Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1933 — Page 5

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MRU'S i Im SEASON MAY. OCT. 1 K u | Eleven Will Meet Kone St. Mary’s 0., W Team Here ■el"'"' «■" open the _U .. ' 111 ”•• . v ~,. • t strong ■ seu,i - ■L a Ohio. ls schedul2 15 •> The field on . |||| ' . > I lie played w ill |Kno'jnce<l later. ; MT ■ - • 11 »U» 'he only |K b , ■,d'l' al on the A. |V\. locals will w score if |)<>ss-l - -laced a real K„.'..-• " lli " gri,i ' |K ... : la. locals. 6too. ' K i>.J. am lias had sev|M.....-; 'U.S and should; , .. tor the opener Th' 1 .lips of those tryMZit f,. r the !• am are as folirirner. Cosand S< luiepp. ■ , Myers. Kiess' Mwayne Peterson. ..... . 1i.0.e rail ilk. and litlyard. Rex n . Gass, Heller, lie!'. Brown and (lage. ■ Watt To I’lay A. C.’s are s. h> Tilled ■p*. ■■.. at the Watt K-w S i .day. The Tigers de-1 ■ltd St. J last Sunday, 9 to I Kirkland Wins ■sh- Kirklan I high school soft■l team detected the Pleasant' ■i- -day after noon at

L t/n AMERICAN LEGION PARADE I CHICAGO ocr.3 i Spectacle Yom Cannot Afford to Miss Trip E Tickets on sale for all trains after 6:00 P. XL, Oct. 2 ■ and tor all trains. Oct. X Return on any regularly ■ scheduled train leaving Chicago before midnight Oct. 3. ■ tor tulcti or information roiuult ■ Your Local Erie Ticket Agent hrfLOOK!g DAYS F7j AT 1 WHITE’S wk Thursday - Friday - Saturday Sept. 28 Sept. 29 Sept. 30 We will give you a complete grease V\ job from BUMPER to BUMPER and Drive to in* Dur Station K Gallon of icl J.v.Xney, GASOLINE 1 White’s Service Station Corner Bth and Monroe Sts. MYSTIFYING - SPECTACULAR - STARTLING CLIFFORD La Delle magician extraordinary Appearing in an entirely new repertoire of Magic Tricks, at the Catholic High School THURSDAY, October s—B P. M. Two hours of entertainment that will delight and please the entire family. Children Auspices Local I Adults 15c Knights of Columbus I 25c

MMMob* I Kirkland, 8 to 7. The game, iched- | uled for seven innings, went Into an ; extra tuning before the Kangaroos | pounded out a victory. JACK SHARKEY BEATEN AGAIN Former Heavyweight Champ Loses Decision To Loughran I Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 28.—(U.R) —Tommy Loughran last night won i a fifteen-round decision over Jack I Sharkey, former heavyweight! . champion and the man who knock ' ed him out in three rounds in New | York tour years ago. A right to ' the chin floored Sharkkey for no i count in the tenth, the only knock down of an exciting duel. Sharkey ■ weighed 202 pounds. Loughran, 183. A hot, stuffy night apparently dis- | couraged the faithful, for scarcely ' more than ten thousand worked 1 I their way into the National League : | ball park for the bout. Running far below expectations,| I the crowd hardly was expected to • pay more than the J25.00U Sharkey i had been guaranteed for tackling I the Philadelphia favorite he knock- ; od out in three rounds in the Yan- 1 * kee stadium four years ago. o Report Convicts Seen in Nebraska Lincoln. Neb., Sept. 28.— (U.R) — Six heavily armed men who police believe were fugitives fitim the InI diana penitentiary were sought | here today after they divided in ; two groups. I The men last night commandeer led a sedan by forcing the occu pants to the street at a stop crossing. The victims, 11. T. Folsom, his wife and son. reported to police the men threatened them with pistols and sawed-off shotguns. The car in which the men were riding bore Illinois license plates No. 352-052.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1933.

