Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 10, 1921, NIGHT EXTRA, Page 14, Image 14

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evening public ledgek philebih:iav
AY,
i
ill HIMSELF
FORGOT HANGING
Negro Know He Was to Be Exe--.'
cutod Some Time, but Could
Not Romomber When
STATE WILL NOT FREE HIM
Ity tlw Asswliitrtl Pros
Shrmttiort, I.n.. I 10 When
Slicrift Ornnt of Quncliilii imrixh. put
Imsylunt. I'rldny nnil ovrrlnnkci the fuel
thflt the hnnglne of Lonnic Kntnn.
Nrgro, wni on hi" ilny's pmernm. lie
IW not tlir only nWnt-inintlcil pi'inn
lit (Jio parish. For l'mnir. Mnicclf.
"clear forROt" the (Into, nrenrding to
the story he ti'lls in tin1 C'nildn parish
jail hers.
"I mnv Ho doml. hut I don't feci it,"
Mild Lon'niP "Hut I stifp nm clml that
thu sheriff forgot iilmut hip. 1 know 1
wni Buppo'rd to linns -ometimi. tint T
rltar forgot thn dnd-
Iinnip received tho nous thnt tlm
sheriff had forgot ten him. in n rasiuil
innnner. Ht li'p" now to pet life
term. , ...
Sheriff Ci runt i-miccI n tnt'iitit in
Monroe todur cleclnntis ho overlooked
the mutter hecnuof the Neero had been
in Jail at Phreveport three yenr find j
lin wan not reminded of the dnte for the
fxecutlon.
"Sew Orleans. I-'1"1'. 1(1' An opinion
handed down yoterday by Attornev
(ienerul Coco declared thnt Lnnnln
Tflton, vrhoso execution on February I
tho date ft, wa forgotten by the sheriff
of? Oiichitn parish, may legally In
Prior to the rendering of the opinion
by the attorney general, mnny attorney-
Of Hie fnf titwl t.rtiif.Tlr1i1 lttn I.AArtil.A '
tllO-flffttn's life bnil oneo been placed In
Jeopardy when the governor fixed the
ditto for execution, and that date had
nrrlved without n reprieve being grant
ed, he eould not now lie legally hanged
hut vn legally dead and must be
granted his freedom.
That view wan not sustained bj the
i attorney ireneial, however, who, after
setting out that he ould find nothing in
the text hooks, ancient or modern, or in
iiirispnidence, to furnish the least basis
for such argument, ruled as follows:
' "I'nder the law in this state author
t ity is conferred upon the governor to
i liavc tlm death sentence executed and
it Is made the dut of the sheriff to
'execute the, criminal in conformity to
tho death warrant mi the date named
by tho governor.' mid the law further
' provides thnt the death sentence 'shall
lie executed. I hanging the person by
the neck until he he dead.'
"That these svitlc provisions of tin
law might bo carried out in so ini
portnnt a matter by tne failure of an
officer to perform hi's duty i altogether
beyond reason. The idea may have
originated from an ancient superstition
by which it win thought thnt if tin'
crintiiinl was not thoroughly killed nnd
revived ho vn thereby iccued by the
unforseen hand id Providence."
The attorney general then inled it
would be legal for the governor agnin
to My a dnte for the r.rut'iu of tho
prisoner, who via couvictd . ; Uc
murder of Charles Mct.iiiillcr, a piunler.
in 1 1117.
A movement has been start1 d In the
state to bine the death sentcm i mm
muted to life imprisonineu' M-am. nilc
alCton is m tlie Caddo piuisli pii-on
apparently not cr mm h concerned
over the settlement of the legal ipi'
tlou.
ROCKEFELLER GETS
$331010 A YEAR
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Income Tax Figures Show He
Accumulated $1,500,000,000
Altogether
NOW HAS $900,000,000
.Washington, l'"b IP. "Who is the
j. Inst person in the In' l States and
what i- h! fortune?"
'l'he answer tii the llr-t pait of this
question i, of course, .lolm 1). Hocke- '
feller; the answer to the second part,
dedueiblo from income ta statistics just j
published by the Internal Reenue Hu-
renn. is thnt the fortune on the income '
of which he was taxed in 1018 wnsj
about str.o.ooo.ono. . I
liivkoning in the capital the tax on '
the income of which is exempt, his total j
W'alth in that vear na probably be- I
,.,, sstm otto mm and si.non.ooo.ox. I
and at the present tini' is perhaps
not much short nf the latter figure. j
As his known benefactions amount to i
John D. Can Spend $63
a Min nl v on His Income
I e .eiirl income of John D.
lim l,i-feller as revealed by income
lax statistics, is SJtll.OOO.OOO. He is
i lie rnhi'st person in Ihc 1'niled
Stales.
Without touching his capital, he
an. if In desires', spend $i!.7ii(M)00
n month, or SlH.lltlO n day. Mncli
hour he inn di-novc of $.11111. As
i ! h minute iiass.s his income would
permit hi in to expend $0.1.
for tlm year 101 8 W an Income of. from
?4,O00.OOO to sn.ooo.oou,
As for Mr. Hoekefeller tlie stnttstlcs
show roughly that lie pnld Incoino tnx
for tho year 1018 on n net tnxnblc In
come somewhere between $0,000.000
and SM.OOO.OOO, probably about $22,
000,000 ntler genernl deduction from
hit rcturndd income of near y Sit; ,000,
000.
