Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 80, Decatur, Adams County, 2 April 1932 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SFOHTS

At the Training Camps By United Press > ♦ Memphis, Tenn.. Apr. 2— (UP) The New York Yankees wen here today for a iwo-giime series with Memphis. Vernon Gomez., slender southpaw, is almost eer tain to pitch against the Aihleti s in the Yanks' major league open •) April 12. The Yanks won. 5 to 4 yesterday from the Birmingham! Barons. San Francisco 'l ite Nt w Yo- k Giants still were talking today about the fine hurling of young l Unroll Schumacher, right-hander.' in yesterday's game with the Mission club of the Pacific Coast i league. lie shut the Missions out 4 to ti after fanning six New Orleans Max Carey’s Dodgers were here today for a two-game series with the Clove-! land Indians, after being nosed out. if IO 10. by the Washington; SeimttWs at Biloxi, Miss., yester day. Little Rock. Ark It was uncertain if the White Sox would play j today's scheduled game with Little' Rock because the new stadium was ' not in readlnesi for yesterday's | contest. Montgomery. Ala The St. | Louis Browns ami Minneapolis i Millers continued their series here lialay. after the Browns won fi toi I yesterday in the first game. Bob Cooney. held the Millers to 7 sea: ; hils - New Orleans -Joe Vosntik. last j season's rookie sensation, will be missing from the Cleveland out field for a few days because of a strained muscle in his right side law Angelos — The Pittsburgh l Pirates and Chicago Cubs played again today. The Pirates blanked] the Wrigley players fi to 0 yester-1 day. Swetonic was the victorious hurler. Philadelphia—An intercity game, between the Athletics and Phil-1 lies was on the menu today. Th-: 1 Athletics pulled in from Raleigh. S. (’.. after beating Raleigh. 7 to 2. Atlanta, (la. The St. Louis Cardinals and Atlanta Crackers were' concluding their two-game series here today. The world champions' won. 7 to 3. yesterday. — —o TAX MEASURE SCRAP SHIFTS TO SENATORS • CONTINUED FROM PAGE CNE Increases in postal revenue 30.500,000 ] Economies 125.000.0001 Total $1,152,900,000! Leaving a deficit of $88,100,(100. Mills began the squabble yes terday with a letter to the waysj and means committee complaining that the revenue hill as then drafted would lead to a $165,000.000 deficit. Democratic leaders half met and half challenged his proposals. From a secret session of the ways and means committee they brought ont a tax on stock dividends, hitherto exempt from the normal income tax. They estimated this would produce from $80,000,000 to 588.000.000. The house followed its Democratic leaders and ( voted the stock dividend tax over Republican protests. The house then began to go over the bill again section by section and Republicans immediately moved to restore the general sales tax which had been ripped from the measure by the rebellions coalition led by La Guardia. Repn.. N. Y. The house repulsed the sales tax sortie by a roll cal! of 235 to 160. The next assault on the bill was successful and the house, by 211 to 178. jettisoned the war-time - ——-T

That Shiny Nose completely subdued. No more constant ineffective powdering. Just one little extra touch and you have not only eliminated “Skin Shine” but have given your complexion an entrancing,, smooth, soft, pearly appearance of exquisite beauty. GOURAm White, Fleeh and Sh**«e

