Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 28 March 1930 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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MG LARKIN HAS TOUGH BATTLE N'< w York. Mur. 28. (U.R) One r»r (he detinue t puncti-s In the Iflng tend one of (he mod modest of mon out of the ring. Jimmy Me-hni-niu, baby faced Irishman from Tiin'oitver, B is confronted ietth om of bis hardest assignments sin.e lie entered til" welterweight fl vision. Be meets "Black Jack" Thompson. California negro, in a pi ound bout n Madison Square Garden ton'ght. In all his career Thompson has never he' it K. O.'d and has been en the floor only once for account. Famed for h's punch, McLarnin's list of victims contains the names of many n -omimn’ fighters- Jackie Fields, Joey Sangor. Sid Terris. Hiil McGraw. Stanislaos Loayza Jpe Glic k. Getgeant Sammy Biker. and Ruby Goldstein. Me -La’nin is a 7 to 5 favorite to hr at Thompson and continue' on his way to a welterweight title bout with Jackie Fields outdoors th'- summer. Jimmy knocked out Jackie when they were just grow-1 fng out of the flyweight division in | 1925 and he is confident he can do * again. j When McL.irnin tights in New 5 York, it always means a sell-out. | or the baby faced fighter's mod I sty. fighting courage and knockent punch have made him the most Popular of present day ring glad tutors in Manhattan. McLatn-'n is not invincible. It was at the Polo Grounds in the summer of 1928 that Sammy Mandell. lightweight champion, gavel Jimmy an artistic boxing lesson Since then. McLarnln, with his added weight, has twice turned the fables on Mandell in Chicago. Tonight's bout will be the renewal of an old feud between McLaruin and Thompson. Ab-out three gear* ago they met in a training bout in Moose Tausig's gym in San Franc si a. Each needed a sparling partner, and they consented to take each other on. A real fight developed. Next day the police l gathered to keep them from meet-

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ing again. Thompson's claim to fame is a two-round K. O. over Joe Dundee when ho was welterweight chump ion. Dundee' made Thompson come in over weight or the title would have chun- ed hands in their botif al Chicago in 1928. Thompson has twice b< en beaten by Fields. - ■ - -o- — BASEBALL BRIEFS * Today's Games Chicago White Sox vs. Waco, at Waco. Tex. Philadelphia Athletics vs. Boston Braves, at Fort Myers. Fla. | New York Yankees vs. Mobile. | ~t Mobile. Ala. Cleveland Indians vs. New Or-1 loans, at New Orleans. St. I.mis Cardinals vs. Philadelphia Nationals, at B adenton, Fla. Chicago Cubs'vs. Pittsburgh Pir-

ates, at I.os Angeles, Calif. Clnc'nnttti Reds vs. Columbus, it Lakeland. Fla. Yesterday's Results Brooklyn Robins, 10; Philadelphia Nationals. 4. , Boston Braves, 5; Philadelphia Athletics. 3. Pittsburgh Pirates. 15; Chicago I Cubs. 10. St. Louis Browns. 2; Mllwatiee. 1. Jacksonville. 4; New York Yan l kees 3. Detro t Tigers. 6; Toronto, 4. Chattanooga. 4; New York Giants | Second-. 3. Pensacola. Fla.. Mar. 28. —George Smith, a Seattle' rookie pitcher, is making a strong bid for a berth on the Boston Red Sox. Smith allow ,cd only one hit in the first five innings of yesterdays practice gante which ended in a 5 to 5 tie. New Orleans, La.. Mar. 28. —John Goldman. Cleveland rookie shortstop. is suffering from append citis and may l>e lost to the team until after the opening of the regular season. Waco, Tex.. Mar. 28.—The Chicago White Sox arrived today to play the Waco Texas league club in the fust game of the r road tour. The Sox broke camp at San Antonio la :t night.

Fort Myers, Flu.. Mar. 28. Yes-i terday was Connie Mack day with] a civic celebration honoring him. 1 but the’ Philadc Ipli'a Athletics I dropped a 5 to 3 cl»i'ision to theBraves. Fort Myers, Flu. Mar. 28. An: injury to Bill Rhiel is g vlng Fred die Maguire nn opportunity lo win back his position at second base, with the Boston Braves. Manager Mi Kec-hnle has decided not to purchase catcher Mickey! O'Neil from the Cardinals and has 1 ■ Igned Kenneth Smith. Clearwater, Flu., Mar. 28. The ! Brooklyn Robins expect Babe Her-1 .man, holdout outfielder, to arrive in camp today. West Palm Beach, Fla., Mar. 28. j The lack of batting punch displayed by th St. Louis Browns is i causing Manager Bill Killefer eon-1 i siderable worry. Joe Hassler, who had a trial with the Athletics last spring, wi.s( purchased from Baltimore yester-l day.

