Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 138, Decatur, Adams County, 11 June 1931 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
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TEAMMftNAGERS TALKING TRADES New York. ’June 11. --XU.RJr—With the trading deadline only four days away rumors of trades between major league clubs were Hying ■ thick and fast today. New York's two teams, the St. I Louis Cardinals. Brooklyn. Cincinnati ami Washington were the ’ clubs figured prominently in the , last minute trade talks. .Midnight. June 15; is the deadline for trades. I Manager Joe McCarthy of the Yankees is making no secret of b.t search for pitchers. It was reported the New York club was dickering with Washington yesterday, ottering to send Tony Lazzeri to the Senators in exchange for Bump ' Hadley and Jackie Haves. The Giants and Brooklyn are af-| ter Red Lucas, star pitcher of the ■ Cincinnati Reds. Brooklyn also is! after an outfielder who hits right! handed. The Robins are said to ! have offered the Cardinals Johnny Frederick tor Taylor Douthit. Both are center fielders, but Frederick is a left handed hitter while Douthit j swings from the right side. One of the players Washington received in a lalst minute trade with! the Browns last year—Manush—' figured prominently in the Senators 9 to 4 victory over Cleveland yes-| terday. Manush got three of the' ten hits Washington collected off ! Hudlin and Shoffner. The victory I was the fifth in a row for the Sen-1 ators and enabled them to creep within four and one half games of j the Philadelphia Athletics, Amer- j ican league pace setters. The contests scheduled between; Chicago and New York. Detroit and j Boston and St. Louis and Philadel-I phia were postponed 'because of; rain. Although defeated 13 to 4 by Bos-> ton. the St. Louis Cardinals retain- l 1 ed their four and a half game mar-11 gin in the National league as the 1 second place New York Giants lost'' to Pittsburgh. 5 to 1. The Braves pounded Derringer,. 1 Lindsey and Kaufmann for 19 hits ' while Zachary held the Cardinals’’ in check until the ninth inning i : when he was replaced by Cantwell. ! 1 French held the Giants to three ’ scattered hits and would have, scored a shut-out except for Grant- j ham’s error. The Pirates collect-1 ed ten hits off four Giant hurlers. ’ The Chicago Cubs advanced to I a tie with the Giants for second | place by shutting out Philadelphia, j 3 to 0. Root he d the Phillies to i four hits. * I 5 Cincinnati continued its winning • " avs and trimmed the Brooklyn ' Robins, 10 to 3. Rixey held the | Kobins in hand while the Reds 11 clouted Phelps and Moore for 141 hits. Yesterday s hero: Charley Root, I who pitched the Chicago Cubs to! 1 a 3 to 0 victory over the heavy hitt-:' ing Philadelphia Phillies. Root al- ! lowed only four scattered bits. . ■
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HOPE REMAINS i EOR LOST MEN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE> board bow turning port during maneuvers. The Yuta ported its i lelm but strnce the Posedon at ,; right angles, naval authorities reported. The captain of the Yuta was said |to have reported he ordered his I engines full speed astern 15 seconds ater the collision. The Posei- ! don, with a hole in its starboard I side, sank in about two minutes. Five officers and 30 men were jsaved, but two died of injuries, i British warships at the scene, 21 miles north of Weihaiwei, in Shantung province, used graphling hooks ■to locate the Poseidon, down in 120 feet of water, jlivers aided in the rescue work. o CHURCH, STATE SCRAP IS ENDED — | (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) ' ed. although in some cases promotion may precede removal from the scene of the controversy. This pro- | eedure is traditional. Thus, it was understood that I Mgr. Pizzardo, assistant secretary of state at the Vatican, who already has resigned, may be named ' either apostolic delegate at Washington, or made a cardinal. Piz- ! zardo resigned as assistant-general ' of the Azione Cattolica, which Italy, i in reply to the Vatican's protests' 'of anti-Catholic. demonstrations, I charged with political activities in j alleged violation of the concordat. CHILDREN DAY PLANNED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ijtercise, "A Pledge for Children's | Day.” Recitation .... Mary Tope j Song, "Trust in the Lord.” Recitation Glenola Rauch I Recitation Ethel Bunner Drill. "Rose Drill." • Recitation Rosanna Rauch I Recitation Ida May Cottrell : Tableau. Song, "Sing Praise." Talk Rev. Matteson Collection. Tableau. "Os Such is the Kingdom i of Heaven." — —o C. E. RALLY TO ’ ,r BE AT BERNE (CONTINUED FK'iV PAGE ONE> Song 4 M. E. Stauffer Invocation Rev. C. H. Suckau Welcome Wilbur Nussbaum, president Mennonite C. E. Society. Response Homer C. Augsburger, vice-president Adams County C. E. Union. Vccai Duet Helen and Marcella Atz, Reformed Society, Berne. , Business, Remarks. Vocal Duet Lucy Alice and Mil- ’ dred Miller. Geneva. Address Kenneth Timmons I Offeratory.
