Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 117, Decatur, Adams County, 16 May 1932 — Page 5

’BdERS WILL Kami director ' VUKIJ> 1,1 NT '"J L ■ I iti-M PAGE ONB) Mli; . .. . Hum NB”*~ ’ police. Jin! KtH 11 "■ 1 ""' I ' llh ' rs "'"" "* E b ■ ll ■"' l s ' '*' ' V* " I,! ' lu ' ■ ; ""' I Efl' llllling IBHa I.un.il g ■ ■K.: ""' ' "' I , 111I iIHK ' j iMfll'.! ' ”kidim|" i ■ p , X , Norfolk, I ~ ..i II M”„., Hint iil' litifh a|m . E« r 1 "' "’ US|, ' I ‘ S>; 1111 I ’Pit' lEi' -, w| "' h 1,1 !i gESX \ tin' #• it^K., ; ' "’ wlloin hP who said further . , ~,, olio lUlt .<| inion." .lassie ail ~ )V K^ a ..id. tin mean 1 shielding a wo ■ _■. ■ ■ ? .i ppt' l u' u by ■Ut led a letter yes. Mkrlfmia Colonel and Mrs. , ssing their "sin- ■ K IP . ini ill the "great fit n » —r~- - -<*• 11 —

|lV[ |lO% fSCOUNT I ON YOUR Ilectric ■light I BILLS ■ PAYING ON I OH BEFORE Way 20 ■POWER I BILLS ME ALSO DOE | —AND—■OST BE PAID I -BY—fUENTIETH OF I month at Tty hah. Hi

assistance yon have been to ng." Seventy five coast guard vessels and three amphibian planes meanwhile cruised up and down the coast line from Virginia to Cape Cod seeking the HG-foot schooner described by John 11. Curl is, the Norfolk Imai builder. < mils lias given police nicknames and descriptions of some men abroad that schooner. Officials said this search would continue as long as there wits hope the vessel was in American waters "a year it need be."| Weather conditions were ideal for the search Sunday, with wind no more than eight miles and visibility of the best. However, scores of fishing schooners similar to the one described by Curtis are along the coast, making the search all the more difficult. Curtis, incidentally, is still backtracking on the trail he followed during his negotiations. He ; s accompanied by state police. They have not been heard from so far, as official statements admit, since Friday, although reported til Newark during the night. Curtis "has received no threats of any kind." according to state police bulletins. The Rev. 11. Dodson-Peacock, associate of Curtis, revealed that he had met five men in a New York hotel in what he believed was still another attempt at extortion. The visit followed a mysterious phone call. The men' he met agreed on delivery of the i baby "within 20 miles of Norfolk."! Terms were SSOO down, remainder of the $50,000 on delivery. The j money was "not” to come from Lindbergh. Colonel Schwartzkopf in a rove-1 lation of his own let it be known, that Salvatore Spitalesand Irving Hitz, New York underworld char-i acters called as "go betweens” in i the case, had keen recommended, by Morris Rosner, a former “under cover” man for the department of justice. Rosner had a copy of the orig-I inal ransom letter which ho showed Spitale and Hitz a month before “Jafsie” paid out $50,000 ransom money in a Bronx cemetery. Spi-, tale offered no statement except ; I hat "I am sorry the baby is dead’] Rosner, it was recalled, had made several positive statements many days after the kidnaping that the baby was alive and well. These statements were duplicate I ■ by similar statements by (lover-' nor A. Harry Moore. Neither lias ■ explained the earlier claims. Police also checked Sunday on I activitiy of Isaac Yamashita. Jap-i anese butler for Mrs. Dore Boice I who shot her May 7. killed a fel*Ww ’worker, then killed himself.' The butler wore sandals which'