surtax Imposts contained in the amendment of Rep. Swing. Repn . f'alli. In place of a levy ranging up to 65 per cent on Incomes of [ ss.mm,non or gieuter, the house; I restored the original imposts pro | ' vidlng a maximum of 40 per cent.l j This lopped $17,000.0110 from the I potential revenue of the bill. l | hi quick succession the house : approvisl the oil and coal Import , duties, the levies on hnnie-brew .materials and other controversial , elements of the revenue bill. The| 1 house in all Instances stood lasi i i for the bill as sponsored by the] I committee and neat 6 p. m.J j enacted the I' il finally in the form | in which it was sent to the sen-' | ate. Washington. Apr I—(U.R) Act I ing Chairman Crisp of the house| ways and means committee is goI ing to take a vacation now that lie has seen the tax hill successfully ; through seven weeks of hearings 1 and three of debate. lie received an ovation from his ; colleagues when the long baltl'*! ended and the hill was passed. He ' asked for a week's leave of abI senee. and Speaker Garner said | i "yes" while the house cheered ' again. “I honestly believe this tax bill I . will more than balance the budget" : I Crisp said. "Despite the high’ . rales, the people will benefit from! the bill." . o POLITICIAN IS MURDERED 'CnNTIN'CED vTinx- rxt;E ONI*, ( j any of his supporters were to I blame for the shooting. "What shooting has been donel has been by the other side." the I , federal attorney said. "A few;! I days ago they shot at one of tnv|] ' precinct captains but he escaped.'. lajcsch's charges made in connection with the senate hearings i 1 on the promotion of I'. S. District Judge James H. Wilkerson alleg-! 1 ! ed five opponents of Parrillo hail • 1 I been kidnaped and forced to sign ] withdrawals from the race TOWN SINKS INTO TAVERN COX'TINTFn FIICIM PAGE ONE 1 ! leuly. There were no casualties, pes’rmtion spread to other parts! of the town Soon there was; scarcely a residence left habitable. The residents were thrown into momentary panic but soon realiz- : ed that the process of sinking was so slow that they could escapei i with safety. Prefect Ren la no | supervised the evacuation. He>| , asked that troops be sent to the! town and made all necessary | arrangements to take care of thc| refugees. Premier Benito Mussolini order ! ed dispatch of troops, food, modi] ' cines. and field hospitals to the | scene. The town is - about halfway be tween Rome and Naples. Experts believed that the original cavern under the town, nowenlarged by the infiltration of water for many years, might have been dug out after th" Roman j epoch to extract tufa, a substance; used extensively as building ma I terial in many districts around Rome. Fesler Is Renamed Bloomington. Ind.. Apr. 2— (U.R)! —James W Fesler. Indianapolis. I today was assured of succeeding himself for another three year! term as trustee of Indiana I’ni-I versify. Fesler was the onlynominee. l Paroles Are Granted Michigan City, Ind... April 2 —(U.R) ' —Trustees of Indiana State prison,] sitting as a pardon and parole j board today, granted 47 of 84 parole petitions front prisoners. Ten j cases wore continued All the petitions were from pri■oners who have served their minimum terms. o Usury in England It hwcanie legal to charge Interest | for m<»ney lent m England In the I time nt Ilmry 7'll. Before this In teresi mid been charged for gen eratioh- by legal fli-rions of part ner'.hfp tii-eiicli of i-ontract etc. The It-at English permissive statutes I fixed It) per cent as the legal Urol’ which -.Hid iw- charged o Depend* on What You Lay A professor of economics finds : « bricklayer's daily pay equids the ; ; zalue of 360 eggs. This represent* I a hard year's work for a hen. but I bricklayers will point out Hint n . . hen cannot lev hHrks.—Kansas I City Times o Taking Chance* The man who depended on winning a fortune in the sweepstakes has another scheme now. He hopes i to marry for money o . Root* Retain Vitality The roots of trees continue to ! grow after the trees are "ill down. I