I Clarinet Solo —“Moon Glade" Edward Martz, Evangelical Society, Decatur. Mizpah Benediction. BANKERS HEAR TAX PROBLEM DISCUSSION’S ' O PAGE ON? was vice president during the past and it is customary to advance tlie vice president to the presi i dency. He will succeed Erank B. Bernard, president of the MerIchants’ National Hank. Muncie. Other speakers on today's program included Eugene Stevens, Chicago; Fred D. Rose, Muncie; and Earl H. Crawford, Connersville. Count Anton Carlson, president of the Norway-Sweden Bankers’ Association. and Dr. W. H. Kiekhofer, University of Wisconsin, will be speakers at the dinner tonight. o Railroad Leaders Are Studying Depression New York. June 11 —<U.R) —EX forts to lift the country’s railroads i out ot their current depression I were due today at a meeting of ( western and southern railroad j executives with a committee ap- j pointed by the -“astern railroads to , prepare a petition for higher; freight rates for presentation to the interstate commerce commission. Indications were that if an agreement is reached, the petition will be filed with the interstate commerce commission within ’ a wieek. A meeting was held last week by representatives of a committee formed by eastern and western railroads, which subsequently enlisted the southern railroads in the move. Following a meeting in Washington Tuesday, traffic officers of southern railroads recommended executives to be guided life 1 arrangements made at today's meeting of the combin- < ed committees.
iGIRL’S DEATH TO BE PROBED ' I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ! grown out of the discovery of Miss Faithfull’s body last Monday morn I ' ing on the shore of Long Beach. j Three days of investigation virI I tually have eliminated the theory r ! that the attractive, party-loving ’ ’ foster daughter of Stanley Faith- ’ i full, wealhy chemical manufact.iri er, might have committed suicide. j District Attorney Elvin N. Edwards I I i has gathered enough evidence to ! convince him that (Starr was mur-! ’ | dered before her body was cast, | into the sea. I j The prosecutor expects to obtain murder indictments tomorrow. i Most startling, perhaps, of de- | velopments within the last 24 hours was a hospital record card, which portrayed Miss Faithfull as I scarcely the demure and reserved i ■ home girl that her stepfather had dea< ribed to police.
GoGd-theijve got to be good] I * yll {— — T z" \ gallant army of / r 'v < >.H help fight your battle /i. rll X.AflMßw'jflH in the cause of Health If / 11 ) l Uli v iZ// Whet modern civilization owes the trained If/ I \ i>s ’ jrs£ cc*n’t be figured in dollars. Tireless, ! / / / Y patient, efficient, she has earned one of k ; Z ' . jF The highest places in public and private f | esteem. We couldn’t do without her — /'z / jgSß' z why not tell her so? They have away with them, too! Not only do you trust them, but evenly. Credit that to the ripe mild you /z& them. And it’s the same tobaccos and the pure imported with a good cigarette. cigarette paper. Smokers stick to chesterfield be- Every chesterfield is made to cause they find them dependably mild- smoke milder and to taste better, er. You can smoke as many as you like. More men and women every day And chesterfield smokes more are finding this out! Chesterfield SMOKED BY MORE MEN AND WOMEN EVERY DAY
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. JUNE 11. 1931.
