Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 13 January 1938 — Page 5
Avoid RuHh, B Gross Income Tax Division Urges ' > M fiiinc of approximately 450.000 Kross income tax an al axpJying period which ends January 31. ■r he Indiana Groas Income Tax Divtoion Have urged taxpay returns early and avoid last-minute jams in local auto j plea the division is seeking to avoid such scenes as i ~.I U line shown al>ove—photographed at the entrance to < office in Indianapolis on the last day of the annual tax- I ' ,'1 j„ 0137 which wan duplicated on a smaller scale in most Hm ’license branches throughout the state. stion for preventing the inconvenience of last-minute filing bv Clarence A. Jackson, director of the division. license branch in Decatur. where gross income tax return i assistance in filing are available, is located in the old I’eoa- Trust Co. building on Madison street. ||s are due by January 31 from all persons who received more in
To Obtain Licenses |i, 13. 4U.R/ BA > a possibility of cir-j - t > - outside ‘B said 111" . jEwt* light get around the law »K rest ' l1 " 1 ' is ‘" l<1 ,ll ’ llar ' (Kpl-. itmi riage Joseph iLaecu
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CHAPTER XVIII . ■ Th* "ere pink crepe paper : . was the uncompromisof white tile tables, - paint panorama of Iptes »nd mountains on the flywalls. Over it all there was : sweet smell of synthetic ■MBavors and the strange coollß*W !a: pervades such ice-cream on a hot July afternoon. EBa- r t :r- : I ack- “ for a matter of such moment ' J.:/" Allerdyce reflected in She was waiting f r Jerry WW 'em d a more Bppyive background. One, perKBrith music. But Fayette ofpublic meeting places , more than Ye Yellow Can'l'ojqo, the drug-store and . I’arcourse, her own . Kincaid at her own impossible. Julie didn’t answer the questions of her ’Alan she was ready, she P ‘ lO ma ' ce statements. ‘ il She wasn’t quite sure that she ■ , Ih‘ wu-re two elements *bb f r ‘ K '‘ n< ’ aid ’ s ' ■ mpany him on ■”ry flight: fear and g^^Bf’ rc t sh" had conquered; she -BBlfmm. ' ' K'nc.'tid s record. -jEMf' hi- acre nm! u-hments but by P lla^.W' n 'Fc. understandable fact y ' t> no crashes. r . gain w , g « ( -, n ieth:ng tbe telephone two IKBt bpfcri ’. Pete Waddell had '-bat her chance had come was riot ready to accept B^V a "..'lt getting her picture in H BM>"' : 'P a Pcrs was to be reckoned * Rrtia F ‘ a * ea ' n If there was no -K3 m ' '' y for Kincaid’s flight. Ui, t be money involved somewa '>'ed some of it. What it do her to have her picM n the newspapers if she didn’t fs.™ nough money to get out in the . aril cultivate the opportuni■B b,lcl ty might thrust her way? Iw-ia e , W ~’ also the P° int that she afford to gamble with huge At that moment was a huge sum of . 0 hcr ’ Proportions being . fi / l 7 d°llsrs sewn in the of ner pique blouse repre- " HK,\ ma .. ttcr of bonor to her, the so to speak, her lutch - Shp owed it to uo . u<l - !t "’as the sum that for the laßt half of Iter essons ' her only hone of Cno ußh money to repay had given it back d asked r 1 " ? hat niornin R- , . . m for twenty-ftv.e e x P ,a mi n g that if she "went Xi Bhe * ou >d have to have nd h t 6 k' H «? ad told her not ll on tlothes. Is aJa'.’k* 111813 whpn y° u ’ rc *? d ! h “t sort of things. 'nKf £- lve *>tiad money’ ather w‘lL Ut if y° u *<*• id I’ll « a k home ’ scnd mp a ”.111 fly out and get you,” -’hom’ t worrie ' l ab< ”’t the i ? ar } : Kincaid bad ' tu. « do bo manage his ; e 6 ronr?t rifl 7 Pprellens > v e thSut P . ,et ?° f sta ying « « h°“t a chaperone. There I
i ing residence for the sole purpose j of obtaining a license would be pet- ’ jury. — o — Woman Senator keeps Up Senate Filibuster Washington, Jan. 13 —(UP) —Sen. Hattie W. Caraway, D.. Ark., today I ’ substituted for Sen. Carter Glass, < D„ Va., in carrying on the senate j filiburster against the anti-lynch-1 I mg bill. She charged the measure | i was designed to destroy the south , both politica'ly and industrially. Mrs. Caraway addressed the sen- , ate in a firm unemotional voice. She replaced Glass on the fillbus-' ' ter schedule. Glass was unable to be present.