COLLEGE WILL EXPLORE CAVE Ludlow, S D. (U.R) Plans to ex 1 plore three stages of ; rehistone tie I vi-hipmt nts in Hie Ludlow Cave re ■ iglon are being mad' W. 11. Over ! mu cum citrainr al the I'niver dty |«»f South Dakota, as niinodneed. cod.. I lie cave which is HomMlmes H ailed Ci: h-r Cave. w..< explored recently by a group from the uni-Ivu-ily According to the members of the exploration party Jlte cave, I | its migin to eroisn in .oft sand and ; : lock. II about 35 |eet deep,, 15 I toi l « <|e and lea feet la low the l .cund level. Over, who -creened the (loorsoil of the cave, discovered brass rings, gold rings and the scalps of two 'Ahite women, which is said indiefate that the cave wa- used by the j | simix in the past lo i year .. | Steel points knives and beads used I i: making trades with othej tribes | and the white men a.so were found. ] The loor soil, two or three feet nearer the original cavern floor contained more than 300 arrow ixe |in|! of exceptional workmanship, it in ;ti acted of -eml-precious stones 1 hey are entirety different from I lany found in the stale. Over said, and indicate an entirely different I ■ ivi.ization. Fragments of woven :abric made from rashes, reen ami l.ark are the l only remnaiil! of woven material found any w here In the etale, ac-1 fording lo Over. A few fragments ,f pottery were found, with elk leeth ami sea shell-. CHILDREN TO BE EXAMINED tCONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE assisted by the Jefferson township. Hartford township and the W. M. F. Home Economics Clubs, will have charge of the station at Geneva. Miss Eva Acker, Mrs. B. R. Farr and Mrs. \V. L. Linn, assis ed by the South Ward Parent-Teachers Association, the Decatur Woman's Club. the.St Marys Township. Root ] township. Union township. Kirkland! lownship. and Better Homes Home] Economics Clubs will have charge I iof the station in Decatur. The schedule for the Deca ur I station is as follows: Decatur, first ward and Washingiton township. April 21. Decatur, second ward, and Waslf , ington township. April 22. Decatur, third ward ami Wash-] ington township. April 25. Root. I nicu and St. Marys town-i ships. April 26. Kirkland. Preble. Monroe, and I Blue Creek township, April 27. o PROBE DEATH OF YOUNG GIRL I I4INTIM rt) H'lti-v t'AUE uNEI week she telephoned him she wanted to talk about "her future." "When I came home late Thurs-I day night she was in bed," he | told police. "We talked over in- ] consequently matters and then 11 went to sleep. The next thing 1 , I knew a terrible roar awakened ] me and I heard Evelyn gasping ; my name. "Blood was streaming from a | wound over her heart. 1 ran for ' a doctor btit it was too late." i ° sdgm iHKiuoo i jo uoii.M(jua • wti ss.rmno.) |u gjßjqri aqj |o uoij3a|{O3 Longhorn Queen IF - ■-* - Y W ; Kx If any evidence t rat Texans are connoisseurs of other things besides their justly famous steers were necessary, here it is. M-iss Mary Tom Blackwood, of Alexandria, La., was chosen “Sweetheart” of the annual round-up of University Exes by the student body of Texas University. One look at the Texans’ “Sweetheart” is : sufficient to prove that the Longhorns know beauty.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY APRIL *? 1932

Drive on Davey Jones ♦ * . » * ♦ * Treasure-Seekers to Renew Attempts to Raise $5,000,000 in Gold Bullion From Strongroom of Sunken Liner Egypt. ■ mil— !■! I>ni mil 1 i- ■■ '■* 'V \ fW . j - v ' T ?«| *‘"' v 1 I f. /.PTiSTS CoMCFPnoM OF SctNE Q»J Sf,A bOTTOIf , ' / IJ * < r :— - ■ ~ dlw.-r 111 Fatcd Diving *• ; *„ * < • * S to Resuming their salvage work where they left off last autumn, the divers of the Italian company, Sorima, will endeavor to make Father Neptune cough up $5,000,000 in gold from the strongroom ol the liner Egvpt. which went to the bottom in 1922, near Brest, France, after a collision with a French freighter It took the salvagers three years to locate the wreck and three more to blast their way to the liner • strong* room. Last year they ripped the top off the cache and, with the treasure in full sight, were compelled to suspend operations owing to bad weather. However, the divers are sure that this year will see the huge store of gold safely within their grasp. With a new robot-like, metallic suit that enables them to work io comparative ease at a depth of 400 feet and a new grab of their own design, the salvagers consider the treasure as good as theirs. But there is a slight uneasiness as to whether the gold is still id the Egypt. When they abandoned the attempt last yOar, they were obliged to leave the strongroom uncovered, and there is a possib lily that the powerful cross-currents and terrific tides may have scattered the gold over the ocean floor. Back in 1930, ten of the fourteen men comprising the crew of the first Sorima expedition j were killed and the salvage ship Artigiio blown sky high. They had finished with the Egypt for the winter and were destroying the wreck of the American munition ship Florence, which was sunk during the war and had constituted a menace to shipping. A premature explosion set off hundreds of tons of shells which blew the Artiglie to smithereens. That was the only fatal accident of the six-year treasure-hunt