THE ADAMS TONIGHT and TUESDAY 10c -35 c “The Wet Parade” with Dorothy Jordan, rtob’t Young, Waller Huston. Lewis Stone, Jimmy Durante. Neil Hamilton. Wallace Eord. ' It’s romance, tragedy, drama in one great picture! - Added - ‘Charley Chase’ Comedy. 111181 “ 111 “* rll ■aiKIEMSMUtMUU J>. > Ilf "nrsE THE CORT - Last Time Tonight - COUG. FAIRBANKS JR. and JOAN BLONDELL in “UNION DEPOT” ! Where sinner meets saint. Th'starting and ending place of life’s greatest adventures. ADDED — "THAT RASCAL” Comedy, Cartoon and News. 10c,15c Coming Sunday, Monday. Tuesday "THE LOST SQUADRON."

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. MAY 16, 1932.

Hearse on Way to Crematory '. J p’ ' As.’ s* ■ '■ '•*& ’ ’ «<Ttwa»«e - vwiK.»am>warvit > fui nwntet. The hearsb bearing the remains of the murdered Lindbergh itiby is shown leaving the morgue at 'rcuton. N. .1.. for the crematory at Linden, N. .1. Lindbergh Lea\ ing Morgue k <*m. stw- >. . ex **». <• ■■•-- 1 I i'W » ■. - ■ ,w -axes”" Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, third from the right, about to enter his car after leaving the morgue, .here he identified the remains of his murdered sou. The <o!onel then followed the hearse bearing the '■mains of the murdered child to the Rose Hill crematory at Linden, N. .1.

might have left prints similar to those found outside the Lindbergh home, the night of the kidnaping. Harry Fleischer, Detroit racketeer, and Abe V, agner, New 5 ork gangster, are still sought for questioning in the case, Colom 1 Schwartzkopf announced. Numerous other "clues ami reports were investigated but no new facts credited by the investigators were discovered. At Hopewell, crowds jammed traffic on the roads near the home of the Lindberghs who main tallied their usual composure ia the face of tragedy and sorrow. JAP PREMIER IS KILLED BY MILITARISTS 'C.ONTINI’KD from CAGE ONE, the police headquarters opposite Ihe palace where a bomb w«s thrown at the emperor. Hie Mitsui bank, and the residences of Count Makino, lord k< eper of the privy .eal; Foreign Minister Kenkii ri Yoshizawa, and Admiral Kantaro Suzuki. Ollier groups, imhiding many men in uniform, gathered in various parts of the city anti fired revolver- in the air and distribulr-| nationalist propaganda. Th- premier, fully aware of 'ho reactionists' plans ami realizing other prominent Japanese were e’iminated by assassins' bullets, made a futile plea to eacam' hi-'

; ' Held for Picketing ■ " ■< . ■ u k IlwM " i jgggSfck j JcM : v 4 1 i '■ V 'f V k '■ fa’' : fl i .j B : LIS ’STS! '■ j, so fe * 1 l ' s)l ’ > rW W HI! xL x S'W ■ ■ ’i •»»bw ■ Ten college students wore urresled in Chicago Saturday for picke:I Inc activities in front of the home of Samuel Inrull, utilities magnate. | T'iov were proto-' nt ireatment of Kentucky miners on property own:ed by the In nil interests. Photo shows four of the students arrested.

i ~ ; own execution. Responding to lite i request of the armed invaders ofj | his home to meet their leader, lie | walked toward them and said: I "Don’t shoot. I will listen to I your demands." I One of the men started to speak, jHe was interrupted by cries of ‘shoot! shout!” from their leader. j Two men sprang forward and! t grabbed Inukai. The loader's command was obeyed. And the victim was the fourth within little more than a yc.rf. Blghleen men took part in th" various demonstrations throughout lire capital. All surrendered to > police and will be tried by ntili1 tary courts.

~ i Captain Dollar Dies > i San Francis , Calif., May 16 , (UP) - Captain Robert S. Dollar, , who r.se from a cook's bay in a , Canadian logging carnp to became j dean of American shipping men, I died ax iiis home here today. f The dynamic old shipping master | who was the prototype of Peter B. , I Gyne’s fictional “Cappy Ricks," sue- , climbed to a heart affliction aggre- , vated by the intentional infection ■ jnd cold. , He was stricken with the cold i on May 1. Complications so reduced t 1 his vitality that his heart was < weakened.

