Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1936 — Page 5

Jiff MEN WILL jlfflN IN SENATE I U l east 10 Rookies’ Will i || in Election To U. S. B Senate I Oct. 31—(UP) -Reof what happens at the at least 10 "rookies, nine states, will win to the I s - Senate. -In ad■SJ, 25 incumbent Senators seek ' rookie Senators will repre|U* Co loi'a<lo. Florida, lowa. Louis IU Massachusetts. Michigan. ■ Resota New Hampshire, and Certainty of rookies ~^^F ;ll ,.se states is due to defeat incumbents in primary elecwithdrawal of seven, and of one since the last adjourned on June 20. K of these ’tresnmen" candidPepper, D„ Fla., and Ellender. D.. La.—can start their bags now for the 'w|Bh' ’" Washington, they'll have ■ Msr - ■' 'he polls next Tueulawyer, termer member • i ia house of representaami unsuccessful candidate I S. Senate in 1934, sueWilliam L. Hill, who was apBBted t" 'he vacancy created by ipa’li - veteran Sen. Duncan mh. Fletcher died three <^B l '" ! ’ > . mgress adjopitied and who was his secretary for years never saw active serformer speaker of tie glMtliana l ouse of representatives follower of the late Sen. Huey succeeds Long's widow. McConnel Long. Mrs. Long after serving out the re- ■ Al der of her husband's term. ■K- Sen. Hattie (faraway, D„ again becomes the lone worn- ■ u lember of the senate. ...miniates for other "roomemberships; — <' .r.himoi). Dem., who moved . Nebraska, became .■KaJL" ranger, entered polities ■Be >1 lour terms in the stat. •gßfc-..c .' > b eted Li. nt tlov 8 t* 1 ' ai.d Governor in -932. lb re- I ’■•<! two years later. RayB rihvl L. Sauter. Repn.. lawyer, war llgflieran. special attorney in numcases before state and fed. rand a special assistant general in Colorado Rivbefore the V. S. su B preiue court. 0. Andrews, Dem., lawyer, judge, secretary of the Florstate senate during four sesand a member of the Florida of representatives in 1927. (' Babcock., Citrus fruit K Mwer. president of the associat- £ rowe, ' s and shippers of clubman and president of real estate organization. I f’ly M Gilette, Dem., farmer, | EeMorningASlSg I Barter's Little Liver Pilis I i

jgMMMg CHAUNCEY E. FRANTZ Republican Candidate for REPRESENTATIVE SF* fU %S»wiMPf °f Adams and W ells Counties. I Commit Myself to the Following Pledges, which I have the Moral Purpose to Fulfill. To the Full Extent of My Ability, and to the i|>shy Wag; Limit of the Authority given me—l Promise You to Support: ■■ 1. The Repeal of the State Executive Administration Act. 'W-'- fei 2 Home Rule. (Note; In matter of Social Security and Relief.) ' ? ' ROR =• The Enactment of Original SI.OO- $1.50 Indiana Property Tax Limitation Law. 4. Lower Property Tax. ! Sal 5. The Immediate Repeal of Gross Income Tax Law, (Note. I not support sales tax of any kind.) 6. Economy in Government. . . B Fair and Square Assistance to All Aged and Needy People within the Ability of the Taxpayer to p y. i State Aid for Public School Teachers Salaries to the extent of S6OO per ann “"’; R . of this >■ The immediate Repeal of Senate Bill 46. Acts of 1935 General Assembly Note The «'P e ’' ° f " ? K Law is the Only Assurance Weils County Taxpayers have that Further Suits Wil. Not Be - g Your Support Sincerely Appreciated. Polibical