PARIS Another anti-hoarding campaign will l>e opened in April when Italian salvagers try toll make old Father Neptune cough|i up $5,000,000 in gold ingots and; t coins that went to the bottom ot the English Channel in 1922. when the liner Egypt sank after a col- i lis'.on with a French freighter. The old miser has been hoard-' < ing this treasure for ten years of | Pointe du Nez. near Brest, some: too feet beneath the surface, ini the liner's strongroom, but now hej j looks like losing it. If old Neptune could be inter i viewed now. ho would probably say: “These modern divers with their new-fangled apparatus are getting the best of me. but lli fight to the last." I After three years of heart-rend i big effort, the divers last Autumn i ripped off the roof of the strong | room and saw what they believed I to be the treasure. At this tantal I izing moment premature winter forced them to suspend operations. Contrary to their desires, the ■ salvagers were obliged to leave’he opened strongroom to the mercy of i the stiff cross-currents and a six knot tide, and for this reason it is feared that Father Neptune may ; have prepared an April Fool joke I by removing the treasure from its I cache and scattering it on the floor of the ocean. RAIDERS WIPE OUT RANCHERS CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE; , The victims were members of a wealthy, pioneer Mexican-American family. | Three bandits, in an automobile,: I drove up to the big dairy ranch of 'Melquiadez Espinosa, near here? last night. The ten members of the Espinosa family were preparing to retire. The trio roused them. and. pos- 1 ing as New Mexican officials, gain-, ed entrance to the ranch-house. Once Inside they drew guns, terrorized the family, and demanded $5,000 in cash. Espinosa recently t had sold a herd of cattle and the, bandits believed he had the money hidden on the ranch. They also demanded a bill of. sale for another herd of cattle. Espinosa protested and declared the money was not on the ranch. . Almost without another word. 1 i the three opened fire on the ten members of the family, huddled to-1 gether in the big living room of j the abode ranch house. A few seconds la er the placet ' was a shambles ! Filomena Espinosa and her five: children were killed in the first , barrage of shots fired by the trio. , 1 Vincente Espinosa. 19, dropped I to the floor with four bullets In his back, probably mortally wounded Melquiadez Espinosa, head of the' family, saved his life when he! j feigned death after a bullet had grazed his head. He dropped to | the floor and lay still, alongside the i bodies of his family. His aged mother, a blind woman, land his wife, dropped to the floor and were shielded from the killers’ bullets by the boflies that lay mass-) ed about them. The three men escaped after the masscre that was reminiscent of. the bloody Apache raids of a generation ago in the southwest. The raiders, in an automobile 'believed stolen, rode 25 miles into (United States territory for the •

