000 greater than the overall appropriations proposed in the budget presented one year ago. It wa.s pointed out that there was little connection between the actual budget estimates and the (appropriations as they do not
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JANUARY C, 1936.
cover the same period.. For exam-1 pie, the larger part of the $4,000.-1 000,(8)0 work relief appropriation j for the current fiscal year ended June 30, next, probably will not be ! actually spent until the start of 1 i the new 1937 fiscal year. Thus the estimates of expenditures for 1 ; a particular period to not corres-1 pond with the appropriations that might be made in the same period, i Mr. Roosevelt said conditions | were improving and that his poll- • ties were aiding the nation to | Itetter times. He revealed that new deal spending was far behind schedule. Mr. Roosevelt's failure to include his prospective relief appropriation recommendation prevent- ; ed accurate estimate of the prospective deficit or of the probable national debt when the next fiscal year ends on June 30, 1937. One year ago Mr. Roosevelt estimated the national debt would aggregate $3451384123,654 on June 30, X 936, when this fiscal year ends. Today's message revised that estimate downward to $30.933,375,017 and forecast that IS months hence, when the 1937 fiscal ywy ends, the national debt will aggregate $31,351,000,000 pins (any appropriations congress may make his year for relief. This message covers the 12 months beginning July 1. 1936, comprising the last half of this year and the first ball of next, designated as the fiscal year 1937. The president revealed a fundamental change in new deal policy structure. He announced that the agricultural adjustment administration, the civilian conservation corps, and the major public works program of the future had been shifted from the emergency .to the regular category of the federal establishment. That means Mr. Roosevelt believes time has proved those agencies to be desirable as permanent parts of government. Coincidentally, the president launched the nation upon a policy of spending approximately $500,000,006 annually on a planned public works pro- : gram designed to re-made the face ; of nature. t
PUBLIC SALE 80 ACRE FARM and 2—DECATUR HOMES—2 By order of the Adams County Circuit Court, in the matter ol liquidation of the Peoples Loan A Trust Co., the I undersigned will sell to the highest bidder the following ' described real estate. Said stile to be held on the premises al the time herein designated, on TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1930 10:00 A. M. SO acre fiirin known as the Clem farm in Union : Township. 6 miles east, and 4'- miles, north of Decatur, just north of ( lark’s Chapel t'hurch. Good productive soil. Buildings consist of good 7 room house, good burn and out buildings. 1:30 I’. M. I’roperty known a: Porter property. 717 Mercer Ave., Decatur. A completely modern 7 room home. This house is bcautiI fully arranged. 4 rooms down sta.irs. breakfast nook, open stairway, ■ large living room: 3 bed rooms and bath upstairs; basement; furmice; motor plumbing; garage. Property in good repair, full size lot. This ' properly must he seen to be appreciated. 2:30 P. M. To settle estate of Wm. T. Waggoner, d< past'd, I ! will sell to the highest bidder the Coffee property at 428 Mercer Ave. ■ This is tin ideal home, modern 6 rooms ajid bath all on one floor, i Large living room, sun parlor; large basement, furnace. In fact a | home that can easily be appreciated, wonderful location. Any one I looking for a modern home should not fail to attend the sole of these i two propel I ies. TERMS—I-3, cash. 1-3 in 3 months, 1-3 in 6 months or purchaser may pay all cash. Sold free ol liens, except taxes due in 1936. Subject to approval of court. CLARK J. LUTZ, Special Representative ' Sale conducted by Roy S. Johnson and Commissioner Wm. T. Waggoner estate Auctioneer.