NORTHWESTERN TEAM IS GREEN Coach Hanley Says Team Will Be Too Young And Inexperienced Evanston, oil., Sept. 28- (UP! —I "Coach Kick Hanley Says any ■ talk of Northwestern winning the 1 i Big Ten football championship is ; farfetched. ‘T don't expect Northwestern to wlu or tie for the title," says Han- |, ley, starting his seventh year at j i Northwestent, "Our material is too I young and inexperienced.” ; Hauiey to the contrary, North- ■ western, which sank to second divi- l i skm last year after tying for the ' , Big Ten title in 1930 and 1931, In 1 ; going to have oue of the most Im- ’ proved teams tn the conference ' ‘ this season and will play a big I i part in deriding the championship. , And the Wildcats might conceiv- , I ably win or tie for the title it their | I Sophomores start clicking in Octo- ! I her, and they do not have any dis- | aetrous injuries to their key men. ■ Northwestern plays lowa, Ind-I I iana. Ohio State, Minnesota, Illi- ! nois and Michigan in the confer- ! ence and Stanford and Notre Dame ' ■in non-conference games. If the ; wildcats defeat Ohio State Oct. 28 , ; at Columbus, their only game away I | from home, their game with Michi-' | gan may take on championship as- j ; pects. Thirteen letter men, six linemen ; and seven backs, return from last; ' year's team. Pug Renter, a’.l-Ameri-l can in 1931, is gone, but that should I help rather than hurt as RenUier . was a decided handicap to the Wildcats last season. They counted'on him for everything, and he consistently failed becaus he didn't have the support he had in 1931. Sophomores, one of the classiest groups in the Big Ten. promise to lift Northwestern back among the Big Ten leaders. There are at least | nine of them who will either make I the team, or be dividing duty with j veterans by November. North western's line will be a bit green early in the season, but it has possibilities of developing into l a powerful Combination before the end of October. The weight, ability and speed are there. It's just a question of whether the veterans and youngsters hit it off together right from the start. Northwestern's backfield will be a hoaiey, featuring Ollie Olson, veteran fullback and one of the best j kickers in the country; Jakie Sul- | livan, tricky halfback and defensive ' star; Wally Cruise, brilliant Sopho- | moro and lefthanded pass r; Roy i Augustou, made-over fullback at | quarterback; Harry Leeper, fleet ' halfback; Chilly Sutton, a plunger of the Reb Russell type; and four or five other Sophomores any one of whom may break into the regular I lineup. Husky Ship of North Succumbs to Hollywood Seattle. — (U.R) — After years of i fighliug storms in the Alaskan waters, breaking through treacherous ice flocs to carry food to starving ! Eskimos and acting as a hospital ' ship, the Nanuk former Ciberian trading vessel, has turned Hol.yI wood. 1 She made her first movie bow in the far-north thriller "The Eskimo," and now will sail for Los Angeles where she will be made . ready for the filming of the pic- . ture “Treasure Island." The Nanuk was bought by Metro-Go dwyu- ' Mayer. Tile veteran vessel is commanded by Capt. E Prestrud. who was with Amundsen in tile exploration | ship Fratn in 1910, when she cruis- 1 ed to the Antarctic and in 1911 l made her way to Buenos Aires and ! Argentina. The vessel will be re-rigged to ' resemble one of the 17th Century. 1 The winter will be spent filming "Treasure Island" and in the spring 1 the Nanuk will be re-rigged to re- i setnble herself. She will then head i north to film the sequel to “The ; Eskimo." ' Get the Habit — Trade at Home '

TH AT GOOD OLD HOOSIER BEER NONE BETTER NOW ON TAP Al! Glasses Washed with Sanitary Washer Carl’s Confectionery Phone 434 for Bottle Beer Deliveries.

trick, k . x Pt. ays tl 's' 7/)ii/ Wwl A J n zukO Warner-1 OLP FOX OF 7W£ G/S/O - B Z W -NOU COACHiMG THE TEMPLE > M /■> university eleven. j PUAITEK.- r? ‘ TEMPLE PLAYS A SOUTH CAROLINA ' jfc sept 29 - I Eh.— .- vn »,«*.«« Im- ■«* •'

WAITRESS HURT BADLY IN JUMP Drug Waitress Hurt Seriously In Jump From Apartment Indianapolis, Sept. 28. — (U.R) — Miss Mary Beyerlein, 18-year-old drug store waitress earning 34 a' week, was in serious condition at I City hospital today from injuries received when she jumped from a third story window to escape the advances of two men. Police found her lying on a pile of bricks besides a downtown' apartment building, clad only in her underwear. She was believed to .have received a brain concuss-; ion and internal injuries. Her two male companions. Richard Heyman. 30, and William Bowers. 24, employes of the same drug store, were arrested in the apartment from which she jumped and placed under 33,000 bond each on temporary charges of vagrancy. When police broke Into the apart- ■ meut, they found her dress turned > , inside out and partially torn. Bow- | ers and Heyman were only partly i dressed, police said. Empty alcohol and ginger ale I I bottles were in the apartment, but; i the girl was not intoxicated, ac-| ! cording to the police. She was con-' scious when taken to the hospital I and said Heyman had asked her I j to attend a party and threatened 1 I her with loss of her job if she rel fused. I “I agreed to attend with Bowers, a soda clerk, with the understand-' I ing that another woman would go I i with Heyman," Miss Beyerlein I said. "I thought we would go out together somewhere but I found my-1 self alone in the apartment with I ' the two men. ; "Both of them attempted to as-i 1 sault me and threatened to beat . me if I did not submit. They jerk-1 od my dress and the first chance i I had 1 jumped through the win- ! dow." Glass in the windiTw was brok- ' en when police arrived. Heyman and Bowers denied they attempted to assault her and said ; she "was crazy drunk." Police i.u- --' sisted. however, that she was not | intoxicated when they picked her | up. NO TRACE HAS BEEN FOUND OF SHERIFF NEAL I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i indicating that two of the escapI ed Michigan City, Ind., convicts i passed through here last night, i Ottawa is about 100 miles southI west of the Indiana prison from which 10 prisoners escaped Tues-