was nothing fool-hardy or stupid about Julie Allerdyce. She had no intention of offending conventions — not if it would do her more harm than good. And Julie, who had missed none of the effects of departures from conventions in the skenn social school of a small town, knew the importance of correct appearances. That was one of the things she meant to take up with Jerry Kincaid. In the meantime “Captain Kincaid, I really can’t see why you want to take me with you. You know—don’t you—that I couldn’t be any real help?” “Listen, Jolie—by the way, call me ‘Jerry’ please—you can be a great help to me. This trip isn’t going to be much fun for you. You’ll sit in a rear cockpit where there isn’t much room. You’ll be there probably for twelve hours steady. You’ll get cramped and bored. You’ll hate me before it is over. I’m telling you all these things before I lay my cards on the table,” Julie nodded. He was beginning to talk her way. “I asked you to come along with me because I think you’re a girl who likes adventure.” Julie said. “And because I’ll get more pictures of us in the paper. I mean my being along.” Kincaid laughed. “I thought I had you right,” he said. “All right, now that we’ve got of? to an understanding, here’s the picture; I’m flying a Cook-Walters plane out to the coast for cookies. That, my dear child, means almost no money. I have reasons of my own for doing it. There’s a new gadget on the engine that I mean to prove something by. I can't offer you a fee but 1 can promise you that your name will be known in every town where there’s a newspaper. There’s sure to be some change for you to pick up when you cash in. Nothing definite, you understand, but if you want to gamble, there it is.” Julie held out her hand. “I’ll do it. When do we go? What do I do next? What luggage do I take? Where ...” “Whoal One answer at a time, please! We go Saturday from Floyd Bennett field in Brooklyn, weather permitting. Jean Vance is driving to New York Friday and will put you up for the night. As for luggage, you won’t want anything more than a toothbrush and your vanity case. Have you a warm leather coat?” Julie said she had, wondering where she could borrow one. “Now, then—you’re going along as my radio operator." Julie opened her mouth to explain that all she knew about radio was dialing programs. "That will be our secret. I know that you don’t know anything about it but it gives you a logical excuse for coming along. Your chief job is to look pretty, smile at the camera and take your cues from me. There’s one more thing: What about your family? Any opposition?” “Not a bit,” she‘answered confidently. It was her confidence in her own ability to manage them all—her father, Cosy and Dick Jessup—that they misconstrued as her confidence in ths safety of the flight. Julie didn’t find it easy to convince them that the flight was not a foolhardy adventure but she won their consent. She told her father and Cosy of her intentions at once. Dick was the
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1938.
