Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 103, Decatur, Adams County, 30 April 1931 — Page 5
9te parks Sen SATURDAY :!0 - ,Spwln " parks '» thu Indiana ' mull) n«xt Satm , v was ainioiincud to )■; I, MU l.lober. commrva- ,»»<"« director. sia"t two weeks M , m many yarn, it wan OU , ami largely for two weather permitted wnrk ill the parka and hn 111 desired to aid the extra men were em|H u i|), ilie result the annual up process which now is way. mMI. noanced that Joseph cl Indianapolis, an ex--oe<l hotel man, is the new j^K„j (i;i lire at the pavlllioii in K'iml, ell hake Mulligan. Mr. |K 1,,i number of years was ' imißer at the f’layin city. grille Ims |K at tin .i , ilium and the place |Hj <> |,„l i i ovide service for JH r ~ li also has been reHy. -ieepillg moms nl , peratml in connecALr • >t rack's cMiieession. H.. pm; i will find many Hw, micii'- in all parks, conser- ■ officials said. A new obHnn, i, wer is added at Clifty
iss gave New Stbenoth sl<in cleared up beautifully
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■ very Spring take SSS. Tonic I SPECIAL SATURDAY! ■ White Organdy Bonnets, 50c value, Saturday . . . . 2dc ■ A few Childrens Dark Hats, 3 to 6 years 25c |H f, . few Flay Dresses—odd sizes 25c Do Not Forget MOTHER’S DAY! Give Her a Lasting Present Smocked Pillows, Hand Worked Scarfs, Pillow ■ Cases, etc. Also Greeting Cards. 'i VITZ GIFT SHOP 221 North Second St. Niblick Bldg.
MORRIS 5 & 10c STORE Souvpniors PRINCESS *1 *sJ SATURDAY, MAY 2 - }.! l l Jugs, Buckets, — , - r , and 1 <£M£. Special Feature Pajamas I Churns, Paper Weights, DAIRY PAILS Barrel Banks, , Guaranteed Cedar Chests, 45c value Not to p ac j e Cedar Tie Racks 10c 2 5 C SI.OO Choice s i each each GRAVE DECORATIONS FOR MOTHER’S DAY WREATHS and SPRAYS LADIES BLOUSES Beautiful tokens of remembrance for Rayon— Crepe—Pongee—Voil Mother’s grave, May 10th Beautiful Assorted t olors 25c, 50c SI.OO «*. SI.OO CLOTHES CLOPAY Choc. Covered MOTHER ~|N WINDOW CHERRIES MOTTOS SHADES Mother’s Day 40 in Box Green or Tan Wrapped 8 in. x 10 in. 10c . 10c 25c ’ 25c "stair Treads WINDOW SHADES FLUE 8x is »n. 3 f( # x (j ft. — Tan or Green 50c ST ° 1 S |^Q C 3 ft. x 7 ft—Tan or Green 60c J() c ADJUSTABLE laildieß « El Y DEAD WINDOW SCREENS Anklets 1A ‘& or 12x33 in 25c 18 cans 24x33 in 4oC ~air
Falls Park; also additional parking und camping ares. Turkey Run lute au addition of twenty sleeping 1 rooms, while facilities of various character are improved at Pokagon Park on Luke James. Shakamak Indiana’s first artificial lake park! for the first time is now' prepared to entertain large crowds. This park is on the west side of the state in the three counties of Cluy, Sullivan und Greene. For the first time since It was established a few years ago, the reconstructed village of Spring Mills, a pioneer settlement, will he lighted at night by old fashioned lights in vogue 100 years ago. Hoosier state parks last year entertained 500,000 paid visitors despite some economic depression. This record will likely be bested this year, officials believe, due to added facilities for entertainment together with the improved state road connections. o flStrange Love Triangle * Ends With Two Deaths ♦ « Chicago, April 30.—<U.R>—Rather than let his sweetheart leave him to return to her husband, J. H. Hartung of Dayton. Ohio, tricked her into taking “one last drink’’ before they parted, and a moment I later both fell dead at the feet of the husband, who had just announc-: ed proudly that he had won back! her love. The other victim in what police said was one of tile strangest mari- j
Mrs. Mary E. Parker, Bahama. N. C„ writes: “Because of a rundown condition my appetite was poor. I felt tired in the mornings and was troubled with pimples and blackheads. Red bumps came on my face once or twice monthly. After taking S.S.S. the pimples and blackheads disappeared and my skin became clear. I do not feel tired upon rising in the mornings.” You, too, will want to take S.S.S. Select the larger size as it holds double the quantity and i represents a price saving. © S.S S. Co.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1931.