BERNE MAX GET NEW BUILDING (CONTINUED FROM page on'Ei sign the bill during the present j week, since he has repeatedly indi- | cated his desire to hasten the ( I work authorized under the bill. Primary among the reasons cited | for this pa sages was the fact that , it would off it work to thousands lot men this .summer. Other Cities S'ated in addition to the-e, there are various other cities where the gov- ■ ernment has owned sites for some I time but hits never erected a« building. These will also be given I preference under the bill. Os the buildings named above, not all can be cared for in the appropriation to be made for work this summer and next autumn, leinee the work must l»e spread over a considerable period of time. It is expected that virtually all of them, however, can he built from the funds authorized in th-' bl!’. The entire public building program can he pushed more rapidly now that the hill has been acted on since it also provides money for employment of private architects. Decatur has a site for a new nostoffice and an appropriation for $65,000 was made sometime ago for the building. So far the contract has not been let. but it is thought that congress will take steps in the near future towards building government buildings, thus giving employment to many people.

o- - .... PRISON MUTINY ENDS IN RIOT (CONTENT EP>ROM PAG’’ ONE) ag iinst thp administration. Warden Rudolph reported the prisoners a saying, rather than an attempt to escape. The prisoners, in a surly mood for 36 bouts, vented their rage against authorities yesterday noon when 'hey turned over tables, threw iron pla es and cups and attacked guards. National guardsmen and special ; police aided in quelling the distur'bance. driving the rioting convicts ' from the mess hall into the court yard where the fighting continued i until the men were clubbed into their cells. Smith and Rascob To Appear Before Jun New York. Mtfrch 28 —(I'P) —Alfred E. Smi h. John J. Raskob and | Michael J. Meehan went before the : I grand jury today to deny all Conner- i I'ion was Robert Lee Harrison, broI ker of Syracuse, who disappeared some time ago leaving a *1,000.000 I deficit. Harrison supposedly obtained plans so: his luxurious brokerage of fices on Park Avenue by representing himself as a member of the pool hat included the former governor, the chairman of the Democratic National committee and Meehan a pro ' :n inent. broker. - - o End Bunion Pain Forever No Need to Suffer Another Day Those Agonizing Torturing Pains There is one simple yet inexpensive way to reduce inflamed, swollen toe joints and get them down to normal, and that is to apply Moone’s Emerald Oil night and morning, and people who suffer from such enlargements would be ' wise to reduce them before they reach a more or less chronic stage. Ask any first class druggist for an original two-ounce bottle of Moone’s Emerald Oil (full strength and refuse to accept anything in jits place. It is such a highly con- ; eentrated preparation that two ’ ounces last a long time, and furthermore if this wonderful discovery does not give you complete satisfaction you can have your money refunded. Spr. ial note: People who want to | retim e swollen nr varicose veins | should get a bottle of Emerald Oil at once. By applying night and morning as directed they will quickly notice an improvement which I will continue until the veins and I bunches are reduced to normal.

® n a DECA FEB DaiLY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MARCH 28. 19.30

