Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 202, Decatur, Adams County, 25 August 1932 — Page 1

K^ er m .... ■ M,. - ■ r ■ K.;*

armers jailed in market blockade

PS RETREAT 1 ■homes after ■{TILE MARCH Beaten Strik■lllini'r' Turn Back Hromlllinois 'lmc lIIFF I’ONTKOkS; BkKATOKPKK!^ |ll.. Aug. 25 (UP) |H... sn ( nffs -P fned f,re jn airplane that HL 10 * over the "battle the 800 dfput.es had last rnght from K miners attempting to county. Hnum not be determined Horary bullets, struck the by a " unidentified ■ > piane zoomed and ■par'd L 111, A'le 'U.R) K, tmsleu u hattlt- with ■j-rdP at tile Franklin ihuUsainl'i . striking ■ re treat-d toward their ii" turn ,if southern Illinois. HjU disorganized ■j •trikii.z uiari lie-1' left a B, »>, . •- ami In Duquon. they left two -afl-'.' " k'hut in thru Many of H,.... • in Hldy L. . "titan Some cl HI" men were ■MI ' . yii luck, and fight. Hk ui the !■ :. wltu joined ■m: > . ~ titered H> are: ■ w.-.ntctl oi»U ■»i ; u ities. Many Ht<er- trucks H "-c foot! supplies were Br.v- wre. kuii :i. tin- mad the battle. :lut • -n were Uul. ■ >:<: li - iict.fi til c Hti-' last were tie ■ Many »cr.- hart, however. H):.. Br.e. at the lnniuoin hosH 1: *as uMim.i'.-.i that pmb- ■ l : ' Implied t heir Hint aid The two men who Hlbt received treatment at a office here. ■ Kimfs i vcst.-rday H*ipi!: • • -"Vt ral eounHnltut here Their intention Hitisrecarii S .■ :!! It diin - .n's and lu nuivh into Frank ■»>’ where mines are being ■* under ’!:.. ' t mule They ■hking for a . turn to the old is lu a day. H* ? ;ii ! s ’’" autctnobiles and the strikers proceeded B>«ri through Bond and Clinthen into this, Perry ■* "here thev were stopped deputy sheriffs, warned ■ proceed and told that they camp for the night at in Jackson enmity, as they ■turned Procession, stretching for ■j , '* H 9 along the highway. headed straight across border toward Frankpage THltßfl 111 PENALTY MED IMO Monarchist Re■*t Leader Sentenced | lo Death Today Aug, 25— (UP) Gen. Jose o..eader of the recent monB, I ev °* t ’ Wj s sentenced to ■ today. Boh* Ula I,a Herranz. an ■ tn°n. reVOlt lea,lers . was senHL. fe Imprisonment. Lieut. B? ri ea “ lnfa nte received a 12B * 0 “ term a, ‘d Capt. Justo ■%.? * a ' H , Pronoiln< ’ e{ ' l>y sevl“6 supreme court's ■ftniii l 0D ’ wbo P rps ided over ■J, al fwterday. ■ •“til i?* 1 ij ol ' l near, y noon to■v, ****«« Alcala Zamora BN thsi/'s'^ 6 cabinet t to anBNtor h, eClaion ' The dp ath I*l, c’ e plum P- bald-headed ‘ ntlmate ° f Primo l»»«c;. 6xpecte<i ' even

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

Vol. XXX. No. 202.

