Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 67, Decatur, Adams County, 19 March 1931 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

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NORTHWESTERN IN DIFFICULTY Chicago, Mar. 19. (U.K NitUt-j western University’s status in ti. - North Central As oei,.tio:i of C>l-| leges and secondary schools r - inained in doubt "fbday as the ass.i-j ciation's board of review on ath-. letics recommended Northwestern’.: | case be returned to it with prove, to act the: eon. Northwestern became involve.! ■ in a diffetence of opinion with the! North Central when inve.ttiga.o” i attempted to make a survey of athletics at that school in Febni-t ary. President Walter Hill Scott of , Northwestern was asked to appea v before representatives of the North! Central today to explain the stand his school assumed in asking the; investigators to suspend their ac-j tivities at the Evanston institution.] If Northwestern should decide toj withhold the incompleted report of the North Central investigators, I that school would automatically be] left, off the association’s list of ap , proved institutions. Members of the North Central] have n rule which specifies thil,» athletic contests will not be sclted-1 tiled with schools which have been dropped from the accredited list because of failure to abide by its! athletic standings. Northwestern, according to Presi-I dent 11. M. Cage of Coe college, has made an “unfortunate interpretation of the purpose of the investigators.’’ ami that the North Central’s purpose was to cooperate with the Big Ten. He said that the North Central was not interested in individual cases, but in bringing about a set of standards for all schools. Rumors of irregularities at Northwestern have been freely circulated since tint school went through an undefeated season in football in the Big Ten and won its first basketball championship in history this season. Four other members of the Big Ten. Minnesota, Chicago, Illinois and Ohio State, were investigated l.v the North Central at the sam? time as Northwestern and there was no friction at those institutions. Butler University of Indianapolis. which was suspended from the North Central last year, was recommended for reinstatement by the board of reviews. Butler was suspended principally because of its huge athletic expenditures which jeopardizes its endowment in the eyes of the North Central. "Butler has ‘cleaned house' and is now worthy of re-instatement,", the board’s report read. Thirteen other colleges were recqmmended for approval, including the U- of Detroit. Ursuline col-] lege of Cleveland, the College of Ozarks. Arkansas State Teachers College and Concord State Norm: 1 of Athens. W. Va. ' Southwestern college of Winfield, Kan., was dropped from the accredited list. o CHARGES FILED AGAINST HYDE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! der the supervision of snperintend- < nts of other districts, and that all time for which she drew pay was spent in office work. It is alleged in the specifications

Collegian Wins Battle flEma<3rCg ■«£? y \ ’ wi'- '-K > W-» #« , ;'| >M- - ?&,.v/WWw * . v ‘Rk - lc vß®*’!? **• <• #. iF® I w7 w feM wL v' s t IfiiLr - ti V' > wf X Mk . W| '**’*■ - UP’/ w * > **' '..">■:■»'•’■■■■•■•■ • • Ihe spectacular showing of Herbert Freeman of New York. .1. <ank Gino Garibaldi in their bout at New York, bring- to th :» e another contender for the crown of James Londos, world’s champ 01 The collegiate wrestler of the City College, N. Y., is shown whirin ■? his opponent around the ring with a double leg hold, which brought him victory after 35 minutes and 12 seconds.