REGISTRATION OF ALIENS UNDER WAY IN MEXICO Time Extended Due to Lack of Proper Clerical Facilities Mexico Ci y. March 28 —(UP) — ' Registration of all alien residents in .Mexico, ordered by the Interior De-1 bailment, hits proved so formidable !., task that the time limit for regisI set ing has been extended to March 131. All foreigners remaining in the I country after that date without proof of registration will he liable.. ! according to an official annouee J men to fines or deportation or both. More than 4'1,000 aliens already have tegis wed and the total when I the work is completed is expected I o exceed 50.000, Jimenez Castro, chief of the immigration bureau, -aid. The records have not yet been i tabulated according to nationalities Long lines of foreigners, frequently Including Sort or more men an ! 1 ■•omen have formed daily at the offices of the Interior Department to I comply with the registration re qui.ements. The inadequacy of the lepartment’s clerical facilities, which have caused many persons it einpting to register to lose sev ' ial working days, has been the sub pect of diplomatic suggestions to the Mexican government. Within a few days after the national registration is completed, the gove. .imen' of the federal district 'ill publish an older requiring al) iliens residing in the capital to register at the district building, an >ffi< ial told the United Press. The pi incipay purpose of the national legistration was to discover aliens who were residing illegally in he country, including many who were believed to have entered as tourists and failed to pay the head tax of 22 pesos imposed on all who remain here longer than six months. 53-Year-Old Woman Adopted By Uncle Evansville. Ind.. March 2S— —<U.R) —Caroline Duton has been adopted at the age of 53 by her unci'. Dr. Joseph C. McClurkin, 76. ( In the petition for adoption, Dr. McClurkin said the death of his wife March 16 left him without an immediate heir. The niece has lived in the McClurkin home most of her life and had lieen regarded by the couple as a daughter. o Japan Has Severe Fire; 100 Injured Tokio. March 28 —(UP) -At least 100 pel sons wet? injured, many ser iottsly, and property damage of 1,JtW.OOt) wa i caused by a fire which -.wept through M)t) buildings in Ko tnatsu in the Ishikawa prefecture Lt >day. O ; Channel Bass Days Near Ociacoke. N. C. —(UP)—Chan nel bass days are almost here, and anglers from all parts of the United States and Canada who have made arrangem-'n s to fish at Ocracoke with Captain Bill Gaskill and his staff of kuides will soon begin arriv ing. —- o • Studies Aid Methods Norfolk. Va.. —(UP) —Lieutenant C’on.mandei Luiz Barreta Alvez Ferriera, Brazilian Navy, has reported | to Rear Admiral Guy H. Burrage for temporary duty. Lieut. Cotnmandet Ferriera was sent to the United States by his government to study (methods of the supply department it the Norfolk Navy Yard and Hampton Roads Naval Operating Base. o_ t Prosperous Fishlna Ocracoke. N. C., — t UP) —Millions of pounds of fish have been taken off the central Carolina coast by trading and sink netting < rafts and ; ss a result the revenue from seafood | products in waters adjacent to Ocracoke and Hatteras will run nea” $2.0.(0.000 foi the season which wil lose in a tew more weeks. This has been a very prosperous year for fishermen in the vicinity. o Wrong Corpse Raleigh. N C., —(UP) —Susie Al ston, negro maid sat up two hours | with a corpse during the night here, thinking it was the body of an old friend. Susie later told her motheRosa Baldwin was dead. "Rosa isn’t dead," her mother replied ‘I just came from her house, she’s not even sick." Investigation revealed there were two Rosa Baldwins, negroes, in Raleigh. o Long Time Repaying Valpaiaiso, Indiana —(UP) —Fif y-one years ago Charles Masie*. Valparaiso, loaned $5 to a schoolmate in Chesterton high school. Yes terday he received a letter from Los Angeles containing $11) from his friend. "Have made good ami want to ease my conscience.” the writer said. —o Duck Lays Black Egg Sioux City, la.. —(UP) —A solid Hack egg was found by Fred Esh lent an here when he "shoed" one of his black ducks off its nest in the Eshelman hennery.

.DISCOVERIES i ARE UNFOLDED AT CONV ENTION I (CQNTINUED'FROM PAGE ONE) i bruin mouns u high order of Intelligence. • The surgeon told of removing lioth frontal loltes of om> patient's 1 hrnJn and watching closely over a long iM'riod for changes in Intell •■< tual powers. Thera was no change, he Mid. Similar results were noted, ho aid. In u case when 1 both frontal lolws and the lipper portion of another section of .the brain were removed. To retain unimpaired mental powers, a human needs only his midbrain and the left hemisphere, the surgeon declared. Dr Bost's report of the enzyme discovery wn« hailed as a noteworthy atop toward effective treatment of conditions that heretotnre have tiaffled medical science. Be I aid that histamine is present in i almost a’l tissues and is not dangerous when taken through th • mouth. When Injected Into the blood stream in large quantities it is fatal, however, he said. A monkey's heart was cut into strip* in the ex.)(eritncnt whii-h led Slddle to comment that "heart | failure" is a mi-taken term in most cases. He told of slicing [ hearts of monkeys into segments and watching them continue to beat witli .nearly r.erfei t rhythm | or from nine to 15 hours. Hoov«r Will Speak At Red Cross Meeting — Washington. March 2.8- -/U.R) President Hoover will head an imposing list of speakers at the 1 annual Red Gross convention beginning here May 5. Karl A. i Bickel, president of the United Press Associations, will address ' the Red Cross annual luncheon at the Hotel Mayflower May 7. Other speakers during the fonrday sessions will include Secretary of Interior Wilbur, Assistant Secretary of Commerce Julius Klein. ’ Senator Capper. Repn.. Kan., and j tohn Barton Payne, chairman of; the Red Cross. COLD WEATHER BEGINS TO FADE • CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE* had melted in central Indiana. Chicago. Mar. 28.—(U.R)—Havoc j was balanced, with benefit today as stat st cs of th" heaviest snowfall in the history of the Chicago area • was computed. The 45-honr storm cost Chicago ■ more than $3.0t>0.000. it was esti-! mated, while it was a God-send t >l 'armers and truck gardeners whose' fields needed moisture. Item- in the city’s expense bill l ncluded Chicago surface lines.! 51.000.0u0, half in loss of revenue ind half in wages to 22.000 extra, snow shoyelers: ri hoads. $500,000 ( n similar loss: citizens ant bus I ness houses, $500,000 for hotel bills; loop department stores. $500,000 in loss of business.* Tills was offset by the gain of ural districts in moisture for drysoil. The 19.1 and 19.2 inches of • now that fell in various districts was the equivalent of about 1.61 inches of ra nfall and made up th-* deficiency in precipitation that had prevailed this season. Normalcy was in prospect both n the city and country areas today •s the heavy snow disappeared under a warm sun. Transformation was again on schedule, milk and ood deliceries were made on time ind schools had reopened. Fears of a pos< hie flood menace l from the rapidly melting drifts I vere quieted by C. A. DonneL chie. l >f the wtather bureau. He said (