jAged Couple Married Two Days; Divorced Columbus, Ind., Aug. 25 — (UP>I A romance that sprang up between John A Jackson, 83. and Mrs. Johanna Ewing, 77. led to the altar but lasted only two days later. A suit for divorce, filed t>y the "bride" was on file In Bartholomew circuit court here today. ( Among charges set out by Mrs. i Ewing were allegations that Jack-1 son was “cruel. Inhuman and atm- j sive.” that he abandoned her after | taking her to Brownstown. and that he told friends he only married her! for her money." TO BUILD FENCE AROUND SCHOOL i ATHLETIC FIELD' Low Rid Submitted For Seven Foot Fence Is $1,728; Work on Budget SCHOOL BOARD TO MAKE BIG CUT The Stewart Iron Fence Company of Cincinnati. Ohio, was the low bidder on a wire fence to he , built around the new Decatur high school athletic field, corner of Adams and Thirteenth street. Their! bid was 81,728. Ten bids were j opened by the Decatur school board j members at a meeting held at thp % high school building Wednesday evening. The second low bidder was Moon , and Girod of Decatur, with a bid of SI,BOO. and the third low bid was; Henry Knapp and Sou Hardware,, $ 1.932. Other bids filed were: Deeatur I aim Iter Company. $2,200: F. L. Johnson, Decatur, $2,300; K. A: Stuckey, Decatur. $2,300; I.ee Hardware Company, Decatur, $2,-j 1 300; Pittsburgh Fence Company. $2,700. Other hids were tiled hut : representatives were not at the meeting. The fence will be seven feet high and constructed of chain link, four--1 inch mesh, number 9 wire which is galvanized over copper tearing steel. The main entrance gate will j 1 he of wrought iron. The four-foot ticket gate and the twenty-foot , track gate will he of wire fabric. The entrance posts will be eight f 1 feet tall and 30 inches square. To Lower Budget The Decatur school board will j meet sometime next week for the purpose of lowering the budget for i the coming year. Dr Hurt Man-j 1 K old. president, stated the board will attempt to conform with the new $1.50 tax limit law and will cut the budget as much as possible. Dr. Mangold also stated that the hoard feels fortunate *lll having a 1 sufficient cash balance on hand to 1 insure a full nine months term of school for the coming year. A sur plus fund has been carried by the 1 hoard in case of emergency, and ; this will provide for the regular school expenses in the event it is needed. It was estimated that with the savings in teacher's salaries, due to cuts made under the new' wage I ■ scale law and the cash balance on 1 hand that a reduction of 35 to 45 cents could he made in the school | city's levy. The levy is now $1.37 j on the hundred dollars o Cooler Weather Is Predicted For Friday I Indianapolis, lAug. 25 — (UP) - Indianapolis residents sweltered under the second day of near 90- . degree temperatures today. Coder' weather was predicted for Friday by the U. S. Weather bureau. The mercury climbed 11 degrees during the three-hour period pre- - ceding nine o'clock and was con- • tinning its rise. BULLETIN Coldwater, Ohtor Aug. 25 — (UP)—Three robbers Held up two employes and one customer of the Peoples Bank today and > escaped with $15,000. i Urban D. Curtins, cashier; Charles Granger, teller and one customer were in the bank t when the men entered. The emr ployes clo*ed the safe and turned the automatic alarm but the men took all the money i lying on the counters. iAs they fled the bandits firt ed several shots. Their fire was 1 returned by Harold Romer a o merchant ami Edward Knapke. r j One of the robbers was believed wounded.

ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER IN ADAMS COUNTY

Nallunsl Anil lulrrunlliiHHl Nrns

EXPECT ARREST : RE PERSONS IN AYRES CASE Sheriff Johnson In Indianapolis to Arrest Men Who Entered Home WOMAN IN CASE; TRACE CAR NUMBERS Sheriff Hurl Johnson was I in Indianapolis today where i il was expected he would i make arrests in connection ! with the assault on Mrs. I .\manda Ayres, 72, Wednesday, August 17th, at her | home in Blue Creek town- . ship. The attack was perpetrated by two men and a woman, the latter driving the car up and down the road us one of the men entered the house, blindfolded Mrs. Ayres and hound her to a chair. He then called the other man who had remained outside and togeth- ! er they went up stairs and search- ■ ed the house. Mrs. Ayres extricated herself ’ and went to the home of Dan Hoop, a neighbor, who called the I sheriff. A young man named Charles Meyers noticed the car ! and happened to take the number, I which was traced to Indianapolis . and the parties located. I Sheriff Jonnson, when notified j the woman was being held, filed : an affidavit, charging auto bandi- | try. which Prosecuting Attorney ' Nathan Nelson said this afternoon i might be changed to malicious trespass, assault with intent to ! commit a felony. It is the belief lof some that the visitors were seeking some papers which Ih-iy considered important. Mrs. Ayres however says that her papers and j valuables are kept in a safety deposit box in a Decatur bank. So 1 far as known no valuables werq taken from th ' house. BULLETIN Chicago, Aug. 25—(U.P. 1 —Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick, daughter of John D. Rockefeller and a notable of society and finance in her own right, died today in her Drake Hotel apartment. Death came at 4:40 (Chicago city time). It climaxed a life that was configured in superlatives and followed a long period of illness and worry over the dissipation of her once enormous estate. Sheriff And Aide Go After Fleuker i Chicago, .Aug. 25 —(UP) — The chief of police of (Hartford City, ilnd.. ind an aide left at 1:30 A. M. today with Reinhold Fleuker. whom they will hold in the Hartford City jail pending trial on tank robbery charges. — o — DICK PARRISH RETURNS HOME Decatur Youth Arrives Safely From 3 Weeks Trip Through West Richard, Dick. Parrish, son of Mr. •' and Mrs. Frank Parrish of Jefferson street, arrived In this city this morning fr. m a several weeks mo- : tor trip througli the West. A rumor had been circulated here ■ o v er last week end that Dick hid met with a serious mishap while in New Mexico. The rumor is thought to have been based on a telegram sent to Mrs. Parrish for the purpose of establishing the identity of her son by a family who employed him to drive for them on their motor trip. Parrish, who has been employed In South Whitley as a barber, and Hank Snyder of that (place, left August 3. with a friend of the lat ter on a inotcr trip to California to attend the Olympic games. The ‘boys wished to return home before the man. whom they accoin panied and whose car they were driving. They received an offer to drive part of the way home for an elderly woman and her family, and a telegram was sent to Mrs. Parrish to confirm Dick’s Identity,

Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, August 25, 1932.

| Synopsis Os New . Laws Applicable To l Adams County Recewed By Auditor

Oounty .Auditor Albert Harlow toI day received a synopsis of the $1.60 tax limit law: the budget making | law: the township road law; the | road repair law; the gas tax law 'and the salary bill law. j The bills which are applicable lo Adams county and all local taxing units follow: Senate Bill 359 lA law without the signature of the Governor, effective August 8. 1932) limiting tax levy to $1.50 This act provides that the maxiI;mum levy on all property of any * municipality for all purposes shall | not exceed $1.50. This means that ( i the sum total of the levy for state, I county, township, civil city or town, * | school city or town, library and all ■jother levies now provided for by * law shall not exceed $1.50, unless -'at least five members of "A Counity Board of Tax Adjustment," cremated by this act, determines that an emergency exists for a total , levy in excess of said rate of $1.50 j upon the property in any municipal corporation for all purposes. I The “County Board of Tax Adjustment” shall consist of the counity auditor, three members of the j county council to be selected from (the membership of the county council and three members to be ap- ‘ pointed by the Judge of the Circuit 1 Court of such county. This board * shall be selected on or before the I first day of September in each year. House Bill 846 (Signed by the Governor August 17, 1932. A one-year law only) (Extension es 1,1 time of making li j budget). >• This act relates only to making >’j budgets in September 1932. II Under the provisions of this act s ithe "County Board of Tax Adjustmerit" shall in 1932 meet on the i 10th day of October. At such meete iigg the county auditor shall inform y such hoard of the tax levies fixed s hy proper officers of each munlei(i j pa! corporation in such county for " the ensuing year, if such board by u I vote of at least five members there- '* of shall determine that an emerg enev exists for a total levy in excess of said rate of $1.50, including said state tax levy, then such board shall have the power to fix a tax levy therein and apportion same

ESTIMATES ON GAS TAX GIVEN Adams County Will Receive $121,981.98 During 1933 From Gas Tax County auditor Albert Harlow today received a notice from the Audir tor of State informing him that it e was estimated Adams County would r, receive $29,568.67 from the gas tax ' in January and an additional $92,11 412.17 during the year 1933 from • v the division of the gas and auto ¥ license distribution. The total of these two umounts is $121,981.84, which is estimated Adams County will receive during 1933. The one-half division of the gas and auto license fees to the * counties is made from the time the ■ new law, (passed by the recent spe- * clal session of legislature became effective. The scond distribution of $92,412.17 will be for the entire S year of 1933. This year Adams County received | approximately $49,000 in the distribution of gas tax to the counties, . the tax being received in February it is estimated that the 92 counties in the state will receive $2,690,924.57 in the tax distribution for the balance of 1932 and $11,012,359.14 0 in 1933. (i The money received by the county will be used in the repair and s upkeep of the roads and no county a levy for this purpose will be made r for next year. 0 J, Dr. J. R. Parson Re-named President d d Indianapolis, Aug. 25—(UP) —Dr. :t J. ;B. Parson, superintendent of the t- White River conference of the Unito ed Brethren church for 11 years, was re-elected at the 87th annual e conference in session here, i- Candidates for election as delee gates to the United Brethren Geno erjl convention were to be named >r this morning. Dr. J. iH. Harris was /. scheduled to speak. Dr. O. T. Deec ver was the principal speaker (or f, the afternoon meeting.