If however the treasure has remained in the strongroom, the . divers say only a few dyas will be! required to hoist it to the surface. , provided they enjoy fair weather.: , They are enabled to work with i comparative ease at the record depth of 40(1 feet, thanks to a huge' robot-like, metallic suit which.! equipped with oxygen tanks and a te'ephone, is proof against water pressure at great depths. The first atti mot to reach Neptune's bonanza will be made early next month, when a diver will go town to the wreck and direct th»i maneuvering of a salvage grub which will fish for the gold. Tips; errah a fine-toothed affair whic'i I though homemade ami as yet un-i tested, the divers are sure will re duce the problem of getting up the precious metal to an operation as prosai- at. scooping debris off: a rulhish heap If the treasure is intact there should be five and a half tons of pure gold, forty three tons of silver and about $400,000 in gold pieces. This cargo was on the: I way from England to India when, the Egypt went down. Due to the fact that the sudden-: ness of the Egypt's disaster pre-1 vented her from taking true bear ings ol her position, the Italian Company. Sorima. which is in charge of salvage operations, were. (sortie. The Espinosa ranch, a great tract of land near here, is only 10 miles from the largest intersate highway in this section. The raid apparently had been carefully planned. After the killing, the three men ! jumped into the automobile, and headed toward the Mexican border and safety. Scores of officers from Texas and New Mexico cities, arrived here today, but found little to indicate .the identity of the three killers. Bullets taken from the bodies of the slain revealed they had been fired from three differed guns, and Melquiadez Espinosa said the three men opened fire at once, and without warning. The elder Espinosa, sobbing over I the tragedy which had virtually wiped out his family, said the three : bandits were .Mexicans. "I never saw them before," he' told officers. “They were Mexicans and they told me at first they were ' New Mexico officials and wanted: to see about the herd I had sold. I so I let them In." PHYSICIAN IS BACK UNHARMED (rwixTlNUtin PROM PAGE ONE) ■* i unrevealed purpose, McCann said. 1 "The men who seized me.” Park-' :er said, “treated me well at all > j times. I was given decent food! and my health did not stiffer.” Jamie revealed the two'men were taken into custody Wednesday at(ter. he charged, they had attempt-: ed to act the role of go-betweens in ! the abduction. Both of the men i have been prominent in local re- ■ form activities. Release of the physician came I (after the local police purportedly I had dropped all activity in the case ' at the request of Parker's wife.' jThe physician was abducted on the' night of March 14 shortly after he I left his home to drive to his club. Jamie refused to reveal the exact: i nature of the secret six investiga-1 tion of the case.

compelled to search for three years before they found the wreck. In this search they dragged the' sea bottom, used divining rods and submarine magnets. Afier finally locating the Egypt, it took them three more years of slow, heart-breaking toil, fighting 1 fog. mountainous seas and wild ocean currents, before they succeeded in blasting their way to the strongroom. Ten of the first crew of four tesn men which made up the! Italian treasure-seekers were killed In 1930. They had finished with the Egypt for the Wimer and were destroying the wreck of the American munition ship, Florence, which was sunk during the war and had constituted a menace to shipping out of Brest. A miscalculation in a demolition 1 charge set off hundreds ot tons of shells and the salvage ship. Afliglio. was blown sky high. Beyond this tragedy only one misadventure attended the treasureseeking enterprise. One of the divers unintentionally released the : water ballast in his suit and was I shot to the surface Ike a cork while the mother ship frantically tried to ascertain what had gone wrong. The accident proved the efficacy of the water ballast dei vice. n : fl Program For Concert Os Glee Club ;a _ .— n Following is the program which will be presented by the Young Men's Glee Club of Fort Wayne, at the Decatur Evangelical church Sunday night at 7 o'clock: Scripture and prayer. Gle" Club Prog: am 1-Chorus: "My Anchor Holds’’ Towner Glee Club 2 —Chorus: “Crus Aders" D. Protheroe Glee Club 3 — Duet: “Angel Voices" D. O. Egans Messrs Davies and Lewis. 4 — Chorus: "Only A Contrite Sinner'—Gabriel r Glee Club 5 —Solo: Selected Mr. Lewis ! 6 Chorus: “Martyrs of The Arena”-L. Deßille Glee Club. 7— Duet: Selected (Welsh npmber, Welsh language) Davies and Lewis 8— Chorus: "O Love That Will Not Let Me Go". J. B. Herbert Glee Club 9— Chorus: “Where Is He” — Beethoven Glee Club (10- Duet: "Watchman What of The Night"—Sergant Davies and Lewis Offering. 11 — Chorus: "Comrades in Arms" — Adams Glee Club 12— Chorus: “Jesus Lover of Sly Soul”—Parry Glee Club Director, Dan Davies. Accompanist. Miss L. Coudret. Marital Shoal* A Swedish statistician reports that the first year of married life Is : not so critical >ts popular tradition I would have It bm that the lime when owrrtnge* are likely lo go on the ris ks Is during the tlftt> to : the tenth tears of w-ddet* life Q. Checking Mildew Mildew can be checked by brushing over books with spirits et wine or a few drops nt n R essentia? such as oil of cloves', applied witn a i soft cloth.