day. After obtaining a description of two men who slopped a hurried flight long enough to buy gasoline here last night. Sheriff Welter telephoned the prison and was informed they likely were convicts. Prison officials hoard Welter describe one of the men as having a long scar from his left eye down to his jawbone and im*mediately expressed the opinion he was Walter Dieterich who had served two years of a life term for bank robbery. The two men drove a Buick automobile with wire wheels and no license plates. They stopped at the filling station operated by Andy Claus. Claus did not consider tlie possibility that tire men were escaped convicts but later told a friend of the occurrence, saying he feared a robbery. The friend reported to the sheriff and when Welter questioned Claus the filling station owner recalled that in the back of the suspects' car he saw a shotgun and a pump gun. He said the men were dressed in I gray trousers such as prisoners : might wear, a brown and a blue i coat respectively, and gray caps. KELLY ORALLY ADMITS GUILT ■ (C< >N IIN UEI» r ROH FA< J E -TJE) , ; were a carefully guarded secret. j Agents feared that members of 1 Kelly's gang might attempt their i delivery. Even lhe approximate | ' time of departure was withheld and it was believed possible noth- ■ ing would be known of the trip ! until the Kellys are lodged in an * Oklahoma City jail. The return I trip may be by airplane. Rorer said that department of justice agents were close on Kelly's trail soon after Urschel was I I released. They first located the ! trail on the Coleman farm at Coleman, Texas, where Kelly s' j I share of the ransom was found yesterday. “They left that farm sure they j i were not linked w ith the case," i I Rorer said. "They were driving j I Katherine's 16-cylinder automobile and didn’t waste much time j in covering their tracks. A maga- j zine detective could have followed > them to Minneapolis. From there it was easy to trace them through ; Chicago to Detroit. In Detroit j they began to realize their heels ' were warm. They found they had been identified and we were after them." Kelly got a smaller machine. Rorer said. The trail led to Des . Moines and Omaha. The agents. , a few hours behind, deducted the fugitives were heading for Cali- ' fornia. A net was drawn there | and a trap was set at Reno, Nev. ■ Instead, Kelly doubled back. He I continued to change cars, acquir- ; ing each new machine by trade or purchase. | As er the double back, the agents bad to pick them up. ■ They found trails leading to . Texas and “places I won't even talk about," Rorer said. At the ’ end of August, the Kellys were trailed to Memphis, then to Chicago, “where we came so close to ' getting him that it hurt." o Huge Tentative Tax Cut At Fort Wayne I Fort Wayne, Ind , Sept. 27. —(U.R) —The Allen County Tax Adjust- j inent Beard was in adjournment ' today until tomorrow after tentatively slashing $451,151 from the 1934 county budget. The cut, which has not definitely been decided upon, would necessitate a 10 per cent reduction in the salaries ot Fort Wayne police-1 men. The proposed reductions would , cut 3270,071 from the county bud-1 get; 3101.654 from the city budget: | $16,166 from the city library bud-1 get. and $3,260 from that of the, Irene Byron Tuberculosis Sanitor- j ium.

MARION YOUTH TAKES OWN LIFE 13-Year-Old Boy Shoots Self In Head, Falls On Track Marlon, Ind., Sept. 18 —(UP) — Fear of a parent's auger because he played "hookey” from school apparently led to the suicide Ute yesterday of Phillip Barkdull, 13, Phillip visited his aunt at Sweetstcr yesterday instead of attending school. En route home Barkdull expressed a fear he would be beaten for playing “Hookey,” Orville told authorities. Assuming that if he returned home wounded his father's anger would be diverted, Phillip borrowed a .38 calibre revolver young Laughlin bad taken from his Iwmt and sat down on a Pemmylvania railroad track. Three times he pulled me trigger wtfh the gun pointed at his foot. Each time the weapon failed to discharge. Aiming the revolver at bis head, | Phillip pulled the trigger a fourth I time and his lifeless body fell across the rails. Orville fled home. Phillip's body, a bullet wound through the bead, was found on the track, severed by a freight train. o 65 TO 75-DAY CAMPAIGN IS EXPECTED HERE tCONTINI EI) FROM PAGE ONE) tinuous operation of the plant and the employing ot “key men” for longer hours, officials believe. It is not known how many men will be required to operate the plaut and the exact number will probably not be determined until the mill is in ofveration. In some cases it is impossible to make changes in work shifts on an eight-hour schedule and where these emergencies exist, the men will be employed louger. The company wishes to cooperate in every way with the spirit and intent of the NRA and at the same time assure the steady and efficient operation of Indiana's only beet sugar mill. Since it is the only plant of its kind in the state, certain exemptions must be considered and observed in its operation. Bann New Plants Decatur is most fortunate in having the sugar factory operate this year. Under the general plan ot lhe Sugar Stabilization Board at Washington, licenses or permits will not be issued to new concerns