, among the different corporations I 1 1 for which the property in such tax- ; ing district is taxable as is neces- ■! sary to meet the emergency. For the purpose of adopting the j annual budget the county council > shall meet on the first Tuesday as „ ;i ter the third Monday in September. | The advisory board of the township 1 shall meet not later than the third Tuesday of September. The common council of each city shall meet t on or before the third Monday in 1 September. All other corporations . j shall meet and adopt their bud•l gets through their proper officers I iso as to report their levies to the y county auditor not lat<*r than the e j first day of October. All corporat ions shall report to the county i ; auditor of the county the levies f ' , made by their proper officers not , later than the first day of October. ,p, . | Each taxing unit shall make up t( . i their annual budget on the forms c , prescribed by the State Board of n 1 ' Accounts, showing the total amount j1 of revenue that will be needed to f | 1 carry on the business of the taxing 1 unit during the next ensuing year, j .'taking due care that every esti- j . mated expenditure shall he reduc|ed to the lowest amount possible, , showing the necessary levy based 1 upon the assessed valuation as h certified by the county auditor. As " t to debt payment, it is obligatory w 1 on each taxing unit to levy a suff ficient tax to liquidate the bonds . and coupons falling due within the year for which the levy is being laid. Any attempt at reduction of] this levy at the expense of the bondholders will lead to litigation and further expense on your tax- 1 payers. This will be true of all t; , bonds issued, which are being c liquidated from a tax placed on v t property. 11 Senate Bill 354 1 e (Signed by the Governor Aug- t ust 15, 19321 Transferring „ Township Roads to r Counties. a I. This act provides that on Sepr tember 10. 1932, the jurisdiction of t y all township highways shall be f transferred to the board of county f ~ commissioners of the county in a J. which such townships are situated. I Upon the taking effect of this act h j the custody and possession of all e x funds, property, supplies, machin- t pl CO NT INT Ft) OX PAGE FOUR

Housekeeper Confesses Killing Farmer’s Wife ' Liberty, Ind., Aug. 25 —(UP) — I Guy Ounsaulie, farmer near Billings j ville, was free today under SSOO bond after being exonerated of the , ' fatal shooting of his wife, bv the J confession of Mrs. Nellie Kumler, their housekeeper. He is being held as a material witness. The Union county grand jury will investigate the killing Monday. , o s Asks For Receiver t St. Louis, Mo„ Aug. 25 —(UP) — r Suit asking a receiver for the St. Louis and San Francisco railroad s was filed in Federal court here to- t day by two bondholders of the road. c HUNT LEADS IN \ WEST FLIGHT • ““ j | Oklahoman Leads Cord c Cup Fliers From West ' With 1,315 Score | Jefferson City Mo„ Aug. 25 — (UP) —'Roy Hunt of Norman, Okla., , led the Pacific wing of the Cord 1 cuip fliers in the Bartlesville-Jeffer- 1 son City lap today, retaining his 1 lead over the other pilots and bring- t ing his total point score to 1,315 , He landed at 10:35 A. M. 1 The Atlantic wing of the flight t left Bartlesville an hour later than > the Pacific fliers. 1 Art Carnahan, Bloomington, 111., * was second, bringing his plane down a few seconds after (Hunt,. 1 He stands third with 708 points. < J. S. McDonnell, Cleveland, took 1 third .place in, today's lap. Eldon Cessna, Wichita, Kan., 1 landed sixth today to Increase his 1 point total to 937.76. placing him second in the entire race. Gladys O'Donnell of Long Beach, Calif., finished in 13th place today. 1 the 2 5 ipointß she received for to- j day’s lap brings her total score to 431.65, giving her fourth place in the race thus far.