that duties performed by Mrs. Hyde ’.l the office induced work which he law provided that the superintendent should perform and that the law makes no provision for an (assistant for such work. Tie spe< i(licatlnns covering several typewriti.cii pacts, go into considerable deI .Ils in st ting out llleged irregularI Th" con ty superintendent has re- ] i ained Judge C. E. Sturgii and th- ( ; inn of Simmons and Simmons to • pres nt him in the defense an I I will fight the charges. He has te - la.ed that at least one-third of the ■ o.titles ave followed the same 1 loan adopted here to provide an of- I ,iice assistant, 1 pointed out ..that ' 1 he bills have been allowed regular- ’ ly by the county commissioners who 1 I were aware of he plan adopted in ’ | providing an office and in providing for the payment of the salI ary. It 1930 CHAMPION IS ELIMINATED St. Me l. Chicago 39: St Fran- | cis Athol New York 20. Father Ryan, Nashville. Tenn.. 41; Messmer High. Milwaukee, 21. * CoVer, Winona, hfinnesota, 42: St Joc?ph. Enid, Oklahoma, 11. | Chicago Ma t h 19—(UP) - The I :eighth annual national Catholic inbasketball tournament ; . ntered th ■ second stage of the ■first round today with De La SailInstitute Chicago 1929 and 1930 champion among the missing. Central Catholic high Wheeling W. Va. defeated the defending < hampions last night 30-24. In other two games last night Catholic high Washington Ind. won from ; St. Marys of the Mount High, Pittsburgh. Pa.. 37-12. ai d De Li Salle high Minneapolis de eated Spalding Institute, Peoria. 111., I'i-I.T. in an overtime game. Eleven games were scheduled today, beginning at 9 A. M and extending through 9 p. m. The second round will start tomo row. — o -- GIVE PROGRAM SUNDAY NIGHT (Cvi.s't IN ■- r”?C‘M PifiF OV!?I Duet—‘‘ln the Service of the King" Mrs. B. Shroyer and Mrs. D. Goldner. Story—" Life of Henry Martyn " Mrs. Chas. Beineke Part HI. Stewardship of Monev Talk “Giving" .Mrs Chris Lehman Male Quartette —".The Riches of Love" 1 <■(> Kirsch, H. Griber, C. Lehman. O. L. Kirsch Part IV. . Stewardship of Prayer Duet —“Beautiful Garden of Prayer" Mrs. B. Shroyer and Mrs. D Goldner. Story—" Following God's Prayer | Program" Mrs. Ralph Yager Part V. Stewardship of Life Pcem —“The Rope Holders’ 1 Mrs. Esther Hunter' Hymn—" Take My Life” Offertory. Benediction. i Doxology. '! Silent Prayer. ( Postlude. Mink Active Hunter 1 Minks not "illy hunt rabbits I ’ iiuskints and otliei animals foi ■,h.,1 leu they go into l.he watei » ' ■ "ifp

STATION WOWO WILL BROADCAST Announcement has been mad" that station WOWO, the Main Auto S pply Co., of Fort Wayne will broadcast all games o." the statfinal basketball tourney, with ciex ep.'ion of the Friday night session. contracted programs over tin Columbia Chain for Friday night present the broadcasting these two games. The- tourney will start at nine o’clock Friday evening with thee garni s scheduled for the morning session opening with Munci? and Kendallville. Bluffton and Frankfort open the afternoon round at two o’elm- ... Four games v. i I be played Saturday iimrniii'- starting at S:lt) oh lock. Semi-finals will star: at 2:30 Saturday afterpoon with t c final battle at 8 p. m. WOMEN INMATES AT STATE VILLE THREATEN RIOT (CONTINUED FROM PVT? "'NET •unwn into th" cel) house Mrs. F nnegan feared Hie women would i revolt. Warden Hill ordered the inmates hick into their cells as soon i as emergency work, occasioned by the rioting was finished. M-arwhi'e. in the twin penitentiaries. state ploicemen under the ■ nuzzles of machine guns, pried I into eve’-'- < -11 and searched all •f th" 1 702 inmates for weapons. ■ r>.-- no n they had unearthed a , ItianHtv ' knives and saws, Indii "•'ng. W •• ■n Hill said, that ; ".. r .p pr an( | bloodshed was i’.lannel i • th- crazed feions. O-'e n’"l ■ shift dirk found was fashioned from a GO-penny nail bat i calculated to l*> dangerous in hand-tnhand fighting. ; Altbon-’i '•■n’h prisons vw» eejot ,• -’ra- the forenoon. Warden H f ”. took no chances. He held the •'>oo soldiers, guards and state poll e in readings”Joliet, 81., Mar. 19. —(U.R) —An , oninous silence hung over the riotitom Stuteville prison today while more than 600 guards patrolled the ; walls and trinities fought the last (of seven fires which the prisene s I themselves had started. Every prisoner remained locked lin his ceU >” I-' ! ' box” cell- » acxarw

How to gain New Strength WRIWIB|CTjBMy in the Spring C ' I'£ VT ‘j&Jfe, sSfeHSiT Every spring countless thousands , ■ nafljr &/■' take S.S.S. — the purely vegetable - - tonic— to build back their red-blood-cells so that they may have that new strength which makes for a keen appetite, firm flesh, a clear skin and c greater resistance against infection ife./ and disease. You, too, will want to ▼ take S.S.S. for this very reason. Colds, fin and sickness play havoc with Select the larger size as it holds the red-blood-cells and the body there- ()„„[,]„ the quantity and represents tore has less resistance against further . .* f c « c r., disease attacks! I a price saving. © S.S.S. Co. Every Spring take S.S.S. Tonic ““ -’ _ _ 1!J • z__ _ ' ' — ————«*——w I Confirmation Suits Q Very dressy, very smart, all the new style details for <or.firr.iation Day and Easter. Blue serges, TjffiWr ' lighter colored suits — in fact, everything that is correct, stylish raUragM and appea irg to the boy. $6.95 $11.95 ■■ wi'A 2 golf knickers, coat and vest $8.95 ~514.95 * " viih 2 long trousers, coat and vest « A cor, p e.c 'ire cf accessories to go with his new’ suit. | John T. Myers Co., Inc

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MARCH 19. 1931.