Remember YAGER FOR CORONER Thanks

war veteran, former member of the state senate, and a member of the U. 8. house of representative! from 1982 to 1936. Berry Halden, Repn., lowa editor. Massachusetts: James M. Curley, Dem., bank, president, former member of the atate house of representatives, mayor of Boston for three terms, and present Massachusetts Governor. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Repn., grandson of the late Sen. Henry Gabot Lodge, reporter for the Boston Evening Transcript 1924-25 and for the New York Herald-Tribune 1925-31. He "covered" three national political conventions and was active in foreign newspaper work. ; Michigan: Prentiss M. Brown. Dem., lawyer, banker, chairman of the state Democratic conventions of 1924, 32 and 'B4 and a member of the 73rd and 74th congresses. Wilbur M. Bucket, Repn., lawyer, war veteran, attorney general from 1922-30, elected governor in 1930 and defeated for reelection two years later. Minnesota: Theodore Christianson. Repn., member of the state house of rep- j resentatives 1915-25, Gov. for three ' terms, 1925-31, elected to the 73rd | congress in 1932 and re-elected in I 1934. ' | Ernest Lunden, F-L., member of the state house 1910-14, served in the 65th (war) congress, 1917-19, voted against entering war, elected to 73rd and' 74th congresses, t The Democratic candidate, Patrick. J. Delaney, withdrew.) New Hampshire: William N. Rogers, Dem., member of the state house three terms, | 1917-21, elected to the 68th, 72nd, 73rd and 74th Congresses. H. Styles Bridges, Repn., lawyer, farmer and elected governor in 1934. Oklahoma: Joseph Lee, Dem., lawyer, ranch- 1 er, war veteran, author, and lecturer, elected to the 74th congress iu 1934. Herbert K. Hyde, Repn., lawyer, worked his way through college as a night watchman and dish washer and became U. S. atorney for the western district of Okla- , horna. TRANSFER OF < •ONTINUFT i FROM PAGE ONTO assurance to this person and to his - neighbors that his property will, he kept in proper condition for, if I by chance, he is not financially, able to care for some repairs that , have to be made, he may draw 1 upon his maintenance fund to pay: for such work. This means that i his property will he kept in good condition. This plan is of benefit ( to him as well as to his neighbors whose property might otherwise suffer adversely if any one Homesteader's property were permitted to depreciate. It also serves to protect the large investment which the United States government has in the Homsteads. ! Os special interest and importance is the fact that if a Homesteader fs in occupancy under a purchase agreement and finds it necessary to move to another seci tion of the country, he will not have Ito sacrifice what he paid on his ' home, as is the ordinary case when i distress sales take place. On the I contrary, he is assured of having ; returned to him the amount which jhe paid in toward the principal j due on his home, plus the value of such improvements as he made, less such depreciation as might have occurred, and in addition, he will also receive what money he has in his maintenance reserve less the sum necessary to redecorate and repair the propery. This manner of returning his equity to a Homesteader who has to leave prevents him from losing what he , has put into his house. With the properties thus in the

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1936.

hands of the people who are buying them, it is anticipated that the occupants will make such improvement! as they Individually dasire and which they have postponed making until they had received definite information regarding the purchase contracts. As has already been indicated future maintenance and repair work is now the responsibility of the individual homesteader. While supervision of the project and the association is in the hands of the board of directors, the active management entailed in the collection of rents and other fees, the examination of homes in order to ascertain whether they are being properly maintained, the payment to the local taxing bodies of the aume due them and many other duties such as the keeping of books and the preparation of necessary reports is delegated to an association manager. After careful deliberation the board, at its first meeting Saturday, selected for this Ferd Litterer, local attorney, one of the original sponsors of the proect and who, from its inception, has given the Homesteads loyal support and assistance. For a time the resettlement administration is giving the services of the present community manager, Miss Marion Neprud to aid Mr. Litterer and the newly formed association in its organization work. With the aid of : ;iese two competent persons, b ii of whom have the sincere iv crest of the project in mind, th- board will be greatly assisted in the work of executing all of .e necessary agreements with !• dividual Homesteaders as speedily as possible. The formation of the local managing body as well as the availability of purchase contracts marks another milestone in the progress of Decatur Homesteads. More than ever before, local residents now have the opportunity to. display their initiative and ingenuity in furthering the progress and the development of this housing project. The association, too, has been assured of the continued interest and support of the capable group of original sponsors who are: Mrs. H. B. Heller, Carl Pumphrey, Ferd Litterer, James Elberson and Eno Lankenau, the last named serving as a member of the new board, those interested in the success of the project stated. On Tax Duplicate