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'that although some 2J)ib>,W)i).o(K»t < tons of snow was dumped <>«<’ (Cook county, drainage facilities i ; were adequate to carry It away • easily. 1 -- o ' Youth Faces Charge Christianbitrg, Va.. March 28--(U.R) James Evans. 21-year old Kansas youth, was formally chtirg- ( ed with tlrat degree murder follow- ' ing the death today of Charles' lattliam. 38, New York tourist, | fatally shot Wednesday night by l a hitch-hiker a short distance , west of ('hriatinnhurg. Evans, arrested last night at I Radford. Va.. 10 mil»s west of! here, made a full confession and ' watt identified us the assailant by laitham him-elf, before the NewYork man died. Chief of Police J. S. Rangeley said. 0 ASKS BOARD TO FORM OPINION iCONTINI’EdY’ROM PAGE onr» F Tgi-son an invitation to testify hut might t. k the judiciary com- ! mitlee to do so as an expra-sion of I its will ngness to get the oth' r • ide of the story on Ontario's ttq-1 ( nor problem. A letter written in 1918 by Prasi-• <’ nt Hoover, then food adminis-1 't for to Senator Sheppard. Dem., iT» x.. ather of th ■ 18th amendment. I"xpl:'-’n ns a refusal to stop beerbrewing by asserting that "it is | I mighty difficult to get drunk on j 2.75 per cent beer: it will be ea-y I enough if we force a substitution! jot distilbd drinks for it," was re-j (called todav bv Rep. Celler, Dem .' N. Y Celler demanded that "if thej I president has changed li s opinion i lot mild beer, now is the time to! (state it." 0 5 CANDIDATES SEEK OFFICES FRiTm PAGE ONE) j I running in the Democratic primary, i for the office of assessor for Preble I . township. i John Felty of Wabash township today tiled declarations of being a candidate for county assessor on the Democratic ticket. Two errors were made recen ly in announced declarations of can didates. Joseph K. Yoder has filed sot the Democratic nomination for assessor of Hartford township. It . was previously reported that Yoder I was seeking the trusteeship of that ownship. Frank Martin is a Demoera’ie candidate for the office of commis I sicner of the second district instead • >f the thirti district as was previously announced. Candidates have until 5 o'clock l April 5. to file declarations, Cou'tI y Clerk Nelson slated today. Merger Reports Current San Francisco. Mar. 28 ,UR>—i i Reports that a merger was in the making which would unite Stan tiard Oil company of New Jer-ey and Standard Oil company of Califora a, were recurrent here today. Califoin a officials refused to

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comment. The merger, according to the rumors, awaits action of the Federal courts on the propsed consolidation of the Standard Oil company ol New York ami the Vacuum Oil company, which is regarded as u t, st case. Fusion of lb" two companies would combine one of th" largest producing gioups In th 1 world with one of the largest refining and distribut'ng organizations, total emu I billed re.ourees amounting to up pioxlmately o Liquor Clearance From Canada Shows Decrease Washington. March 28-(UP) A decease of almost 50 per cent in liquor clearance from Canada to the United States in February. 1930. as 1 otnpared with the corresponding month yeai ago. was rapor.ed to day by the treasury department. Statistics from Ottawa showed that during Fe uuaiy this year exports from Canada aggregated 150, '.•97 gallons of in oxicating beverages. In February 1929 the corresponding figute was 282.985 gallons. A t ill to prevent exports of liquor ton the United States now is before j he cauadia i parliament. Nutt Remains Head of Bank Directors Cleveland. Ohio, March 28 (U.R) l— Although he has resigned as president of the Union Trust com pany. Joseph R. Nutt, treasurer of i the Republican National committee. explained today he would conI tinue as ( hairman of the board of I the Trust company. Announcenien s of Nutt's retireI rnent led to, reports he might be ' in line for the Republican committee chairmanship in event that

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