. house. Orders from Warden Henry iC. Hill were that they bo kept I there, deprived of all privileges,’ ! Isolated from the outside world, | and shorn of all merits. Four companies of National | guardsmen, city, state and county | police patrolled the prison, inside i and out, to prevent a recurrence of I yesterday's riot which resulted in | the shooting of three prisoners I and destruction by fire of almost s'>ou.(um worth of stat« property. One <>f the wounded pHsoners, ■ Ray Arney, died early today in the Stuteville hospital. He was shot ■ in the stomach nt the height of the riptfng yesterday when guards | rushed the dining hall. Arney was I from Chicago >•• • serving a term , I for rchbe- . Both 7 ,Solis we'e quiet at d i Imt t-.i: (bm guards remained on . (duty. Only the burned ruins remained of six of the seven buildings. The seventh, the machine shop, still blazed. Trusties aided firemen in preventing the flames from spread- > ing. Quiet prevailed, but the extra ' guards and the smouldeting ruins bore mute evidence of the mutiny that was quelled only after the convicts were driven to their cells at ftie points of guns an I convinced by force that their rioting was futile in the face of Warden Hill's • determination that discipline be ■ maintained. ' ’ Even the shouts of "parole boafd. get the parole board," which the crazed felons had kept up for hours, died away as darkness tell. (Troops were marched around th'? i cellhouses as a gesture to prove the wai den's declaration that "this is , not a country dub." About 200 ptisoners accused of inciting and starting the riot were I in solitary confinement. An unnamed Mexican prisoner who was - accused of starting the fires with i gasoline drained from prison trucks • also was in solitary. Warden Hill said he would be indicted for arson. Because the mess hall, kitchens > and bakery, as well as all the prm 1 visions they contained, had been I destroyed, there was nothing for the men to eat. "I am sorry for them, but they' did it themselves, and will have to wait for food." said Hill. Work of rebuilding the mess ha 1 w: s started last night, but orders . were that the men be fed in their I cells until all signs of mutiny had ! passed. Warden Hill, just recently recov- > ered from an operation, scarcely i has slept for several days, keeping ? in constant touch with condition • at Stuteville an I at the old prison, four miles away, where two ritfta within the last week resulted in i two deaths and property (damage. HiU and the Rev. Elijius Weir, chaplain, were two of the heroes ol ? yesterday’s outbreak. B>th walkt ed. unarmed, among the rioting pris--1 oners, pleading with them to stop. B th were treated with respect, 1 they said, but their warnings were 1 unheeded until after guards ha 1

fired alMiut 39 shots. The rioting started by signal among jibout 250 convicts In the mess hall. Two guards inside the hall were beaten and thrown out us tiie mutiny spread rapidly. The convicts rushed into the open and the unnamed Mexican began his rounds of the buildings. He had a handkerchief over his face. He tired building after building as lie ran. Others of the rioting eonvicts aided him. Soon the whole prison was flam Ing. which roared t > a height of 200 feet and cast a dense cloud of smoke over the countryside. Many prisoners who did not wish to join in the riot raced immediate ly to their cells. Among them were Nathan Leopold and Martin Durkin. Tiie original rioters, joined by others, continued the mutiny fur two hours while Joliet firemen waited outside Hie gates, unable t.o enter to. fight the fires. i'pon entering the prison yard. Chaplain Weir was given a soap box by some of tiie convicts. They were quiet for a minute while he stood upon the box and pleaded that they were hurting inly themselves. "We've heard that before,’’ a convict shouted, "we want a new parole board." The rioting began