Disillusioned Relieved for the time being from the strain of further questioning, Mrs. Amy Conlin tabove) fortyyeuoold housewife of Queens, N. Y., wept and berated her erstwhile sweetheart, the debonair sheik, James De Pew, whohascon- | fessed to shooting her aged husband in an attempted hold-up Mrs. Conlin and De Pew are held i on cltarges of assault and robbery, I while it is feared her husband will not recover. j tal tragedies on record here was J Mrs. Kathleen Garrison, 38, wife |of Ralph Garrison, a magazine circulator of Kalamazoo, Mich. They died almost instantly of prussic acid which Hartung, a aalesI man, had poured into the liquor I before he urged her to have “just |one last drink’’ before they parted Sin the hotel apartment where they had lived as man and wife. Letters left by Hartung indicatI ed he had planned only to kill him--1 self, but when Garrison and his ! wife, reconciled, called for her clothing he decided suddenly, it appeared, to kill them also. He ofj sered drinks to both, but only Mrs. Garrison accepted. The romance i which led to the tragedy began sev- ; eral months ago, police learned I from Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Jones, friends who came with Garrison from Kalamazoo to help influence Mrs. Garirson to give up Hartung, five years her Junior. Lust March Garrison sent his wife to Miami, Fla., in the hope of breaking up the romance lie knew was growing between her and Hurtling. In April Mrs. Garrison who formerly lived in Chicago and Cleveland, returned home, but she and Garrison quarrelled again over Hartung and she left on April 18. Garrison believed she would come to Chicago and asked several friends here to notify him should they see her. Monday Mrs. Charles E. Foley called Garrison and told him she had heard from Mrs. Garrison, who was living with Hartung at the Bismarck hotel under the names of
Mr. aud Mrs. J. H. Gerliardt. Garrison hurried to Chicago and met his wife at the Foley home. After 30 minutes alone, they au-i nounced happily that they had be- j come reconciled, Mrs. Jones accompanied Garrison and Mrs. Garrison last night to the hotel to get Mrs. Garrison’s clothes. Hartung extended a pleasant greeting when the trio entered his room. He made uo comment when Garrison told proudly that Mrs. Garrison was going home again. On a table were three pints of gin and u whisky bottle, which contained the poison. Hartung had packed Mrs. Garrison's three suitcases, which were on a bed. "Let us have one last drink,’’ he pleaded of Mrs. Garrison. She was willing, but Garrison disapproved and refused tu accept the drink that Hartung mixed. Hartung raised his glass, waited a moment until Mrs. Garrison’s touched her lips, then drank. A moment later he fell, crying "I'm dying; it was poison." Mrs. Garrison fell at ills side both at the feet of her husband. In the room, police found letters written by Mrs. Garrison to Hartung and others from him to her. in one, she called him "the sweetest boy I’ve ever met.” One of Hartung's letters was addressed to “the one 1 love.” It said; “Angel, I can’t go on after having you and realizing that you are leaving me. It is too much for my poor brain. Why must a love like ours be separated? If it were only possible for me to have taken you away! Please understand that my love for you has become such a part of me that to be even away from you Just drives me crazy. “1 would rather be dead than away from you. My love tor you l is deep. I want you to know that the last thought shall be of you. I The last word shall be I have loved j you. After all, dearling, we must die, but to die for one you love is j most pleasant, after all. May God bless you, sweetheart, and give you love to carry on.” Police believed from this letter that Mrs. Garrison had communicated with Hartung Wednesday and that it was not news to him when Garrison told him last night “everything is settled now; Kathleen is going home with me.” They believed, too, that Hartung had planned only to kill himself and that the idea of killing Mrs. Garrison as well, and possibly her husband, was an insane impulse inflamed when lie saw his former sweetheart with her husband and knew instinctively from their actions that he really had lost her.