INDIAN RIOTS CLAIM LIVES Hindu Rioters Continue Drive On Moslems; Many Reported Dead Bombay, May 16 (U.R) The third d.ty of Hindu-Moslem rioting murder, pillage, and arson with British troops firing into fighting mobs has boosted the death toll to 42 with the injur'd estimated at more than 500. Twelve more victims were add ed to the death roll when fighting broke out again this morning. The entire northern city resembled a battle field in which troops were handicapped by the guerilla tactics of bloodthirsty crowds. The traditional rivalry bfetween Hindus am! Moslems flared into violence Saturday, touched off when Moslem boys allegedly stoned Hindu homes. Street fights Is'gau. pedestrians were stoned or stabbed, houses were set on fire, and soon an entire street was in flames. Police said many women and children were in the blazing houses and that numerous occupants preferred to die in the flames rather than rush into the streets and lie attacked. Several deaths and injuries were caused by persons jumping to the streets from blazing buildings. Reports of the riots spread throughout the city. The police commissioner called on British troops for aid. The rioters then fought troops and police as well as each other.

BALE EACES TRIAL TODAY (CONTLNIT-.D FORM PACE ONE) netli Horstman and Harry Nelson, detectives; W. A. Parkhurst, police captain; Patrolman Dan Davis and Ray Powell; Raymond Hoover, police mechanic, and Fred Kubeck and Ernest Flatters, alleged bootleggers. Chauncey Stillson, indicted witli the others, has not been arrested, Corbett Johnson pleaded guilty and is expected to testify for the government. Alex Cavins and Telford Orbison. deputy attorneys, will assist Jeffrey. Dale and his eo-defendants will lie represented by R. W. Lennington and Sons, C. A. Taughinbaugh. Muncie city attorney, W. A. McClelland and F. B. McClelland, all of Muncie, and Clarence C. Nichols and Dixon Bynum of Indianapolis. Indianapolis, May 16. — (U.R) — Twenty-one Anderson residents, including several police officers, faced federal sentences today of prison terms not exceeding two years and fines up to |5,t)00 for prohibition law violations. Nine persons were convicted, and 12 pleaded guilty. Sentence will be pronounced by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell on May 23. Only one of those tried was a<a quitted. He was Louis Lavelle, police chauffeur, accused of delivering confiscated liquor from the An del son city hall to friends of the administration. Mayer Jesse Mellott and three others have not yet been arrested. Mellett’s arrest was postponed because of his serious illness, and the others are fugitives. Those convicted are Alvin Riggs, chief of police; Ralph Rich, patrolman and former captai not detectives; Mrs. Edna Boyer, filling station proprietor; John M. Stinson, fur dealer and barbecue stand and filling station propietor; Robert Clark, alleged Peoria, 111., bootlegger; Earl Hoel, proprietor of the Black Bear poolroom and Markleville; Ora Raines, bootlegger; Raymond Ross, bootlegger, and Albert. Abel, alieged collector of “protection" money. _o NEW COMMITTEE IS UNCOVERED > CONI L\ L.A> FROM PAGE ONE. off of the payroll. Senate expense accounts, like the family names on the congressional payroll, arc kept secret until they become obsolete. So while we are waiting for the seal of secrecy to be removed from the '-xpense accounts of the committoe's "big bear hunt" in Alaska last summer, we may see the weary senators hard at work with rod and reel in the Minnesota lakes in the summer of 1930. There were tiiree senators and two secretaries. The senators were Walcott, Repn.. Conn.; Pittman, Dem., Nev.; and Hawes, Dem.. Mo. With all of the care and foresight of Admiral Byrd setting out for tire south pole, the senatorial committee assembled the equipment needed for its investigation of wild life in the Minnesota lakes This included guides, porters, a can of minnows for which a charge of 75 cents was finally put through the senate disbursing office, as was the 15 cent charge for a notebook in which the ex-