The record revealed that a little! more than a year ago she was takI en to Bcllevup hospital as an alcoI holic patient after being found in I ja hotel room with a man who de-' scribed himself to the ambulance! surgeon as her husband. She was! . suffering from bruises and lacera-. (ions, but neither her parents, who took her home the next day, nor | the police have been able to learn! the name of her companion that ■ night. The young woman's stepfather! I admitted he had given Starr liquor I frequently, hoping it would pre-1 I vent her from drinking bootleg l whisky in speakeasies, he said. In hope of locating rjecent drink ! ' ing companions of the girl, auth-! ■ orities are seeking aid of Scotland : Yard. On May 29 Miss Faithfull! reportedly was taken from the liner Franconia in an intoxicated! condition. Francis Peabody Ham- : lin, cruise director for the Cunard! line and scion of a prominent j i Boston family, was said by Ed- ;
! wards to have Introduced her to a man aboard the liner with whom j police are eager to get in touch. I The London detective have been risked to obtain statements from i Dr. G. Jameson Carr, the ship sur- ! geon, who is understood to have been acquainted with Starr, and from otli,er officers of the ship. An autopsy report revealed that Miss Faithfull died unmistakably from drowning in the sea. More important, however, was the fact that particles of sand were found in her lungs, showing she had succumbed in shallow water. Be ing an expert swimmer, she almost certainly would have been safe if she were able to help herself. It is Edwards' belief that she was murdered by two men in New York who, after striking her on the head, carried her unconscious to Ixmg Beach and took her out to sea a short distance to abandon her. She had not be»n drinking on the night of her death, the autopsy disclosed.
LEGISLATORS 1 STAGE BATTLE F (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' licans. who jumped to their feet. e "Kick the Aiderman out." yelled 1 | one downstate representative In ref erence to O'Grady's membership in 1 i the Chicago City Council. ' ! Several republicans charged from Z their seats upon O'Grady, but doorJ keeper F. J. Leonard bad beaten i ! them to it and was wrestling with (the Democrat for possession of the! pad. O'Grady fought and fists flew L freely for a lew minutes before or I 1 ler was restored and the pad plae I ed back on the desk. B | From then on the fight was prinf > scpally verbal until just Irefore mid- ( . night when the republicans, by a s ! vote of 71 to 70 passed their amendo meals. t The pa ty fighting centered about r a republican desire to redistrict the ? state this year, while they are in control. Democrats want to wait un-
til 1933 in the belief that they then! will control the legislature. The same question was up in the afternoon. when O'Grady hurled a copy of the house rules across the floor ’ at Representative Elmer J. Schnac- 1 kenberg, a Chicago Republican. ] Conflict over the proposals to aid t Chicago were less heated, but far i from friendly. Rep. Guy Smith of t Pana complained at one point that , ( downstaters were being "highhatt- ( ed" by Mayor Anton J. Cermak of ( Chicago. i' I Cermak was before a legislative !) j committee most of the day begging ' ? laid in the crisis which has left Chi- ' ! ago millions t.f dollars in debt |■" I mil wilh no money to pay its emI jloyes. ’ermak be’ue«ed would aid some by reading out of three bills which Cermak believed would aid ome by lelpina re establish the city's credit 1 slid making it possible to borrow 1 noney until taxes are collected. o ' ! f Get the Haoit—rcaae &t Horn* h
Kvaii Head, '■ ">■>». s l-.agles the « session here . Other e were. Vite Preside ney, Portland; secw?' I *' Cloe, Noblesville Gutcsell, Michigan J* < harles Stewart, KoknX A. M. Foiij, ... “’’d; guard. Edward Wd’?*' guard. <). Haute- trustee t sport. e ' U * e «N< — ] Bear Attacks K tep) -Marion, Ji| lle 11—mh. J black bear kept in ti „ turned upon Georg. s ’JS teeper today, inflicting «J Juries. Smith was tak #n ** tai suffering wo aw i 8 on ' *' 1 ark ' and rib trace