LOCAL WOMEN’S BROTHER DIES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) brothers, Homer and James A. Crosbie both of Bluffton, and two sisters. Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. Twigg of this city. The body was taken to the home of James A. Crosbie today. Funeral services will l>e held Saturday afternoon a; 2 o'clock at tile James A. : Crosbie home, 410 West Central ave I nue, Bluffton. INSURANCE IS CHIEF TOPIC (CON TIN trie r> WIOW PAGE ONE' problem as the chief concern of | the annual meeting, the business leaders continued today to offer the inspect carefully numerous alternatives, which resolve themselves into these plans: Shorter working days and week, with retirement at an earlier age on pension to make way for younger men. Establishment of a reserve fund for benefits to unemployed for a | certain period, such as the Roches-j ter plan which goes into effect in 1 1033, a modified employment in- j surance scheme. Stabilization of production such 1 as successfully achieved by the Proctor and Gamble Go., soap j manufacturers. Creating of planning hoards for j each industry to control produej tion according to consumptive 1 demand. Budgetary control through industrial units, by trade associations, and even on a national scale. Occupational education of labor ( to train for new jobs when introduction of new' machines displace workers. The variety of such plans and the general sympathy they have aroused here indicate that indus- ■ Tells How To Get Rid of Stubborn Torturing ECZ E M A - Don't waste time with makeshifts -it takes something powerful to put Eczema out of business — And Emerald Oil is a concentrated, powerful antiseptic -it's effecj live —it does the work and a generous bottle costs but 85 cents. It will stop Ihe itching promptly and in a short time rid you of ! bothersome fiery eczema or you 1 run get your money back from j Outshall's Cut Rate Drug Co., or any other good druggist.
\ Virginia Brannen (abdve), 23-year-old dance hostess, native of Bangor, Maine, was found with a bullet through her heart in the Dun wood ie section of Yonk 'rs, N. Y. Police attribute the crime to jealousy.
tries may be expected gradually to evolve some such plans according to the individual ne*ds of the particular industry. The wide divergence of opinion here is indicated in the flat oppotition of sucfli men as Rome C. Stephenson, president of the American Bankers Association, and the warning of Edward A. Filsne, Boston merchant, representative of the liberal group here, that 20 stafeji legislatures have pending before them state compulsory insurance proposals. o | GUSHER STILL ROARS FLAMES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ing the wild gusher under control. John L. Keys, 34, crew worker of Oklahoma City, was the last victim to succumb. He died late last night. A ninth victim, Frank , Feiock, Woodville, 0., was in. a critical condition today. The other dead, identified with difficulty many hours after the fire started presumably from tool friction, were: George Albright, Carnegie, Pa.; Ray Blankenship, Seminole, Okla.; Virgil Woltz. ] Hunter, Okla.; W. H. McCaslin. j Winona, Okla.; W. H. McCaslin, j Jr., bis son, also of Winona; Rob-] ert Murdock, Orlando, Okla.; Wil- j lium Harroun, Canadian. Okla. I Bocnes of the last two had not been removed from the derric pit. Heavy rain fell yesterday over
Just received a fine assortment of splendid Nursery g to c k : Apple, Cherry and ail kinds of fruit trees. Evergreens & Shrubbery plants of all kinds. Priced right, j Schafer Hdw. Co.
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the east Texas oil fields, of which the Cole well was an extension. It had no effect upon the flaming well, and only added the handicap of mud to the workmen’s efforts. BANDITS ARE CAPTURED IN STATE HOLD-UP i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEI overtaken. Botii surrendered without resistance. Tlte men gave their name" after iieing surrendered to custody of j state officials here. Not only did the bandits lose the
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loot, but $35 of their own money] as well, It wan revealed when detectives checked the sum. Pleas of the bandits that the $35 be returned, went unheeded. Nap Costs Him Freedom Portland., Ore. April 30—(UP) — j It’s quite a different life tiiat a 300pound sea lion Is living in Ills fresh water pool at the Portland zoo than when he flipped in the restless seas l around Newport, Ore. But it’s tlte old fellow’s fault that he was taken In captivity. He napped on the beach at New port when the tide wen: out. Ttlie coast guard tied him and offered the prize to the Portland park bureau.
PAGE FIVE
Ring Embedded In Potato Courtland. Kans., April 30.—-,U.R) —Winona Front, a Jewell county girl, loat a valuable ring while digging potatoes last fall aud searched In vain for U for weeks. Her mother, preparing a meal recently, found the ring half embedded in a potato she was peeling. Epidemic of False Alarms Eau Claire, Wis., April 30. —Chief James P. Welsh has threatened to remove nil fire eall boxes in Eau Claire unless an epidemic of false alarms is baited. Half the alarms turned in from call lioxes last year were false, he said.