penses of the committee were listed so that none of the senators would fail to be reimbursed upon returning to Washington. And here are some of the things the book said -all eventually paid for through the senate disbursing clerk: Senator Walcott’s guide (3 days and tip) $21).00. Senator Pittman's guide (3 days and tip) $20.00. Senator Hawes’ guide (5 days and tip) $30.(M1. Guide for Mr. Shoemaker, special Investigator for committee. $13.50. Boat hire. $107.50. Tent. 4 days. $3.00, Bgagage truck. $5. 3 sinkers. 15 cents. Mineral water, $40.50. Glasses, 75 cents. "Soda to take on that, $2.10 (This fisherman's old guide says he never uses soda, but others say it is the best thing to take- the next morning after drinking 100 much mineral water.) 1 spoon hook. $1.25 4 fishing licenses. $22.00 Mat< lies, 15 cents. And so the senators were ready to investigate wild life on the Minnesota lakes. Altogether, including a bill of $320 for an airplane which was chartered at S4O an hour, this investigation cost the government $1,983.76 for the senatorial party. Also there were so officials fsom

-.•I. 1 v •' wKr '4. ■'■. MAKING FARM LIFE ENJOYABLE The old time isolation and lonesomeness of farm life is a thing of the past. Modern communication has increased the activities and broadened the social life of the rural family. The telephone plays a necessary part in neighborhood affairs, such as arranging social and church gath-erings--planning tripsand reunions—promoting community meetings. And, of course, the telephone is especially valuable in exchanging information and local news. You need your telephone to keep in touch with the rest of the world as well as your neighbors. Citizens Telephone Co Phone 160 Wednesday SPECIALS AS AN INTRODI ( TORY (H I ER WE IRE GOING TO GIVE WEDNESDAY ONLY One Galion Free 100', PI RE PENNSYLVANIA MOTOR OIL with Each Purchase of Live Gallons eThis motor oil is Pure, it is not delated. Just as fine an oil as* you would ever warn to use. Give us a trial afd you will be convinced that it is just as we claim it to be. a gallons specially priced at $2.15. Please bring your own cans. SI.OO Value CERTAIN-TEED LINOLEUM This Beautiful Linoleum is Jirst Quality - - Not seconds. Why not make Jrl W your house work easier? ’w* - Buy this smooth, easily /w cahadc cleaned, germ proof flB yapd Linoleum. 12 ft. wide. NOTICE TO OUR FARMER FRIENDS The above specials are for Wednesday Only but owing to your busy season if you can't possibly get in Wednesday just clip this ad and bring it with you Saturday. Take advantage of these prices. Schafer Hdw. Co.

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the executive department along amllbey doubtless turui-d their own expr-nao accounts for notebooks to keep expense accounts in and "soda to tuke on the boat.” DELEGATES TO BE SELECTED I (CONTINUED EROM RAGE ONE, Republican convention on record for repeal. The 11 Montana Rei publican delegates lire counted for Mr. Hoover. On Wednesday a Vermont Demiicratic convention will choose eight i.elegates, claimed tor Roosevelt. Twenty-four Democratic delegates to be named by the Tennessee convention on Friday also are claimed for Roosevelt. President Hoover will get Oregon's 13 votes in the Republican primary there Friday. Roosevelt is considered ahead in the contest for In Oregon Democratic delegates. ■■l I 1) '■ 1 '■ ■■■— Mystery Plane Sighted London, May 16. (U.R)—A mystery airplane was sighted by two I steamships in the Atlantic today, Hying from the direction of North > I America toward the British Isle.s. The ship was monoplane equipf|ped with pontoons. i The air ministry had no knowl- ■ edpe of any airplanes maueuverinf 11at sea. other aviation quarters ami ■shipping officers could not idtntify i the plane.