AUTO PRICES I j ARE REDUCED Low-priced Auto Manufacturers Start War For Field Control .—— Dvirnit. Mich. Apr 2 (U.R) The ,iulciiHiiL* liidtis rj's fight to o|H*ii iihe picketbo'iks of the nuthm and ;ihe coiiuid'-nlal fight for the low ipru tnl cur market, was marked io Iduy by prlci' redmlion unnoiince ] ImanlH by two I'ompuiiies mid a] ;>• rent palioii.il exhibit by General Motors. Pon be droppeil in line on the price reduction started by the .Ford Motor Company, and announced a new range from $6.35 to $795. iThe llupinobile six cylinder stand-! Hird models were reduced to prices] I ranging fr< in $79."> to sl»s‘i. Chevrolet already bu.l announced redin-1 I lions ranging up to $55. The new Plymouth, a Chrysler | ! product and a formidable factor! I 111 the low price field, also went on display throughout the country. The price, to Im- announced tomorrow, is expected to be in line Willi! Ford and Chevrolet The price redaction on Pontiac, i ranging up to SSO. and the earlier] announced reductions in the Chevrolet range, added interest to ex-! hibils of General Motors products. 1 All the corporation's latest models piere on display, while in compet-; liters' ehowrooms the Ford V-8 and | | the improved four cylinder model, land the new Plymouth were vieing i for attention. Whether the automotive industry ]can swing Into top production, give I employment to thousands, and step: up th” tight against the depress ! ion, will depend upon the manner] l in which the buying public receives I the new offerings. The new models generally are; proclaimed the finest ever offered ]in engineering skill, body design land performance. Refinements and ] improvements which ordinarily would have been nude in the next ■ few years have been added in an j I.ffirt to intluence potential buyers I into purchasing now. The Ford company has announced it will spend millions tor labor, and materials if expected sales develop. Nearly a 100.001) men will be piit ! Ho work in the River Rouge plants. Thousands more will be given emI ployment in assembly plants scattered over the country. Nearly 5.-■ , msi individual companies sell lo Ford when in- is inamiiuci urina . and thousands more will be employ- , ied in ibis way. i The same is true of the other !hig plants, and manufacturers be1 lieve that should they all be able io swing into line with tip produi-, ition, a great step will have been j taken toward resoring prosperity. o . MORE THAN SO SEEK SEATS IN 1933 CONGRESS r CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) * vises. -W—swere seeking the Republican nomination and eight had filed for the Democratic. The nearly complete list of candidates follows: First District Alexander C. Pendleton. R.. ; Gary; Roswell O. Johnson. R. ), Gary; Carl E. Nelson. R.. Hani--1 mond; Harrv L. Dorton. R.. Hani- ! monl; Ward S. Powers. R.. Ham- • mond: George Sosnowski, D.. i Gary; Daniel R. McDevitt. D..] Garv; Harvey C. Myers, D.. Gary; William T. Schulte. D.. Hammond: Frank R. Martin. D.. Hammond: Vernon D. Boren. D.. Hammon>'; > Walter E Stanton. D. Gary; Harrv Sharavsky. Gai' - : Ora L Wilde- , math. D. Gary; James W Burns. R.. Garv; Oliver Starr. R.. Garv:, Os'ar A. Ahlgron. R . Hammond, i Second District Guy R. Coffin, I)., Monticello: ‘ Will R. Wood, R.. Ijfayette;, George 11 Durgan. D.. Lafayette: I s Claude S. Steele. R.. Knox; Frank. R Moon. D . Rochester; James S.: ' Cox. D.. Valnnraiso. Third District Andrew J. Hickey. IL. Laporte: i ' Samuel B. Pettlngill. D., Smith Bend. Fourth District ' lames I. Farley, D.. Auburn: ] William Greene. R.. Fort Wayne; ’] Harvey W. Morley. D.. Angola; ! Alfred Farrar. D„ Geneva; ThurI man A. Gottschalk. D„ Berne; 8 1 David Hogg. R . Fort Wayne: l Junes I). Adams, D., Columbia "I City; Thomas Riddle, D„ Ray; 9 1 Glenn A. Smiley, D.. Fort Wayne. Fifth District 9 ] Charles F. Howard. I). Windfall; J. Raymond Schultz, R., North |