It takes GOOD SCHOOL SHOES to STAND UP "'““THIS s Miller-Jones realize each day is chock-full of kicks and scuffs. Durability is built into every pair and proved by this wear test w hich has won them a real reputation. They’re a match for your son’s pep —get him a pair—i see for yourself. Flexibility is combined with durability in this black calfskin oxford. • Golf Socks New fall patterns —full assortment 15c . ======= This good looking black oxford has leather sole and rubber heeL Miller-Jones Co. Good Shoes for ALL the Family I 142 N. Second st. Decatur, Ind.

or to those which are now closed. This ruling was made recently by administrators of the Agriculture Adjustment Act and in keeping with the plan to regulate farm pro ducts. The government seeks to have 40,000,000 acres of land taken out of production next year. The beet acreage in Indiana and the local territory has not been reduced materially, but it cannot be increased over this year's total contracted acreage. For that reason many growers are already endeavoring to sign contracts for next year, assuring them of the raising of beets in 1934.

We Celebrate the Opening of Our Double Kay Nut Shop Department Nuts World Here’s a new idea for the clever hostess—fresh, butter toasted nuts from the world's finest nut grovea. A wonderful food treat for the children, too. Phone your bridge party order. Butter-Toasted Bridge Mixed Nuts PaQn Regular 79c lb.—Special, tb V Butter-Toasted Blanced Mogul Peanuts Regular 30c tb.—Special Price B. J. Smith Drug Co. THE REXALL STORE BUYW .1 ow USE OUR RIDE-AS-YOU-PAY PLAN SLIPPERY roads and colder weather are coming—don't risk trouble, delay, discernfort. At today's prices enjoy immediate use , of the tires, battery, spark plugs, car heater or radio you need—pay a small sum down, js balance $1 a week up as you ride. The NRA asks the public to buy now—we do our part to aid the drive. Drop in, talk it over—no obligation. jBKr Manager Wonderful New Car Heater! Full site radiator core. “Vari Heat " gradual j control from low to high. Large sturdy quiet motor: aKKB 4 b’ad fan. adjustable deßecto*; attractive design. I A bargain in quality ! All-Weather SENIOR $7.95 JUNIOR $E.95 Twin Door I As Shown U " Llr ••Varl-Msaf C»«tro! Witte "WaK-Heat" Ceatrel Battery Ready for Fall? Ask ua to look at it — test voltage and specific j gravity - check cables. A little attention now may 1 save you trouble later. ■■ E X I D E IWOff $6.75 and old battery and old battery '■*».>ikrw.v 6-TUBE SUPER-1 SPARK PLUGS HET AUTO RADIO CLEANED i I. |OO% i 1 "lon ® 0 O J I PURE PENN. LZ — I MOTOR ' heISH ML-*--’** Licensed by R.C.A. Highest Grade Lighted Airplane Dial 100% PIATS Fsr quick starts io caW weather—sp~k.r v i vania The Hew GOODYEAR and other latest features rCflflSylVaol3 Moxar Danwnstrater 2,-gallon sealed can Spark Plugs $35.95 spa KM PATHFINDER IXI U Supertwist Cord Tires t u toll _ - . Per Pair -Ride EMUS* |lAk S L HEK V -J th ‘A 1 >5.55 »1”-, 'I! >6.30 s £ >B.IO »HL. S :X >9.40 >l”_ ft S —V aJBHSLe * um -own Other sixes in proportion INCORPORATED “Call 262 and Count the Seconds’’ 6:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. CORNER THIRD & MADISON

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YOUNG THIEVES ARE HELD HERE (CONTINUKD FKOM TAGS ONE) ileltoa reformatory ipotu which ho later escaped. He was apprehended 18 months later In Camada and returned to Peudloton, where he serv- ' ed a total ot three years and eight - months. The two young men have been ; under suspicion for several months. ' They have been living in a farm ; bouse six miles south of Decatur on ' the mud pike. I —.— o Get the Habit — Trade at Home