FurnUard Hr lloltrd Press

AMELIA PUTNAM SPANS COUNTRY IN 19 HOURS “Lady Lindy” First Woman to Make Successful Cross-Country Flight FLEW FROM WEST TO NEW JERSEY Newark, N. J., Aug. 25 (UP) — Mrs. Amelia Karhart Putnam landed at Newark airport at 11:30 iA. M„ (EDT) at the end of her transcontineental airplane flight. She left the Los Angeles Municipal airport at 4:27 P. M. (EDT) yesterday. Her elapsed time for the; cross-country flight was approxi- [ mately 19 hours and 3 minutes. i She is the first woman ever to : fly non-stop across the country. ] The speed record is 11 hours and | 11 minutes, established by Major I James Doolittle. Before departing from Los Ange- i les, Miss Earhart said she was not ] heeking to break the record, but j merely attempting to prove that a| woman could fly non stop from l , coast to coast. —o Ogden Basses On Two New Tax Payment Laws Indianapolis, Aug 25. — (UP) - Two bills dealing with delinquent! tax payments, passed by the spe- 1 cial session of the Legislature, ! were held constitutional hy attor- j nev General James M. Ogden today. | Previously it had been believed that j the measures overlapped. Ogden’s opinion was given at the request of Lawrence F. Orr, Chief , ofthe State board of accounts. j Under Ogden's interpretation of the bills, pertaining to taxes of the; first half of 1931, delinquent fees for 1929 and 1930 will be waived and a 0 per cent interest charged. Delinquent payments for the first! half of 1931, however, will be assessed a 3 per cent penalty plue in-1 terest of 8 per cent, Ogden ruled. ROAC BUILDING IS CURTAILED Diverting Gas Tax Forces Start to Abandon “Dot- j ted Line” Program Indianapolis, Aug. 25. —(U.R) —Indiana's entire "dotted line" schedule of proposed additions to the state highway system will he abandoned as a result of two bills pass-i ed by the recent special session of I the state legislature, it was learn-j i-d here today. The bills provide for diversion of an estimated 11 million dollars from the highway department's revenue to local governmental units. Under the reduced financial situation, Ralph Simpson, assistant highway director, told the United; Press that the department cannot ! consider further absorption of county and township roads into the state system. All efforts of the department will be concentrated upon maintenance ot roads already under state supervision and construction projects' on the more travelled roads that have been located and approved, Simpson said. Continued maintenance of the roads in the now forsaken “dotted line” system on a more concentrated basis was seen, however, in the fact that county highway departments will benefit to a great extent from the money being diverted from the state department. Provisions of the new laws get out that the revenue received by local units from gas tax and auto license fees shall be spent on maintenance and construction work. An effort to chart probable income from gas tates and auto licenses fees during 1933, based on figures for the past three years, to determine how much federal aid may be absorbed is now being made by Simpson. Taken on the basis of figures a'ready assembled, the department will receive approximately $13,000,000 from Its two cents of the 4-cent gas tax. and one half of the auto license revenue. Out of this amount must come CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE

Priee Two Cents

Will Not Determine Parentage By Test j Indianapolis, Aug. 25 —(UP) —A court ruling by referee Russell Newgent in juvenile court today prevented a blood test to determine the •parentage of a child of Mrs. Margaret Horn. Claiming that her divorced husband, Howard Griffin, 37, was the father of the six-yeir old girl. Mrs. Horn demanded that he ipay for her support. Griffin denied that he was father of the *tirl and offered to submit to a blood test to decide the case. Newgent held that such a, test was illegal in Indiana. NON-STOP OCEAN FLIGHT RESUMED BY BACHELORS Allen And Bochkon Take Off From Harbor Grace I in Green Mountain Boy HUTCHINSONS PLAN TO CONTINUE TRIP I Harbor Grace, Nfd., Aug. 25. —(U.R) —Two young American bachelors swept out of Harbor Grace early today on their red monoplane, the “Green Mountain Boy,” on a nonstop ocean flight Intended to end i in Oslo, Norway. I Clyde Allen Lee and John Boehikon clambered into their stiip shortly after dawn, and with their motor roaring a last farewell to a 'small group of spectators, left the Irunway and headed into the misty at 5:01 EST. j The two fliers took their piane (into the air with 460 gallons of gasoline on Izoard —enough they beilieved to carry them 4,000 miles iThey estimated the distance between Grace Harbor and Kjeller | Field, Oslo, at 3,150 miles. Their ship has a cruising speed {of 115 miles an hour with a maxii mum speed of 140 miles an hour, j They hope to be in Oslo within 30 'hours. They left Barre, Vt., Tuesday morning. Lee, who is 24 and chief pilot, is from Oshbosh, Wis. He originally intended starting his flight from ; I there. An offer of SI,OOO from ] Barre, however, led him to bring his plane east and begin the journey in Vermont. Bochkon is fourl years older than Lee and is from j Brooklyn. The “Green Mountain Boy’’ is 'powered by a Wright whirlwind motor, capable of 220-horsepower | The doors of the plane's cabin have | been sealed to provide more space for fuel storage. A hole has been cut in the top of the cabin for entrance and exit. The plane carries no radio. | Meanwhile on the Island of Antij cosli in the estuary of the St. |Lawrence river, the "tying family' lot Col. George Hutchinson made ]icady to continue toward F.urope. Hutchinson flew His giant Sikorsky amphibian from St. John, N. 8., to Port Menier. Anticosti, yesterday. Col. Hutchinson has with him his CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE BAIN AND SONS ARE SENTENCED Chicago Banker Gets 1-to-5-Year Prison Sentence; Sons Are Fined Chicago Aug. 25—(UP)— John Bain, who built up a chain of 12 banks which crashed, was sentenced to one to five years in the Joliet penitentiary. Two sons—Robert A. and John iH. Bain and his son-in-law. W. Merle Fisher, were ordered hy Judge John M. O'Connor to pay fines of SI,OOO eacii. The sentences followed conviction of conspiracy in the collapse of the hank chain with $13,000,000 loss to depositors. The court had indicated Bain’s sentence would be only 18 months blit prosecutor Edwin J. Raber quoted the law and insisted on the longer term. Beside the elder Bain as he sat awaiting sentence was his granddaughter Hazel Burt. She clutched his arm sympathetically as he mopped his face with a handkerchief and tried to avert his face CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE

YOCR HOME PAPER—LIKE ONE OF THE FAMILY

ARREST 100 AT SIOUX CITY FOR BLOCKING ROAD After Weeks Picketing Sheriff Was Instructed To Clear Highways MEN BROUGHT IN BY TRUCK LOADS — Sioux City, lowa, Aug. 25. ! (U.R) Farm strikers were iail- | p<l by the truckload today. By noon more tlian 100 men accused, of picketing, the highways into Sioux City anti i keeping from the markets here till farm produce, had lkt'cn herded into the county jail. Outside the jail which is in the j county court house a large crowd of farmers and sympathizers gathered demanding release of i those whose numbers almost fill- ) ed the jail cells. After approximately a week during which markets here have been fed only by train Sheriff John Davenport and his force of deputies set out today to clear the highways. They ordered all pickets to disperse. Those refusing were loaded into trucks and brought to jail. Council Bluffs, la., Aue. 25— (U.R) —Fearing a mass attack on the Council Bluffs jail, where 60 striking farmers were held, Sheriff Percy Lalnson threw a machine gun barricade around the structure today. Lainson called in most of his 100 special deputies. He said he was ready to combat any attempt to deliver the prisoners. Three men with submachine guns were posted at vantage points. Deputies watched ali avenues of approach. Council Bluffs furnished its entire police arsenal to arm the guards. Arrests —66 in ail —came during a night of violence in which the strikers, their numbers increasing hourly, emerged victorious in the CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE VAN NUYS OPENS HIS CAMPAIGN Candidate For Senator Speaks at Peru; Hurls Charge at Watson Peru, Ind.. Aug. 25—(UP)—Senator James E. Watson wjs assailed as a "mouthpiece of sleek corporate interests" in a campaign address here by Frederick Van Nuys, Watson’s opiponent for election to the U. S. Senate next faii. Van Nuys charged that Watson was supported'by "every special interest in America. These interests will not lose Watson's vote if money propaganda and a huge political underground can prevent it" he said. He pointed out that the only time Watsou wjs out of office in the past 35 years, he wa' a lobbyist. Clarence G. Manion, dean of the Notre Dame law school, warned that “If Herbert Hoover is re-elect-ed to the White .H'ous.e there Is grave danger there never will he an- , other election in this country." All-Night Court Boosts City Funds i , Lebanon, Ind., Aug. 25. — (U.R) —- Funds in the city treasury mounted sl7l in the first all-night court - session ever held in Lebanon. Thirteen violators of the state . motor truck laws paraded before . Squire Edmund Connor and as , each, in his turn, pleaded guilty, f he was fined. The court session lasted from shortly after the sup- . per hour until shortly before dawn. s o » Indiana Clubwoman Dies at Home Today s New Albany, tnd Aug. 25 —(UP) 1 —Mrs. Anuabelle Hartley, 63, for--3 mer secretary and treasurer of the Indiana federation of woman’s club ' died at her home here of aspyhxlation. The body was found in the bathp room of her home by a maid. A gaH jet was turned on. Dr. P. H. Schoen p said he believed the death was accidental.