PURDUE ALUMNI I GIVEN HONORS Former Students Paid Special Honors During Conference Lafayette, Ind., Jan. 13. — (U.R) The Purdue agricultural alumni 1 association banquet today highI lighted -the fourth-day program of ! the annual agricultural conference | being held at Purdue university. High honors were conferred upion 15 former Purdue students who j are establishing enviable records I as farmers and four others for outI standing service to Indiana agrii culture during the past year. The awards were announced by L. E. i Hoffman. Lafayette, president of I the alumni association. i Former university students win--1 ning "distinguished agrictulture” 1 certificates as outstanding farmers were: Grover C. Arbogast and Cecil A. Madill, both of Muncie; William T. Leaird and Francis H. Heaton. • both of Eaton; E. Ralph Harvey of Newcastle; Allen B. Hinchman of Rushville; Leroy Turner of Richmond; George G. Langdon of Hartford City and John H. Guthrie of Muncie. Students who have won similar certificate awards since the plan was initiated in 1927 and who qualified for the honor again in 1937 by winning two or more gold medals! n various gold melftl livestock ' and crops projects include: Clarence Cecil of Muncie; Lee ; Chambers of Konto; Fred Fraser I and Roscoe Fraser, both of Rens- ' selaer; Whitney K. Gast of Akron, i and Lee B. Florea of Milton. Certificate of distinction awards for outstanding service to Indiana | agriculture were presented for the first time by the association to ! Dean J. H. Skinner of Purdue, and ' to county agents M. E. Cromer of Muncie; H. E. Abbott of Indianapolis, and H. S. Benson of Vincen-
last to hear. For an ardent lover, he w;:s surprisingly amenable. But then Dick was not an ardent lover. Julie sighed a deep sigh of relief when that was over. Her way was clear after that. She invited her three closest girl friends to lunch the day after she made her decision. From one she borrowed a leather jacket; from another, a pair of whipcord riding breeches, and from the third, riding boots which pinched her toes— a point too minor for her consideration. The second day she posed in her flying costume for the local newspaper and gave an interview which was heady wine for her. The third day she returned from a triumphant tour of Main Street—flushed with her first taste of fame —to find Tommy Jessup waiting for her. “Hello, Tommy!” she said. “Did you come to wish me luck?” “Naturally I do. However, that wasn’t why I came.” Well, why didn’t he go on? This new, solemn Tommy who no longer lost his temper, or said what was on his mind, distressed Julie. “Then why?” she asked when he forced the question. “I came to ask you not to do it.” “Oh, Tommy, must you always keep telling me what not to do? Aren’t you ever going to find out that it doesn’t do any good?” “Julie, I’ve always talked to you as though you were a kid. I still think you are. but I’m going to talk to you as a woman. I’m going to ask you if you think it’s fair to indulge your self love at the expense of Dick’s happiness?” “But, Tommy, he doesn’t mind! We’ve talked it all over.” "I’m not thinking of the flight," he said evenly, “I’m thinking of you and Dick. . . . An excitement-eater is not the best wife in the world for a man like my brother. He has a right to a life in which he is given something. He’s always been the one to give.” Julie took a deep breath. “What about me, Tommy? Don’t I count? Haven’t I a right to happiness in my own way?” Tommy crossed his long legs, shifted his weight, fished in his pockat for cigarettes. “Well?—” “I’m thinking about you,” he answered. “I’m going to ask you to give yourself a chance. Break your engagement to Dick. Call off this crazy jaunt and take a little time to find out what you want. Then be prepared to wait for it. Stop grasping at straws! Life finds you out! You don’t have to seek it!” “What else might there be for me?” “You might even fall in love some day. Had you thought of that? Now, Julie, don’t start again to tell me you’re in love with Dick! . . . Just take things easy. I’m asking you that because .. . well—” He got up and took his hat from the table. “Because why?" She spoke softly waiting for his answer. She tried to make him meet her eyes, impelled by a sense that the moment was important. He shrugged his shoulders and the moment passed. “Happy landing,” he said and was gone without even a handclasp. (To be continued) Copyrliht Marie Bl Izard DUUtbu'-ad bv kiM Faaturai ebodicata. loa.