ADAMS THEATRE j Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wed. 11,1 I MARIE DRESSLER I in “EMMA” J with Richard Cromwell, Jean Hersholt, Myrna ■ , Marte Dressier in her greatest character P° _ b ; ec t. B Added—A Charley Chase Comedy and Sport SuOF g LAST TIME TONIGHT—“BEN HUR" in

Mam 1d,.,, r’B U-’lh-1.. .\|f„.,, j, ■■/)>)■ l"U. Gl.ui, p •'l'h '.li w„|,| r , '■ h, S'Hh H 11 ''("011:1 j.' i, " • s„i,i, J lb'LU?' ,4 IL. rnJB , A " ' i. n H Bliiomim-iun E D.Hr,ct I ’'•lni Stir. uH . ■ w 80.1,,,.. 1,. |.; v: „ isvj||i ,. a .letmmts. 11., Evansville. W N nth Dijfrut fl ( beatfr ■, | )l(Vis R ■ Eugene H c,„ WP h Harry Cann,.|,;. p "gM Francis f.allnaith, f) Charles S 11,„. v . R. Troth District I F.phriam r Bow-n. [> a Fniiiid L'llali .ig. r p I City; Cl if for,| F I‘ay»<., castle; Finley |> <;eay pl neisvill', ,\ri»ri !■:. Muncie; Elmer p ! Liberty: Janies K. Maw, 11 10,1 : L :irl V. riiom|,.,„i p, j mond. UlarpncH a. JarW Newcastle. Robert P m IL, Muncie; Stanley j J Richmond; Ualph A. Rlchmoml Eleventh District Frank Hurley. R„ | ni 1.. Willi im Curry. B. b<M Frank E. Bla< Lilian. 11. i Ila; Frank .1 McCarthy, ft, anapolis: William II |« I).. New Palestine; Frank fl R . Indtannnolis; Fred M R man. Indianapolis. Twelfth District I Areli'ba’,l M Hall. |{„ India [ olis; Isiuls Ludlow. I)., la,la I Olis; William Henry Harrlm, ; Indianapolis.

REPORT S\YS I BABE IS SAFE ■ IX SMALLS® (’(tynyi rn > rom sea from * :'.dl. larger Immiiaa-.- ' ie« tl fB nt i v (Clifton. N I. i.ive lieen M of this pi. I! ,e 'I ordered • » the liwtkou-. iroiminc sei tie ’ ■ d West r.riitliie:: It '. said At ciu dim: t ■ ■ :r.i“•« vM aloiig ths th; r.;rg said, the baby at -present is al age on the small < rail Mod .12 mile limit I: i- passible: that the child .beard the now in a European port. When the minal PXrhMI 'made, the mw-p.ipt-r said, small boa' will pull along a 11 (craft, possibly a freighter, r.insom money will be d™ |overlmard from the larger tt • Then the child «ill i»-transit 'and lie brought back to it* ents. The n.-w spa pel re. ailed that migration authorities hare working in the Soitrland nu district in which the Litt® home is located. It also rtt 1 that Major Charles H. Srb» ’assistin superintendent of Xt* (sey state ■ police, now is tn t to England on a mission in w tion with the kidnaping else. , At todav's press confereW Trenton. Col. H- Norman kopf. superintendent of 1 lice, said: ~ "As stated in previous but Major Scboeffel is on a ** mission, the nature of whicti not be revealed at this time I his return further information .be given out if it <ioea n ’ sere with the progress ot the _ o Get

THECOO Sunday and Mond«i Matinee and Night — ,Oc I James Dunn and Sa l y ! in a big 4 star picture I “DANCE TEAMj They tried to kf “ pp In ' e wa < J their act—but found it "1 whole show. Added— Comedy. News and Cartoon. TONIGHT—“SHOTGUN P* J Western thriller with Also Comedy and Car o JJ