The property will be placed on the Adams county tax duplicate as soon as legal details have been completed. The local assessed valuation of the entire project, including land and improvements totals approximately $56,000, the properties averaging a little less than $1.2u0 each. The assessments were made by the local taxing ofncials, consideration being given to the debt of individual home owner, although no mortgag exemption is filed. The monthly payments, including principal, interest, which is figured at only three per cent and other charges, range from S2O to $21.67 monthly. Several u of the Homesteaders have signified their intention of accepting the final contracts and thus acquire their own property. RECORDBREAKING ONTINUKT’ KROM PAGE ONF. ahead of the national G. O. P. ticket. Gov. Paul V. McNutt said Townsend would darry the state by at lea.st 100,000 votes. Townsend led the state tticket, trailing Mr. Roosevelt by less than 2,000 votes, in 1932, and will run even closer this year. McNutt sajd. Scratching between the state and national tickets is much easier this year, however, since thq

“Eugenics Baby ” to Be Married HP* srz WWP h / V lOr HBBB ■ | Gertrude Van lx>an ] * ‘ [George MutkiJiX ' Celebrated 20 years ago in New York as the "perfect offspring of a magically-mated eugenic pair." Gertrude Van Loan, daughter of H. H. Van Loan, playwright, and Gertrude Cameron, one-time screen star* since divorced, is to be married to George Muller, young architect. The bnde-to-be gave up a screen career for marriage.

two tlcketa are on separate ballots under a law sponsored by the Democrats a,nd passed in the 19J3 legislature. With more than 200,000 "doubtful" votes holding the margin of victory, both major parties contested hotly for Indiana's 14 electoral votes for president. Governor Landon made three appearances in the state, the largest for a major speech at Indianapolis Oct. 24. Frank Knox, G. O. P. vice presidential nominee, opened his extensive speaking tour at Connersville at the Springer

Figures in White House Shift? SlwjffiiaK £ jSMEw t ' v*!Efer&B 1 JOr \ KKBe iJTiip'ii. 1 egg' ll | r rSiv s I H-wk Cv*%£ W’- -M 4 1 ' : 1 ' ’ ;J ISK W wA>‘ - ;? i is# i K a % ■--•I kPvt L..JW \ » «*.«5 jSfcar W wio ‘ -*■* Eugene Leggett, chairman of the National Emergency Council and former Washington correspondent of a Detroit newspaper, may succeed Stephen T. Early as presidential press secretary, if Early retires, according to Washington rumors. Early is said to be considering an important post elsewhere. Radium Prevents Baby’s Death ~ — F< ' ' ' ' >x ■ X ■ £r A 1 F' '■/ > z |i A r ' \ * Xx - - 1 « f '\ ... I ■ . < I Loretta Gral, t I 'X-,,,:. .■...-i.iX-iSX,-*' ■ * . Faced by death from strangulation because of an enlarged throat eland. Baby Loretta Grant of Pittsburgh is having the growth "shrunk”, enabling her to breathe normally, by means of radium rays j radiated from a tube of radium placed against her throat,,

• notification ceremonies early in t the fail and cloned at Gary last I I week. President Roosevelt failed to . make Indiana after formally opens ing his campaign for re-election . hut visited Indiana,polls on his drought conference tour a few ' weeks' earlier. Local Democrats made that an opportunity for 1 party display. ' ; National campaign headquarters I sent in more than a score of ■ j national leaders, especially mem- ■ l bers of congress, to make up for • i the failure to display its national r standard bearer, however.

RECORD-BREAKING (CONTINUErtain states and far west sufficient to place him in the White House on next January 20—inauguration day. Republicans variously predict they will gain from 45 seats up in the house of representatives in which the Democratic party now has a majority of more than 200. Democrats privately concede they dozen border and northern states in which there are senatorial contests, Reptvblicans have a chance to gain here and there. But it is a mathematical impossibility for the G. O. Pt to regain control of the senate this year because so many of the seats to be filled are in sure southern Democratic territory. One-third of the senate membership plus persons to fill vacancies are to be elected Tomorrow. The parade of voters which form first on the. east coast and extend finally across the nation will number from 42,000,000 to 45,000,000 in the opinion of satisticians who have examined records of extraordinary registratio nincreases reported from all parts of the country. The vote fdtar years ago was just short of 40,000,000. Outstanding among political issues as this campaign closes is that raised by Republicans with working men and women in this country. Republicans are charging that the new deal social security program will impose a one per cent tax on the workers' wage as of next January. Mr. Roosevelt and his aides are bitterly resentful of that phase of the Republican campaign. Last minute surveys indicate the wagetax argument has cut into Mr. Roosevelt’s strength in the smoky industrial cities of the east and lake states. It is there that the race Is closest and where it may be won or lost. Trained political observers believe the mould of new parties has been cast in the hot campaign which will end tonight as the