This, of course, did not include the
I exemption of IiIm clmritnble bequests
which undoubtedly nmiuitctl to tho 1"
per cent nf his total Income exempted
I by law. nor did it Include the Incomo
' from tnx exempt Liberty liomli nnd
other tax exempt bonds, such ns state
and municipal bonds, which were ex-
i eluded by lnw from federal tax. !
1 X, f.f.n tlt.lrt 1. ln ..t.l 1 1...... 1 .-l.i
I - v ,,..u inn.; ,ie la rum u, milt; injiiKllT
ah mi S.MKi.OtHi. .lohn I). WockefcllerS2.'i.000,000 of Xew York city bonds in
has in the si,ice of one lifetime accumii- I " singlo deal.
Int.'d about ?1..(IO.OOO,000. .
statistiis of the Internal Uevcnue i 10,000,000 Eggs Coming '
niireni.-l.ow thai one womnn. i.resum- Further decline in the price of egg,1
nb y M.s. 1, H. Ilarrimnn. paid taxes' , indicated by a Vancouver, I!. ('., dis-
Wch that millions of tho" prpditct of.
Cnlncsc nnd l'uget sound hens are cost
Wiril bound to the principal Atlantic
v-i. ?
7
1 w'srf!is??Jr
kenbonrd clllcs, Tho latest shlnmrnt
ontho rond is n lot consisting of 10,
000,000 eggs, 1,000,000 of which, from
China, nro destined for bakers nnd con
fct!onrs. A largo Jiorjtipn Is dcslluei
for the Philadelphia induct.
T
CORSET EXPERTS
flofr
V' Paper Hoxes
' and Mailing; Tubes
EDWIN J. SCHOETTLE CO.
533 N. llihSt. Philadelphia
"SsaEs
835 Chestnut St
ClcOSL
U3I
Have You Tasted
' I HE more closely you study
your own thoughts about
the Cadillac, and analyze its
wonderful hold on public ap
proval, the more clearly you will
see that .when people call the
Cadillac the greatest car in the
world, they actually mean that it
isthemost trustworthy, the most
constant, the most dependable
$sc in thersviorld.
MEEC-GADILLACCOMPANY
142 -North BroadStreet
C A
I L L A G
"i
Th
ree invisible
Guest Days '
TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
February 10, 11 and 12
Entertain One of the Starving Children of Europe As Your "Invisible Guest" at the
OPENING OF OU;
ivrir viz
CAFETERIA
Occupying Entire Second Floor Over Our Lunch Rooms
1508-10-12 Market Street
(Opposite Broad Street .SLiluia;
Entire Receipts of Cafeteria Will Be
Given to t&e HerbertHooverFund for
Relief of "Starving Children of Europe
On the three opening days, Thursday Friday Satmday. Open dmly- 1 1 to 8.30.
Horn & H
ardart Bkff.
L.O.
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CHOICE SPANISH PEANUTS
(native grown) thoroughly hulled, roasted golden
brown, mixed with the exquisitely flavored
A UER BACH vanilla sweet chocolate a
wonderful, delicious confection
There are dealers
in every town who
sellAUERBACH
ChocolateBarsfor
5c Ws yourown
fault if you pay
more.
D. AUERBACH & SONS
llth Ave, 46th to 47th Stroot, Now York
AUERBACH
CHOCOLATE PEANUT BAR
and
Eleven Other
Kinds
FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OB GOODRICH
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KSiBBBKI
BtSKKUWIi iHYTO
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GoodricJi is what it is today because during the fifty yean ofilt growth it has adhered to high
f ideals. TIk progress of the company from the beginning has been markedly influenced by the
loyal belief of coery member of the organization in its plans, policies, purposes and products.
GOODRICH AND THE RUBBER INDUSTRY
HEN Goodrich started business fifty
years ago the whole rubber industry
was represented, by a few scattered
plants. The two-story building in
Akron, on the site of the nresent
Goodrich factories, was part of .the nucleus of
the industry itself as it now exists. At that time
few persons ever dreamed what the industry
could become. Scarcely any of the fields in
which rubber products play so important a part
had come into being. Electricity was undevel
oped. Transportation was in its infancy. The
automobile and motor truck were unborn. The
combination of circumstances which brought
about the greatest industrial era of the world
was virtually unseen.
Yet. the history of the company shows that
even in those early days Dr. Goodrich and his
associates were actuated by a broad view of the
future and its potentialities. Radiating from that
small factory and small organization of half a cen
tury ago, Goodrich has built a city. Not alone the
huge city of brick and stone and steel which
houses the great plant in Akron -but a city
which comprises the entire Goodrich organiza
tion everywhere in the world.
It requires people to make a city, and the spirit
of those people is the soul of that city. The per
sonnel of Goodrich is one that has a family feel
inga pride in its work a determination to
maintain the integrity of its creed and which
extends that integrity to the service of the prod
uct itself.
Wherever a Goodrich product is used, it carries
with it the good faith and good will of the organ
ization. The opening of the second half century of
the organization finds it just as earnestly building
its city in the esteem and regard of the public, as it
worked on that far day in 1870 when it was enter
ing a field almost untried and approaching an era of
development passing the imagination of that time.
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F. GOODRICH COMPANY AKRON, OHIO
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