■ This Spring We Promise Even More I DRE v -INESS at a Lower Outlay I • "Sy SLITS and Topcoats are presented this season in a fashion re- | ] view that outrivals anything this Store has even shown before. I Fn* < lhc vim and vigor of the new season are correctly interpreted I 7 in the modeling, in the woolens and in the needlework. Here I > cu wi ’‘ nolc lhat the designcrs wlth their accomp,ices strove 10 I*e ' ou C,othcs cf cußtom - ,ike tharacter - and were sucres, ‘ n I ( fu, ‘ And eqital’yinterestirg are the new lowered prices-now X /i \ « akirg it possible for most men to wear good (lothes al / i. * \ v A/ / / ’° W • L A uA SUITS 1/ / I /Xi / / •X' re-adj listed our vnlin scluin" W 4 of ineicliiintli’sina attuned to new V y'l |2 / • market conditions and gn il' i’ nuhw’ V j \ expo lotions ol buyers. W■ '■ I’"' t able t<> price our lines lower through ll buving advantages and a I<;"ci 11 "’ of profit-taking. You'll see tin-e\< ei- / ,1 | X p ili> in Ihe-e -nils ;il ;i v.du< UILI $22.50 \ J with Extra Trouser S’27.jd 7W\- K\ TOPCOATS 1 \\„ 1|! ' \ \ You’ve never 11 s “ cl ' XJM ' I A \ \ fine fabrics .i- '"'"nf r VI \ \ in this line llllin A ’ A A I I I ' 1 lars of our i>n -cu pru* \ A V I I ..imported I weedsI'■ 1 ' 11 « ’ | fleeces, cloth-. \ l\ I \ | vicunas, worsteds. /\ \ ‘ v' I erts, gabardines and knit . I >./'y/ V i \ weaves. ..fu 1 -ilk-lined \ y or shower-proofed jl this special pri ' — 51950 Special SI.OO Values for Saturday - ■ - - - - I. ■■■■— —— Boys Mens Caps Boys Boys Sweaters Leather sweats, Golf Hose Knickers o lull 8 piece lops. Plaids, fancies, Pl-ii.k tweeds. fiood patterns, slip- wonderful assort- dark patterns, ail twists’ lig h I llili oq V ‘w S ' d S ’ ”1 V? ment of sizes and sizes and a good <|.>ik iriltern- ‘’lasS, - tw<;i fv U Z :M..>(* va ues. Saturday Only! all sizes 2 sweaters Choice 4 pair SI.OO SI.OO SI.OO sl.oo__ TVT„., C Tine ELDER SHIRTS NEW PETER PAN Mens lies (for Men) WASH SUITS Regular SI.OO stock choice Values. Madras, prints A chance to stock ui> 1,1 of the store broadc oths. plain or fancy vour summer needs. 2 ties patterns. Saturday Only 2 suits $1.50 SI.OO SI.OO __ JohcL’T’MyfiCACo-Inc / CLOTHING AND SHOES J FOK DAD AND , LAD' ' DECAT UK- INDIANA-

I anew, more fiercely than before. The convicts uhot were Ray Arney, who died later. Mike l a ruri'i and Edward Dehaney. Deihaney was hurt erltienlly Several (other men suffered from tear gas (when guards burled bombs union: them. . 8.-nldt-H Hill and Weir other (heroes of the Hot were Frank ! Kness. a guard, who ran through a ] flaming building to spread the I alarm, and J Im I? Easer, imnrlH!oll(.<l banker, who load a «notip of fire fightets. Both Hill nn'l Weir ■ ntneil the riot and others of the last week to overcrowding in‘the two prison? where. Hill sai l. 4.702 men a.e eon . lined. In an Interview with the United Ihess. Weir said that much of the unrest was due to' state parole |bo::.d actions which the convicts ! consider unfair. Right Efforts The great high.road -f Intmtin welfare lies iilo' Utl ♦' "Id , ” tr 1 wai <d stemlfiist well do ng. rtU.i they who tire the most per slslent, >tn<l work* in the true 1 spirit, will Invariably be the inns;! sih’uissfuL Suw’us* Um Ihh-Is of every right es I fun Samuel Smiles

receipts show BIG INCREASE (•(>\ riN'I'HD FROM PAGE ONE) Tills Is an annual charge. Faced with the necessity of additional financing to take caro of Soldiet's loan bonus payments, treasury . fficials said they found nothing cheerful in the genetai situation. They still expect a drop in total income tax collections for the fl:st quarter, despite the temporary increase noted in today <- . tabulation. L

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Your Money Cheerfully Refunded, y If On- Bottle of Dare’s Mentha u Pepsin Doesn’t Do You More Good , Than Anything You Ever Used < There's a sure way to put an end 1 to st abbot n indigestion, gas shortness of breath and all the ailments that are caused by a bad stomach. You are simply patching up your,], stomach when you take things that |B onlv give relief for a few hours. |c Whv not build up your run-down li stoma, h make it strong and vig-;e . (1 -.,us so that you can eat anything n

Total Incom,. lilv " RCI " h''‘tinnlSjH I totalled U,277j;v, 1|6 '■ With $1352,!10n.U2 hr ' period last fiscal y. w S Cor.l Island C irou .'H The Bert „ re H ' M ’ f '" """I id,m,|, •ibolll twenty ~f ui.1,,1 IOPSY at sij,7s Cash Coal Yard. pho£|H Rememhor Itipsy keeps you warm. (••,.?■ ard—Phone 32. h W

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