MII Installation Charges »Discontinued FOR ONE MONTH I Through our special appeal, the Public Service Commission of Indiana has granted to the Citizens Telephone Company, the right to discontinue the regular installation and reconnection charges for one month Nov. I to Nov. 30 This gives you the opportunity to have that telephone installed now. The savings will mean over a month's rental and you’ll enjoy the conveniences a telephone will give you. Remember —this special installation offer continues for one month only so don’t delay, (’all our office or stop in today— you’ll enjoy using your telephone tomorrow. CITIZENS TELEPHONE CO.

president and Gov. Landon turn away from microphones in Hyde Park and Topeka. There has been a mass movement of left wingers ‘ and so-called radicals toward the I Democratic patty os denied under Mr. Roosevelt’s new’ deal leadership. Conservative Democratic began more than a year ago to draw 1 away from the new deal and many 1 are to be found now in Republican shelter. The campaign has produced some notable fence sitters. Re- ( publican Senators Charles L. Me--1 Nary. William E. Borah and Hiram W. Johnson have been silent i or hardly audible on the question , 'of the respective merits of Mr. . Roosevelt and Gov. 1-andon. The i voice of all or either would tre-1 I inendotisly aid the Kansan's cause, i Sen. Carter Glass, Democratic' '; Virginia’s favorite son, has refusJed to campaign for Mr. Roosevelt j although the new deal high command long hoped it would persuade him to reply to the anti-r.ew deal crusade of another famous and unI happy Democrat, former Gov. Alfred E. Smith of New York. Sen. Ellison D. Smith, D., 8. D., and 1 Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D, Va., scarcely conceal their dislike of the Roosevelt administration, but neither has left the Democratic reservation. Both linger now near its outermost limits. o RAIN FORECAST ■ 1 <7ONT INU ED FROM PAGE OW8) • ing filed. The county ballot has two Jieki ets, Democratic a.nd Republican. Democratic candidates are: con- ' gressman, Jamea I. Farley; pirosef cutor. Arthur E. Voglewede; joint I representative, Frank G. Thomp- • son; county treasurer, Jeff Liech- ■ ty; county recorder, Ruth Hol- ' iingsworth; county sheriff, Dallas 1 Brown; county coroner, Robert i J. Zwick; county surveyor, W. H. ’ Gilliem; commissioner, second district, Frank Liniger and commis- • sioner, third district, Moses i Augsburgzr, Republican county candidates are: congressman. David Hogg;

PAGE FIVE

prosecutor. Arthur D. Unversaw; joint representative, Chauncey E. Frantz; county trensurer, Ralph E. Kenworthy: county recorder, Preston E. Booher; county sheriff, Robert Hill; county coroner. J. Jerome Yager; county surveyor, none; county commtsaionw. eecond district. Homer Raudebush, and oounty commissioner, third district, Harry Moore. All counties in the fourth district vote on the congressman. Adams and Wells counties vote on the joint representative. W. H. Gilliom, county surveyor, and Democratic candidate for reelection is the only unopposed candidate. The fourth ballot will be on a constitutional amendment which omits the word “White" from the pari of the oonstUution dealing with the eltgibility of entrance in the stafe militia. Voting in favor of the amendment would permit negroes to join the mililia. o ■ ■*■■■ Ward Calland Buys Morrison Property J. Ward Calland lias purchased the lot and home on the corner of Fifth and Jeffenson streets from Mrs. Harriet Beatty, anmiuistratrix of the estate of the late Elizabeth Morrifion. The home is one of the landmarks of the city. O' ' 11 Trade In a Good Town — Oecatu» Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you cs get relief now with Creomulsic . Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of tne trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even If other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)