‘Teach of a Girl” £ Passengers of the bog-marooned airliner, forced down by fog in a Newark, N. J-, swamp, voted Veronica Lally, stewardess (above),a “peach of a girl." Miss Lally tended to their needs during the five long hours which it took Pildt Rouch to find his way to the airport and bring help. nes. E R. Mclntyre, editor of the Wisconsin agricultural magazine, was principal speaker at the banquet. Other prominent persons on the program were President Edward C. Elliott of Purdne; Dean Skinner, and officers of the state organization. "Agriculture as the first and oldest industry of America must not relinquish its spirit of leadership,” Mclntyre said. “This signifies well trailed farm minds and ample discusson and debate. It must not be forever pushed and led into dilemmas but take its own traditional progressive pathway. "Every agricultural advance is due to the individual and his t’ore- ! sight and thought. The same is I true in privae works and in pubinstitutions and in co-operatives, all depending on the trained and ! leader said. thinking individual." me farm Speaking as a steady observer and frequent recorder of American farm movements and objectives and as ap economist, M. Intyre expresesd the opinion that middle- ' west folks juuat be true to the sort •Os tradition for self-relianr-e and initiative and resolve to work out an agricultural program on a pattern suited to America. Noble county's organization under the leadership of A. J. Mor, ris, advisor for the Purdue alumni group, was awarded tire "Purdue Ag alumni gavel” for the most active county agricultural alumni association in the slate during the past year. Delaware county. 1936 winner, was a close contenderTrade in A Good Town Itccai■»' SALE CALENDAR Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Decatur Indiana Claim your sale date early as I am booking sales every day. Jan. 17 —Sam Coomer, i mile south and 2% miles east of Wood- . burn. Closing out sale. I Jan. 19—Harry Huffine. 2 miles south of Van Wort on Ils and mile west. Closing out sale. Jan. 18—Harry Huffine, 6 miles west of Van Wert on Lincoln highway. Jan. 19 William Hearst, 4 miles west of Van Wert. Ohio. Closing out sale. Jan. 20—Oscar Evard, 6 miles east of Fort Wayne on 14 and then 2U. miles north. Closing out sale. Jan 21- Noah Heitschen. 3 miles . south and 6 miles west of Decatur. Closing out sale. Jan. 25—Sam Ehrsam. 1% mile west. % mile south of Woodburn, ! closing out sale. Jan. 26 Bryce Kessling eslate. 9 j miles southwest of Muncie. ClosI ing out sale. Jan. 27—F. E. North, 1 mile I South and % mile East of Convoy, closing out sale. Feb. 6 J. Conley Brown, 10 mil" ! northwest of Fait Wayne on road 12. 345 acre farm and also all perI sonal property. 1 Feb. 8 Lew Murphy, 2 miles least of Decatur on 221. Closing out sale. Feb. 9—th-, w. E. Smith and A. ! U Doctor, 3 miles south and 2 mils 1 west of Decatur. Closing out sale Feb. 10 -J. V. Banta, 3 miles north of Yoder. Closing out sale | Feb. 15 Frank Robinson, 2>/i miles north of Rockford, Ohio. I Closing out sale. Feb. 16 Ira Thompson, li mH? east of Tocsin. Closing out sale. I Feb. 17--Ed. Devries. Demott, i Indiana. Pure bred Du roc bred l sow sale. Feb. 18—-Orval E. Hileman. I'i j miles west of Rockford, Ohio ■ Closing out sale. Feb. 21 —Doyle Allison. 4 miles I west anil 2 miles south of Payne, I Ohio. Hampshire pure bred sow i sale. | BOOK YOUR SALE EARLY. ROY S. JOHNSON Decatur, Ind. Trdst Company Building 1 Phone 104 Phone 1022
SAM JACKSON AT VINCENNES Candidate For U. S. Senator Assails G. O. I*. Leaders Vincennes, Ind., Jun. 13. -|(U.RX Sam Jackson. Democratic candidate for nomination to the United States senate, last night charged the Republican party with "assaulting democracy and undermining its foundations ’ in an address here. Jackson, campaigning for the seat now held by Senator Frederick Van Nuys, reiterated his support of President Roosevelt and his administration, denying that the President is exertinng “dictatorial control" over congress and the nation. Mayor Joseph Kimmell of Vincennes was in charge of the program and other speakers included Omer Stokes Jackson, attorney-gen-eral and Democratic state chairman; Dick Heller, executive secretary to Gov. M. Clifford Townsend, and James Beatty, secretary of the state committee. “President Roosevelt,” Jackson said, "does exercise a powerful intellectual and moral leadership. His assumption of this leadership is one of the best fruits of a representative democracy based upon th tentative democracy based upon the fundamental principles of party government. "The advancement of the people’s welfare is the first obligation of our party as long as we are. in power. To lead this advance, to fulfill this duty, the president is charged by the people will full responsibility. The power he exercises over congress is in reality the power of the public will, demandin gsupport of th" party and the leadership charged with the people's business. “Assaulting democracy and undermining its foundations are the leaders of a political party who would commit representative free government to interpretation by a committee of 200, not a single one of which is an elected representative of the people. "Secure in his determination to I vindicate and preserve democracy lls one who has faith and confidence
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