WOMAN IS HELI) I JCONTI NV ED FROM PAGE ONE) his perainbula,tor on a sunny sidei walk while his parents went into ian apartment to visit friends. They left another son. Seymour, 3. I playing at the baby's side but I Seymour tired of the quiet street ' and went around a corner to watcli I other boys at play. Across the street Lewis Schnier I sat beside his own infant son. • a,sleep in its buggy. A ‘‘queer" looking woman (so he described her later) annoyed him by peering under-the hood of 1 his baby's carriage on each of three shambling walks up and down the block. To escape her. he moved himself and the child around the corner. Ten minutes or so later Mrs. i Horowitz, who is 28, came from : her friend's house to look after Jacob and Seymour. Jacob was asleep anik she found Seymour around the corner. When she returned the baby and his carriage I xvere gone. She run upstairs. found no one there had moved the child, ran back to the street and broke into screams. The street filled with hundreds of women from surI rounding tenements who added their cries and screa,ms to the mother's. Police answered a riot call. The ' queer'' woman Schnier had seen was dressed in a dark tarn o'slianter and a tan camel's hair coat. Wlien Gitssie Friedman wa.s found an hour later, pushing little Doris Mastin toward the river, she wore such clothing. o Apartment Hotel Fire Kills Seven Westfield. Mass., Jan. 6 —(UP) The known death toll in a fire which destrayed an apartment hotel here rose to seven today when firemen recovered additional bodies from the still smoldering ruins'Although there were rumors that an unidentified man still was unaccounted for. authorities believed all bodies had been removed.
REACTIONS TO (4IONTINUED J'KpM, dinners throughout the nation, but I it was understood he would not return to the political wars until the presidential campaign formally gets under way several months hence. It was said by persons usually well informed of White House intentions that Mr. Roosevelt, having thrown down the gauge of“attle, would bend his efforts from now on toward keeping congress on an even keel rather than in prolonging the controversies already aroused. He intends, it was said, to defer until the campaign his ideas on further reforms or for legislation of more than a routine or essential nature. A continuation of the "breathing spell” declared last fall appeared assured for another year at least. Reaction to his Friday night address emphasized the bitterness witn which political Issues will be fought out in the forthcoming presidential campaign. Comment generally followed party lines, but a few Democrats condemned the address and a few Republicans praised it. Republican leaders accepted the President’s challenge to come out into the open for a finish fight on new deal policies. Hoover, silent on the address until last night, issued a caustically critical reply in Ogden, Utah. He described the president's address as “a good oratorical word picture of proper national objectives and ideals and a good sample of the political method of accusing everyone as being terribly wicked and corrupt who objects to the many departures of the new deal from these objectives and ideals." Hoover, denying implications that prior to 1933 the unemployed were dependent upon "inadequate private charity,” asserted the "fact is they were adequately cared for almost wholly by federal, state, and local public funds." He saw as "the most ominous note of all . . . the pregident's warning that the powers he has assumed would be dangerous in I other hands." These powers, Hoover said, “never should be possessed by anybody in these United States.” Two important sections of the press—the Hearst newspapers and the New York Daily News, which, with a circulation of 1,575,000
a girl who hod everything B she wanted... JL- ' "wy Sharlene’s life had been too easy.,. beauty, wealth, the freedom to come nX. What can marriage give such a girl Z 1 v in place of the liberty she loses? / I The story of Shajdene s love and / u\ zjvi V marriage will fascinate you. Don’t ; m^S tkk LOVE DENIED by LOUISE LONG and ETHEL DOHERTY Starts Monday, January 13 in the Decatur Daily Democrat
I copies daily, is the country’s largest newspaper — expressed their opinion of Mr. Roosevelt's message today. The Hearst newspa-pere, in an editorial in the style 01 their puolisher, William Randolph Heuerat, wore bitterly condemnatory. The Daily News, which devoted its full editorial space to the message in yesterday’s and today’s issues, was laudatory. An excerpt: "It was a mighty speech; the greatest speech, we believe, that Mr. Roosevelt, as President, has yet delivered, man can be a great orator without being a great man. We have had p’ently of
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■ eloquent demogogues and fakers. • President Roosevelt is tho great- • eat orator now speaking in English. We think history will accept him • us a great man.” An excerpt from tho Hearst editorial : "The President's message to congress gave much more information on the state of his mind than the i 'state of the union.' . . . The President seemed gripped, not by the ‘synthetic’ fear which he anathematized in his speech, but by a very real and agitating anxiety as . to his own political fortunes. . . . The subject of our neutrality he treats like a schoolboy , . . but it
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was when tho President turned to the domestic scene and problems . . . that he was mout elusive und obviously on the defensive.” ■ o ■ ■ ■ Clearance of Hew Melton .Jackets at Vi price. Peterson & Everhart Co.
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